Johns Hopkins University

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The Johns Hopkins University

Motto: Veritas vos liberabit
(The truth shall make you free)
Established: 1876
Type: Private coeducational
Endowment: US $2.8 billion[1]
President: William R. Brody
Faculty: 3,100 (full time)[2]
Staff: 15,000 (full time)[2]
Undergraduates: 4,478[3]
Postgraduates: 14,275[4]
Location: Flag of the United States Baltimore, MD, U.S.
Campus: 3 Main campuses in Baltimore, campuses and satellite facilities in the Baltimore-Washington , D.C. area, Bologna, Italy, and Nanjing, China
Colors: Academic:
Gold & Sable          
Athletic:
Columbia blue & Black          
Mascot: Blue Jay
Athletics: NCAA Division III Centennial Conference
Division I Lacrosse
Website: www.jhu.edu
The Johns Hopkins University Logo

The Johns Hopkins University is a private university based in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. Johns Hopkins also maintains full-time campuses elsewhere in Maryland, Washington, D.C., Italy, and China. It is particularly esteemed for its medical, health, scientific, and international studies programs.

The university is named after Johns Hopkins, who left $8 million in his 1873 will for the foundation of the university and Johns Hopkins Hospital. At the time, this was the largest philanthropic bequest in U.S. history, the equivalent of over $131 million in the year 2006. The university opened on February 22, 1876, with the stated goal of "The encouragement of research ... and the advancement of individual scholars, who by their excellence will advance the sciences they pursue, and the society where they dwell."[5]

Johns Hopkins was the first university in the United States to emphasize research, applying the German university model developed by Wilhelm von Humboldt and Friedrich Daniel Ernst Schleiermacher.[6] Johns Hopkins is the first American university to teach through seminars, instead of solely through lectures, as well as the first university in America to offer an undergraduate major (as opposed to a purely liberal arts curriculum).[7] As such, Johns Hopkins was a model for most large research universities in the United States, particularly the University of Chicago.[8] According to the National Science Foundation ranking, Johns Hopkins performed $1.55 billion in science, medical and engineering research in fiscal year 2007. NSF ranked the university first among 20 U.S. academic institutions in total Research & Development spending for the 29th year in a row.[9]

Contents

[edit] General information

The university's first president was Daniel Coit Gilman. Its motto in Latin is Veritas vos liberabit – "The truth shall make you free." While women had previously been admitted to graduate programs, the undergraduate program admitted only men up until 1970. Admission of women to Johns Hopkins undergraduate programs was not considered until the late 1960s. The decision to admit females was announced in October 1969, and in the fall of 1970, women were finally admitted into the undergraduate programs. In the academic year 1970-1971, 4.7% of students in the Arts and Sciences programs were women. In the year 1985-1986 the proportion of female students in the Arts and Sciences programs had increased to around 38%. Currently, the undergraduate population is 47% female and 53% male.[10]

[edit] Origin of the name

The peculiar first name of philanthropist Johns Hopkins is the surname of his great-grandmother, Margaret Johns, who married Gerard Hopkins. They named their son Johns Hopkins, and his name was passed on to his grandson, the university's founder (1795-1873).

Milton Eisenhower, a president of JHU, was once invited to speak to a convention in Pittsburgh. Making a common mistake, the Master of Ceremonies introduced him as "President of John Hopkins." Eisenhower retorted that he was "glad to be here in Pittburgh."[11]

In a commencement address to the undergraduate Class of 2001, university president William R. Brody had the following to say about the name:

In 1888, just 12 years after the university was founded, Mark Twain wrote about this university in a letter to a friend. He said:

A few months ago I was told that the Johns Hopkins University had given me a degree. I naturally supposed this constituted me a Member of the Faculty, and so I started in to help as I could there. I told them I believed they were perfectly competent to run a college as far as the higher branches of education are concerned, but what they needed was a little help here and there from a practical commercial man. I said the public is sensitive to little things, and they wouldn't have full confidence in a college that didn't know how to spell the name 'John'.

