Headlines at Hopkins: news releases from across
the
university Headlines
@Hopkins
News by Topic: news releases organized by
subject News by Topic
News by School: news releases organized by the
university's 9 schools & divisions News by School
Events Open to the Public (campus-wide) Events Open
to the Public
Blue Jay Sports: Hopkins Athletic Center Blue Jay Sports
Search News Site Search the Site

Contacting the News Staff: directory of
university
press officers Contacting
News Staff
Receive News Via Email (listservs) Receive News
Via Email
RSS News Feeds RSS News Feeds/
Podcasts
Resources for Journalists Resources for Journalists

Virtually Live@Hopkins: audio and video news Virtually
Live@Hopkins
Hopkins in the News: news clips about Hopkins Hopkins in
the News

Faculty Experts: searchable resource organized by
topic Faculty Experts
Faculty and Administrator Photos Faculty and
Administrator
Photos
Faculty with Homepages Faculty with Homepages

JHUNIVERSE Homepage JHUniverse Homepage
Headlines at Hopkins
News Releases from Johns Hopkins

July 23, 2008. Mice with inflamed nasal tissue being tested at a Johns Hopkins laboratory may be unable to tell if something smells bad or good, but their sensory deficit is nothing to turn up a nose at.

July 22, 2008. Researchers at Johns Hopkins have discovered that the Notch protein helps human embryonic stem cells “decide” their own fate, a finding which may eventually be useful in programming cells for the development of stem cell therapies.

July 17, 2008. The name that graces some of the world’s top research, educational and medical institutions has a new place in space.

July 17, 2008. For stories about the 2008 presidential campaign, consider the following sources from The Johns Hopkins University. Listed with each source is a brief description of his or her area of expertise or particular take on the campaign.

Raimond Winslow July 16, 2008. A federal grant will allow Johns Hopkins researchers to purchase a powerful $2 million computer that will speed up their efforts to find new ways to diagnose and treat brain disease, heart illnesses, cancer and other medical ailments.

July 16, 2008. Mars once hosted vast lakes, flowing rivers and a variety of other wet environments that had the potential to support life, according to two new studies based on data from the Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) and other instruments on board NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO).

Lisa Feigenson and toddler July 14, 2008. Which is easier to remember: 4432879960 or 443-297-9960? The latter, of course. Adults seem to know automatically, in fact, that long strings of numbers are more easily recalled when divided into smaller "bite-sized chunks," which is why we break up our telephone and Social Security numbers in this way.

July 11, 2008. The Johns Hopkins Hospital has once again — for the 18th consecutive time — earned the top spot in U.S. News & World Report’s annual rankings of American hospitals, placing first in three medical specialties and very high in 12 others.

July 9, 2008. After more than 30 years in space, NASA’s Voyager 2 continues to make new discoveries and is upending our understanding of the processes at work at the very edges of the sun’s influence.

July 7, 2008. Washing hands with soap and water in preparation for delivery significantly reduced the risk of death for infants within the first month of life, according to a study in Nepal conducted by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

July 7, 2008. A single, oral dose of vitamin A, given to infants shortly after birth in the developing world can reduce their risk of death by 15 percent, according to a study conducted by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

July 2, 2008. The Johns Hopkins University has established a formal research collaboration with Germany's Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft, described as the largest organization for applied research in Europe.

June 30, 2008. Nonprofits in Maryland are growing their workforces nearly three times faster than the state's for-profit sector, according to a recent Johns Hopkins University study.

Nicole Suveges June 26, 2008. Political scientist Nicole Suveges was civilian Army contractor Nicole Suveges, a Johns Hopkins University graduate student in political science who was working in Iraq while doing research for her dissertation, was among four Americans killed in an explosion Tuesday in the offices of the district council in the critical Sadr City section of Baghdad.

