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(11/16/11 5:00am)
The Vocal Chords put on their Annual Fall Concert in the Bloomberg Auditorium on Nov. 11th at 8 p.m. The show's theme was "The Cranberry Love Game," and each member of the Vocal Chords portrayed a distinct character.
(11/16/11 5:00am)
Non-Spanish speakers, be jealous. The new Intercambio series at the Walters Art Museum in Mt. Vernon is fun, interactive and not to be missed — a welcome change from classroom language learning.
(11/16/11 5:00am)
With just a week left until Thanksgiving, it is all that has been on my mind.
(11/16/11 5:00am)
Staying at Hopkins over Thanksgiving and don't know what to do?
(11/15/11 5:00am)
Protesters and sympathizers of the Occupy movements temporarily halted a lecture given by Karl Rove, former Senior Advisor and Deputy Chief of Staff to President George W. Bush, at Hopkins' Homewood campus on Tuesday night. Activists, predominately entrants in the Inner Harbor's Occupy Baltimore camp, interrupted Rove's speech with chanted political epithets, inciting anger from audience members, security officers, and Rove himself.
(11/11/11 10:55pm)
Stuck in the library trying to upload a reading for class. Attempting to read the news on your laptop on the beach. Relaxing in your room trying to stream a video on YouTube. Almost every student at Hopkins has, at one point or another, struggled with the wireless internet server on or around campus.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
The Office of Undergraduate Admissions received 1,432 Early Decision applications last week from students seeking advance admission to the Class of 2016, marking a continuing growth of Hopkins' popularity among the college-bound demographic.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
Sociologists represent a small part of the student population at Hopkins. However, the sociology department's specialization in social inequality is what attracted Anne-Marie Livingstone to study at Hopkins. She is currently in her second year of pursuing her doctorate degree in sociology, and she is one of the teaching assistants for the Introduction to Sociology undergraduate class. Originally from Montreal, Canada, where she received an undergraduate Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology from Concordia University, Livingstone moved to the U.S. to pursue her studies. The department's work relevant to public policy and a background of research complements Livingstone's passions and interests of race, poverty, inequality and social policy well.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
Due to a mechanical system error, the fire suppression system in the Fresh Food Cafe was inadvertently activated last Friday afternoon. The clean up closed the FFC for the remainder of the day and students were redirected to Nolan's for dinner that evening.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
The Office of Housing and Dining has revised its policy at the Fresh Food Cafe (FFC) to now allow students to bring backpacks into the dining area. The change comes in response to a string of thefts from the front vestibule area of the FFC over the past several weeks. The thefts included a backpack and a laptop.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
The MSE Symposium hosted David Axelrod, senior advisor to President Barack Obama, this past Tuesday. Axelrod discussed his views on political divisions, healthcare and other hot topic issues, while incorporating his history with the Obama administration and his view on the current political climate.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
The Power Down Tuesdays Campaign held their launch event at Nolan's this Tuesday with Carrie Bennett reading from Adam Mansbach's book, Go the F**k to Sleep, a book detailing, in a humorous way, the frustrations that come with trying to get a child to go to sleep.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
Many people confine their definition of fashion to clothing and accessories.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
Not to say every guy or girl we've ever been with is in the wrong, but we all get annoyed at some of the things our significant others do — things we wish we could bitch about to his or her face, but don't. Sometimes we're not even involved with someone and we take crap from them just because we're too nice to tell them to go get lost in the AMR tunnels.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
On Monday evening, we journeyed from the Homewood campus to the streets of the flamingo-dotted Hampden.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
The Hopkins community is brimming with talent — from the harmonious voices that emerge from the many a capella groups to the agility of the many athletes to the researchers who spend hours experimenting in the lab. Then there are a handful of other students who can add more talents to this diverse list: juggling, staff and unicycling. And the list does not end here.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
The phrase "organic chemistry" elicits a spectrum of different reactions. Some students shudder in fear while other students are excited to learn more about aliphatic compounds. Regardless of the feeling, organic chemistry is notorious for being extremely difficult, especially at Hopkins. And when students are struggling, the best solution is to go to office hours.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
After a Hopkins student reported suspicious activity on a rowhouse roof, Hopkins Security and Baltimore Police responded and aprehended a wanted burglar.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
At least 12,000 people from all over the country and Canada protested in front of the White House last Sunday to oppose the Keystone XL Pipeline. This protest was part of the larger Tar Sands Movement, which aims to convince President Obama to reject the proposal for the pipeline.
(11/10/11 5:00am)
As part of the 2011 Turnbull Poetry Lecture series, the Writing Seminars Department hosted Edna Longley, a well-known critic of modern Irish and British poetry in Mudd Hall Auditorium Monday. Her discourse revolved around various poets such as Louis MacNeice, Edward Thomas, and Robert Frost. Her lecture was organized under three headings: poetry and war, poetry and modernity and poetry and the ear.