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(10/05/11 5:00am)
Looking for a relationship? Start with a flirtationship. You don't see many couples around campus at Hopkins, but they're out there. They may be holding hands on the breezeway or sipping coffee outside Café Q, but when you do see a pair of love birds, you may find yourself asking the question, "Why them and not me?"
(10/05/11 5:00am)
When it comes to your relationship with the gym, a funny thing happens. At least from personal experience, when I'm feeling lazy, I continue to feel lazy. When I'm on a roll with my exercise and lean foods, I continue that rate of consistent training and diet. In other words, fat begets fat and fit begets fit.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
Here's a great recipe for honey wheat bread. Although I can't see myself doing this often, making your own bread is a great experience. For one, it's interesting to realize how much work it takes to make something as seemingly simple as a loaf of bread. Secondly, fresh bread is great; so much better than your normal store bought bread. Eating a slice of bread fresh and hot out of the oven is just too good!
(10/05/11 5:00am)
Nadav Weinberg, former combat soldier in the Israel Defense Force offered a presentation on the martial art of Krav Maga in the AMR I MPR room Tuesday.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
The minor in Financial Economics is not like other minors at Hopkins. It isn't just a watered down major in a subject. Instead, it is uniquely focused on educating students on how to couple economic theory and financial practice.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
It starts on a dirt road; traveling in a small van, bouncing in the back from side to side, as each push forward is interrupted by another deterring rut in the road.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
The world is an unfair place. No-one recognizes that more than sophomore Richard Skelton, who was inspired by a Uganda summer trip to establish a chapter of Ugandan charity Building Tomorrow (BT) at Hopkins this past summer.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
The News-Letter sat down with sophomore Richard Skelton to discuss his recent summer trip to Uganda through the international nonprofit organization, Building Tomorrow.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
A wave of excitement and pride reverberated throughout the Hopkins community on Tuesday when Hopkins Physics and Astronomy professor Adam Riess received the Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering that a mysterious force known as dark energy causes the universe to accelerate and expand.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
Researchers at the University of Utah have discovered a new class of compounds that strongly bind to the sugar coating of the AIDS virus, making possible a new ointment that could prevent HIV from infecting host cells.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
Surgeons have long earned a reputation as a terse crowd bent on perfection. Yet the stereotype of this stern bunch operating in a silent and sterile environment has been disputed with the results of a recent UK study. Ninety percent of surgeons surveyed in England reported listening to music while in surgery, and nearly half preferred that music to be rock.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
You would think that Highlandtown is pronounced HIGH-landtown.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
Ever since 1981, scientists have been dreaming of a computer faster than the fastest supercomputer available today. Quantum computing, the idea of creating a computer that works by taking advantage of the properties of subatomic particles, would make these ultrafast computers available. Although this field is still in its infancy, it has been making quite some progress.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
October brings with it a series of fairs and festivals to the Baltimore area, each celebrating a different aspect of culture in Charm City.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
The death of Steve Jobs marks the end of the life of an individual who reinvisioned technology for us in so many ways.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
You're emerging from D Level at the ungodly hour of 5:30 a.m., hoping to catch an hour of sleep before your next final. After a nap that is too short and a shower that is not quite cold enough to wake you up, you get to the test. The first question goes by without a hitch, and the second one too. You flip through the pages, and so far, it doesn't seem too bad, but then you hit that one halting question.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
Whether you're looking for a laid-back song to listen to after a rough day of work, or a song to help you recover from the night before on Sunday morning, the latest single, "Teflon Heart," from Brooklyn-based quartet Caged Animals has you covered.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
A female undergraduate was sexually assaulted a block from campus last Saturday by a man who claimed to be armed.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
On Monday, justice finally reigned in Italy in the highly publicized and drawn out trial and appeal of Amanda Knox. Knox, an American college student studying abroad in Perugia had been convicted, along with her former boyfriend, Raffaele Sollecito, of the brutal murder of her housemate Meredith Kercher in 2007.
(10/05/11 5:00am)
In a time when the United States is supposedly concerned about the amount of foreign energy it is depending on, one might think that leaders would try to invest in clean energy sources that do not cause national security issues. Instead, the State Department is supporting the $13 billion Keystone XL Pipeline that will carry crude oil from Alberta, Canada to Texas. This is a big mistake, as it will only use more unnecessary resources and will be a serious detriment to the environment.