Alfred Sommer June 23, 2008 Alfred Sommer, dean emeritus of The Johns Hopkins University's Bloomberg School of Public Health, has been elected chair of the board of the Albert and Mary Lasker Foundation,b a philanthropy that supports biomedical research aimed at conquering disease, improving human health and extending life.

June 19, 2008. Follow along online as Johns Hopkins University Egyptologist Betsy Bryan and her team of graduate students, artists, conservators and photographers expand their investigation of Mut Temple this summer, turning their attention to the temple's Sacred Lake.

June 17, 2008. Uncertainties about proper use and possible long-term effects of hydroxyurea in the treatment of sickle cell anemia may be wrongly influencing doctors to avoid prescribing it to those in serious need, according to results of a literature review by specialists at Johns Hopkins.

June 15, 2008. A team of AIDS experts at Johns Hopkins has found a simple mathematical equation that accurately explains how well each of 25 anti-HIV drugs in five commonly used drug groups suppresses the virus and keeps the disease in check.

June 14, 2008. Every year, about 500 million people worldwide are infected with the parasite that causes dysentery, a global medical burden that among infectious diseases is second only to malaria.

Civility Solution June 11, 2008. Johns Hopkins University's resident civility maven P.M. Forni takes the guesswork out of defusing more than a hundred different everyday hackle-raising scenarios in his new book, The Civility Solution: What to Do When People Are Rude (St. Martin's Press, June 10, 2008).

June 10, 2008. A short-term, very-high dose regimen of the immune-suppressing drug cyclophosphamide seems to slow progression of multiple sclerosis (MS) in most of a small group of patients studied and may even restore neurological function lost to the disease, Johns Hopkins researchers report.

June 10, 2008. A new study indicates that African Americans with a family history of colorectal cancer are less likely to be screened than African Americans at average risk for the disease.

June 4, 2008. Johns Hopkins University researchers and colleagues in China have unlocked some of the secrets of newly discovered iron-based high-temperature superconductors, research that could result in the design of better superconductors for use in industry, medicine, transportation and energy generation.

Erica Falk June 4, 2008. Hillary Clinton's bid for the Democratic presidential nomination effectively ended Tuesday night when Barack Obama earned the last handful of delegates necessary for a win. Research by Erika Falk, a communications expert at The Johns Hopkins University, shows that the media treated the two candidates differently from the start.

June 4, 2008. A Johns Hopkins astronomer is a member of a team briefing fellow scientists about plans to use new technology to take advantage of recent, promising ideas on where to search for possible extraterrestrial intelligence in our galaxy.

May 29, 2008. Researchers at Johns Hopkins have established a human cell-based system for studying sickle cell anemia by reprogramming somatic cells to an embryonic stem cell like state.

ICU Mover May 28, 2008. Johns Hopkins undergraduates have designed and built a device to enable critically ill intensive care unit patients to leave their beds and walk while remaining tethered to essential life-support equipment.

May 21, 2008. Christopher Celenza, a professor in the Department of German and Romance Languages and Literatures at The Johns Hopkins University, is among 190 artists, scholars and scientists who have been named 2008 Guggenheim Fellows by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation.

May 19, 2008. Heart patients often experience lasting problems with memory, language, and other cognitive skills after bypass surgery. However, these problems aren’t caused by the surgery itself or the pump used to replace heart function during surgery, a new study by Johns Hopkins researchers suggests.

Alexander Szalay May 14, 2008. Thanks in part to a Johns Hopkins University astrophysicist, the final frontier got a bit closer today with the launch of a new application that allows people to easily explore the night sky from their own computers.

May 13, 2008. Researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health have conducted the largest nationwide study on the acute health effects of coarse particle pollution.

May 12, 2008. The Johns Hopkins University and the U.S. Army have agreed to work together to train scientists to develop vaccines and medicines to defend against biological attacks.

Paul Smolensky May 9, 2008. Paul Smolensky, Krieger-Eisenhower Professor of Cognitive Science at The Johns Hopkins University, has been appointed to an International Blaise Pascal Research Chair by the École Normale Supérieure, a prestigious French institution of higher education.

