COURTESY OF ISHAN KALBURGE The donation will allow for the creation of three endowed faculty positions as well as new graduate research and postdoctoral fellowships.
COURTESY OF NORTHROP GRUMMAN / NASA and STScI A rendering of the cold side of Webb, where mirrors and measurement instruments are placed.
FILE PHOTO Morris argues against the University’s newly revised guest policy, calling it an unnecessary barrier to meeting other students given current precautions already instated by Hopkins.
FILE PHOTO Affiliates will now be required to wear N95s, KN95s or to “double mask” with a surgical and cloth mask.
FILE PHOTO As part of its updated COVID-19 guidelines, the University has reduced the quarantine time for those who test positive but are not symptomatic.
COURTESY OF LEELA GEBO The extensions were informed by the rise in cases on campus and in the surrounding community.
COURTESY OF LEELA GEBO The University is scheduling on-campus booster shot clinics.
FILE PHOTO Some students expressed hope that the BHCST will be useful in responding to mental health crises.
FILE PHOTO Daniels discussed shared governance, the Johns Hopkins Police Department and COVID-19 guidelines on campus during his interview with The News-Letter.
COURTESY OF ISHAN KALBURGE The men's and women's tennis teams will practice indoors as usual at the beginning of the spring semester.
COURTESY OF JOHN D'CRUZ Hopkins researchers hope to elucidate the connection between hearing loss and dementia.
COURTESY OF SOUTH BALTIMORE COMMUNITY LAND TRUST Hopkins students and faculty joined Baltimore’s zero-waste campaign in a public action at City Hall on October 22.
COURTESY OF CALEB CHERRY Students and faculty share challenges balancing their workload with the resumption of on-campus activities.
COURTESY OF MIN-SEO KIM The Hostile Terrain 94 display uses toe tags to underline the human cost of America's immigration policies.
JOHN D'CRUZ/GRAPHICS EDITOR Speakers discussed how to prevent HIV contraction.
500 WOMEN SCIENTISTS / CC-BY-SA 2.0 The hope for the edit-a-thon is not only to increase representation of scientists and doctors with disabilities but also to build more of a community at Hopkins for students and faculty living with disabilities.
FILE PHOTO Abidi makes the case for the Molecular and Cellular Biology major here at Hopkins, citing the vast amount of opportunities the major has brought to him.