Issue: 2012 March 13

Bioethicist calls on Congress to protect docs in war zones

March 12, 2012

Greater leadership is needed from the U.S. government to protect physicians and health facilities from increased attacks in armed conflict zones like Syria, experts told members of Congress in a special briefing held March 7. “Adherence to norms won’t take place unless it becomes a diplomatic priority, with the U.S. and other states using their […]

Two JHU mathematicians honored with Simons Fellowships

March 12, 2012

Two Johns Hopkins University mathematicians have each been awarded the highly competitive Simons Fellowship in Mathematics, which provides scholars with the opportunity to spend a semester away from classroom and administrative duties in order to pursue their research interests. Christopher Sogge and Joel Spruck, both professors in the Department of Mathematics in the Krieger School […]

Classifieds — March 12, 2012

March 12, 2012

APARTMENTS/HOUSES FOR RENT Baltimore County, 3BR EOG TH in quiet neighborhood, CAC, partly fin’d bsmt, W/D, lg fenced yd, side deck, patio, rear prkng pad, conv access to 95/695, JHMI and downtown, avail June 1. $1,200/mo. 410-236-3596 or dwight_pinkney@jbhunt.com. Brewers Hill, 2BR, 2.5BA rehab, gourmet kitchen, fin’d bsmt, deck, no pets. $1,850/mo. 410-303-1214 or hudsonstreetrental@hotmail.com. […]

APL team developing solar probe for closest-ever flights past sun

March 12, 2012

Two-thousand-degree temperatures, supersonic solar particles, intense radiation—all of these await NASA’s Solar Probe Plus during an unprecedented close-up study of the sun. The team led by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory—which has been developing the spacecraft for this extreme environment—has been given the nod from NASA to continue design work on the probe, […]

HIV rates for urban black women five times higher than estimated

March 12, 2012

A national team of AIDS experts at Johns Hopkins and elsewhere say that they are surprised and dismayed by results of their new study showing that the yearly number of new cases of HIV infection among black women in Baltimore and other cities is five times higher than previously thought. The data show that infection rates […]

The big reveal, Homewood-style

March 12, 2012

Earlier this month, Wolman Hall residents were given the first glimpse of the building’s recently completed renovation. The “oohs” and “ahhs” came fast and furious. The 92-year-old apartment building (once home to F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife, Zelda) has been outfitted with a slew of upgrades, new spaces and multimedia knickknacks to make the […]

Volunteer groups wanted to ‘adopt’ classes in city schools

March 12, 2012

More than 30 Baltimore City Public School teachers have requested ongoing assistance in one-on-one projects, small group activities and overall classroom support through Adopt-a-Class, a Johns Hopkins Takes Time for Schools initiative. Adopt-a-Class provides support to Baltimore City classrooms by matching them with five or more volunteers from a JHU department/office. Eligible volunteers can use […]

Team of scientists announces ‘birth’ of a baby crystal

March 12, 2012

A team of scientists has determined the size of the smallest, cubic, lead sulfide cluster that exhibits the same crystal structure as bulk lead sulfide (rock salt). Determining the size of nanoscale and subnanoscale assemblies of atoms or molecules at which they first take on recognizable properties of the same substance in the macroscopic world is […]

Radiothon raises $866,000 for kids at Hopkins Children’s

March 12, 2012

The 23nd annual MIX 106.5 Radiothon benefiting Johns Hopkins Children’s Center raised nearly $866,000 during its three-day broadcast, bringing the total raised to date to more than $15 million. The numbers were unveiled March 5 on the MIX 106.5 Morning Show with DJs Jojo Girard and Reagan Warfield.  

Making memories: How one protein does it

March 12, 2012

Studying tiny bits of genetic material that control protein formation in the brain, Johns Hopkins scientists say that they have new clues to how memories are made and how drugs might someday be used to stop disruptions in the process that lead to mental illness and brain-wasting diseases. In a report published in the March […]

« Previous PageNext Page »