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(10/19/11 5:00am)
The Hopkins football put on yet another impressive performance this weekend, defeating Dickinson 47-6. The Jays entered Homewood Field on Friday night ranked 15th in the country and would look to improve on that in their first night game of the season.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
Not to my surprise, I'm smarter than a Wall Street occupier.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
The Hopkins men's soccer team suffered their first Centennial Conference loss of the season to Dickinson last Saturday, but bounced back strongly with a 4-0 victory over non-conference foe Neumann on Tuesday evening to improve their overall record to 7-4-3.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
Field hockey tends to be a sport where a lot of activity takes place at the goal.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
The Hopkins Cross Country teams both had strong performances over the weekend at the Gettysburg Invitational.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
Planet hunters have a new technique for finding planets orbiting very bright stars. Better yet, they can use this technique to clean up old images that were thought to contain only stars. The motion of planets over time can be determined by comparing the old images to the new images.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
Pink has long been the color of breast cancer awareness campaigns. Every October, during Breast Cancer Awareness Month, the pink ribbons, banners and advertisements are all intended to raise awareness about the disease that affects so many women around the globe. You are probably one of many who don the pink ribbon in October to show your support for the breast cancer cause.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
Researchers at the University of California, Riverside have determined that some female mosquitoes identify and target human hosts for infection using carbon dioxide trails and odors released through our skin.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
If you're like me and many of my Hopkins friends, your daily study routine probably involves getting your desk space all ready to go, your computer open, and a good iTunes playlist to help you through the next few hours of math, chemistry, English or whatever other subject you may be taking.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
He has played Barack Obama's favorite T.V. character. He was listed by USA Today as one of the 10 reasons to still love television. He has garnered national acclaim for his portrayal of Omar Little on The Wire and now Chalky White on Boardwalk Empire.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
Recent research shows that Trinidadian guppies display female-against-female aggression in the presence of a harassing male.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
Recent genomic evidence has shown that the contemporary strain of the Y. pestis bacterium, commonly associated with human infection, is a direct descendant of the bacterium that caused inconceivable devastation in the Middle Ages, when people were convinced the human race was at its end. Genomic structures indicate no significant discrepancies between the two strains — the ancient and the modern — forcing researchers to wonder what made Y. Pestis unthinkably lethal back in the Middle Ages.
(10/19/11 5:00am)
The amount of sea ice covering the Arctic Ocean was at its second lowest recorded level last month, according to satellite data from NASA and the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The average ice extent this September was 4.61 million square kilometers, which was 2.43 million square kilometers below the 1979-2000 average.
(10/12/11 5:00am)
Nearly 2,000 bikers toured through both Baltimore City and County as the 18th annual Tour Du Port kicked off at Canton Waterfront Park last Sunday.
(10/12/11 5:00am)
The Hopkins Global Water Program (GWP) is a university-based organization that integrates researchers across Hopkins to address water issues and provide solutions internationally and domestically. It was developed through an innovations grant from the National Sciences Foundation under President Brody in 2009.
(10/12/11 5:00am)
Uni Mini. You walk (read: stumble) in at around three o'clock in the morning craving your favorite sandwich. The line is almost out the door but you decide the wait is worth your while. You pass the island in the middle of the store and know it's almost your turn to order. You wipe some drool off your chin as you begin to dream about unwrapping the paper of your mouthwatering sandwich. But as you arrive at the counter, you have most likely failed to notice the glass window that stands before you holding Uni Mini's lesser-known food option: the salads.
(10/12/11 5:00am)
Now I should probably preface this entire article with the fact that I love being in cold weather. My favorite time of the year comes creeping in with the fall. The warmth of summer is finally gone and the great cold air of winter is right around the corner.
(10/12/11 5:00am)
Between textbooks, parties and food, college students often find their checking accounts deplete much more quickly than anticipated.
(10/12/11 5:00am)
Everybody has their weird things. Some people hate ketchup. Some people keep up with 35 television shows. I take a bath every day. Now you know.
(10/12/11 5:00am)
Camp Kesem, a college student run one-week sleepaway camp, provides children from ages six to thirteen with a parent who has or has had cancer with summer camp experiences that give them opportunities to be kids. In the United States alone, there are over 1.7 million cancer cases a year that affect individuals and their families. Adults have the means to seek support, but the emotional needs of children of adults afflicted with cancer are often overlooked. In many cases, kids must deal with emotional baggage and personal tragedies on their own. As a result, the sons and daughters of cancer patients miss many of the simple joys of childhood.