Herica Valladares May 8, 2008. Hérica Valladares, an assistant professor and director of undergraduate studies in the Department of Classics at The Johns Hopkins University, is one of 30 emerging artists and scholars to win a Rome Prize in the American Academy of Rome's 112th annual competition.

May 7, 2008. Obesity may increase adults’ risk for having dementia, according to researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

May 7, 2008. A complete list of Johns Hopkins University commencement speakers is available online.

May 7, 2008. A recent study by the U.S. Council on Competitiveness concluded that nurturing innovation has become a key strategy for national prosperity. To support that strategy and meet regional workforce needs, the Johns Hopkins Engineering and Applied Science Programs for Professionals (EPP) will offer a new master's level concentration in Technical Innovation Management this fall.

May 6, 2008. Sonia Sarkar, a Johns Hopkins University junior from Austin, Texas, is one of 65 students from 55 U.S. colleges and universities to be named a 2008 Truman Scholar.

May 6, 2008. Kurt Herzer, a Johns Hopkins University junior from Melville, N.Y., is one of 65 students from 55 U.S. colleges and universities to be named a 2008 Truman Scholar.

Benjamin T. Rome May 5, 2008. A. James Clark, a leading commercial builder and university trustee emeritus, has committed $10 million to The Johns Hopkins University to endow the deanship of the university's Whiting School of Engineering in honor of his mentor and business colleague, Benjamin T. Rome.

May 1, 2008. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory is sending a spacecraft closer to the sun than any probe has ever gone — and what it finds could revolutionize what we know about our star and the solar wind that influences everything in our solar system.

May 1, 2008. Johns Hopkins University astrophysicist Riccardo Giacconi will receive the National Inventors Hall of Fame Lifetime Achievement Award on Saturday, May 3, in Akron, Ohio.

April 30, 2008. Summary statement and key facts related to the 2000 Soil Study by the Kennedy Krieger Institute and The Johns Hopkins University.

Jane Guyer and Gregg Semenza April 30, 2008. Gregg L. Semenza, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of pediatrics at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and Jane I. Guyer, Ph.D., a professor of anthropology at the Johns Hopkins University Krieger School of Arts and Sciences were elected as members of the National Academy of Sciences for their excellence in original scientific research.

April 29, 2008. Scientists at Johns Hopkins have outlined a new path for potential therapies to combat inflammation associated with sinusitis and asthma based on a new understanding of the body’s earliest immune response in the nose and sinus cavities.

Adam Riess April 29, 2008. Johns Hopkins University professor Adam Riess is among the 212 fellows elected to the 228th class of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Kristina Johnson April 24, 2008. Kristina M. Johnson, provost and senior vice president for academic affairs at The Johns Hopkins University, has been selected to receive the John Fritz Medal, widely considered the highest award in the engineering profession.

April 23, 2008. A Johns Hopkins University biologist, in research with implications for people suffering from seasonal affective disorder and insomnia, has determined that the eye uses light to reset the biological clock through a mechanism separate from the ability to see.

April 17, 2008. The Johns Hopkins University has awarded approximately $25,000 in grants to students and faculty to stimulate new courses in the arts and other arts-related efforts on the university's Homewood campus.

April 17, 2008. Now that green is not just a color but also an environmentally conscious way of living and doing business, there is a growing need for classes that incorporate "green" knowledge.

April 16, 2008. A new study from researchers at The Johns Hopkins University and elsewhere concludes that parents do punish older children more harshly — and what's more, that they are wise to do so.

April 15, 2008. The 37th annual Johns Hopkins Spring Fair takes place April 25, 26, and 27.

April 9, 2008. Researchers at Johns Hopkins have uncovered the molecular underpinnings of one of the earliest steps in human development using human embryonic stem cells.

April 8, 2008. Stefanie DeLuca, an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at The Johns Hopkins University, was recently named a William T. Grant Scholar, a major fellowship given each year to four to six early-career scholars conducting high-quality research in the social and behavioral sciences.

April 8, 2008. Statement issued by Michael J. Klag, MD, MPH Dean, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health regarding POPLINE family-planning database.

Denis Wirtz April 8, 2008. A team led by Johns Hopkins researchers has solved important puzzles concerning how certain proteins guide the reproduction of bacteria, discoveries that could lead to a new type of antibiotics.

April 8, 2008. Surgical teams at Johns Hopkins performed what is believed to be the first six-way donor kidney swap among 12 individuals Saturday, April 5. The 10-hour surgeries used six operation rooms and occupied nine surgical teams at The Johns Hopkins Hospital.

April 7, 2008. The Johns Hopkins University will provide at least $5 million over the next five years in matching funds for departments seeking to improve faculty diversity, including hiring and retaining outstanding women and underrepresented minority scholars.

April 4, 2008. Statement by Michael J. Klag, MD, MPH, dean of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, regarding POPLINE Database.

April 2, 2008. For men, having a parent with hypertension greatly increases the risk for developing high blood pressure throughout adulthood, according to the results of a long term prospective study conducted by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.

April 2, 2008. Researchers at Johns Hopkins, as part of a large, multi-institutional study, have found one gene variant that is linked to an increased risk of lung cancer.

Michael Strine March 31, 2008. Michael Strine, currently chief financial officer of New Castle County in Delaware, has been appointed executive director of financial planning and analysis at The Johns Hopkins University.

March 27, 2008. Long known for its role in preventing anemia in expectant mothers and spinal birth defects in newborns, the B vitamin folate, found in leafy green vegetables, beans and nuts has now been shown to blunt the damaging effects of heart attack when given in short-term, high doses to test animals.

March 26, 2008. Tuition for full-time undergraduates at The Johns Hopkins University's Homewood campus will rise 5 percent this fall to $37,700, an $1,800 hike that is slightly smaller than this year's increase.

March 26, 2008. What is believed to be the largest study of its kind for the genetic roots of inflammatory bowel diseases has suggested new links to Crohn’s Disease as well as further evidence that some people of Jewish descent are more likely to develop it.

March 20, 2008. NASA's Cassini spacecraft has discovered evidence that points to the existence of an underground ocean of water and ammonia on Saturn's moon Titan.

March 19, 2008. One day last spring, fossil hunter and anatomy professor Kenneth Rose, Ph.D. was displaying the bones of a jackrabbit’s foot as part of a seminar at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine when something about the shape of the bones looked oddly familiar.

William R. Brody March 10, 2008. William R. Brody, who has led The Johns Hopkins University to a deepened commitment to undergraduate education, diversity, the community, and research that advances human society, and who has directed a transformative renewal of its facilities, will retire as president on Dec. 31, he informed the board of trustees today.

WMAP data March 7, 2008. NASA released this week five years of data collected by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) that refines our understanding of the universe and its development.

March 5, 2008. The images in "Mapping the Cosmos: Images from the Hubble Space Telescope," an exhibit running through July 27 at the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, are both art and science.

March 4, 2008. Patients cared for by hospitals with residents in training have a 17 percent less chance of dying after lung cancer surgery compared with patients undergoing surgery at non-teaching hospitals, according to results of a Johns Hopkins study.

March 4, 2008. The Johns Hopkins University's Evergreen Society, a 23-year-old continuing education program for older men and women, has received a $100,000 grant from the Osher Foundation that will be used to engage additional faculty, provide scholarships and enhance outreach to prospective students.

Yash Gupta February 27, 2008. Yash Gupta, inaugural dean of the Johns Hopkins University Carey Business School, has been elected to the board of directors of the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, the global accrediting organization for business schools.

 


© 2008 The Johns Hopkins University. Baltimore, Maryland.
Office of News and Information. All rights reserved.
Last updated 23Jul08 by dgips@jhu.edu