More than a century later, we continue to bestow our diplomas only upon individuals of outstanding capabilities and great talent. And we continue to spell Johns with an 's'.[12]

[edit] Campuses

[edit] Homewood campus

Undergraduates walk across Keyser Quadrangle in Spring at the Johns Hopkins University
Undergraduates walk across Keyser Quadrangle in Spring at the Johns Hopkins University

The original main university campus was in downtown Baltimore City. However, this location did not permit room for growth and the trustees began to look for a place to move. Eventually, they would relocate to the estate of Charles Carroll of Carrollton and Homewood House, a wedding gift from Charles to his son Charles Jr.

The park-like main campus of Johns Hopkins, Homewood, is set on 140 acres (0.57 km²) in the northern part of Baltimore. The architecture was modeled after the Georgian-inspired Federalist style of Homewood House. Most newer buildings resemble this style, being built of red brick with white marble trim, but lack the details. Homewood House was later used for administrative offices but now is preserved as a museum.

As a part of the donation, Hopkins was required to donate part of the land for art. As a result, the Baltimore Museum of Art, which is not part of the university, is situated next to the University's campus, just southeast of Shriver Hall.

The Decker Gardens, bordered by the Greenhouse, Nichols House and the Johns Hopkins Club, were originally known as the Botanical Gardens and were used by members of the Department of Biology to grow plants for research. By the early 1950s, the gardens no longer served an educational purpose, and in 1958, when Nichols House was built as the president's residence, they were completely re-landscaped with aesthetic criteria in mind. In 1976, the gardens were done over again, and named for trustee Alonzo G. Decker, Jr. and members of his family in appreciation for their generosity to Hopkins.

The statue in the middle of the pool, the Sea Urchin, was sculpted by Edward Berge. It stood in Mount Vernon Place, near the Washington Monument, for 34 years before being replaced by a 7'10" copy, which fit in better with its monumental surroundings. Frank R. Huber, the man who left the city the money to make the copy, asked that the original be given to Paul M. Higinbotham, who donated it to the university. North of the campus, also on Charles Street, we find the Evergreen House, one of Hopkins' museums.

[edit] Medical Institutions campus

This urban campus is in East Baltimore and is home to the School of Medicine, the Bloomberg School of Public Health, and the School of Nursing. It comprises several city blocks spreading from the original Johns Hopkins Hospital building and its trademark dome. The School of Medicine of the Johns Hopkins University is associated with clinical practice at Johns Hopkins Hospital.

[edit] Academics

Gilman Hall, Krieger School of Arts & Sciences
Gilman Hall, Krieger School of Arts & Sciences

[edit] Divisions

[edit] Homewood Campus

  • Zanvyl Krieger School of Arts and Sciences: Located at the university’s Homewood campus, the Krieger School is the core institution of the university and offers undergraduate and graduate programs,[13] with more than 60 undergraduate majors and minors and more than 40 full-time and part-time graduate programs.
  • G.W.C Whiting School of Engineering: The Whiting School is located on the main Homewood campus of the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, and offers undergraduate and graduate engineering programs.
  • School of Education: The School of Education was established in 2007, incorporating divisions of the former School of Professional Studies in Business and Education.

[edit] East Baltimore Campus

  • School of Medicine: The School of Medicine is headquartered at the university's Medical Institutions campus in East Baltimore with Johns Hopkins Hospital. The School of Medicine is widely regarded as one of the best medical schools and biomedical research institutes in the world.
  • School of Nursing: The School of Nursing, is located in East Baltimore and is affiliated with Johns Hopkins Hospital and the School of Medicine
  • Bloomberg School of Public Health: The Bloomberg School was founded in 1916, is the first and largest public health school in the world. It has consistently been ranked the number one school of public health by U.S. News & World Report.

[edit] Downtown Baltimore

  • Carey Business School: The Carey Business School was established in 2007, incorporating divisions of the former School of Professional Studies in Business and Education.
  • Peabody Institute: founded in 1857, is the oldest continuously active music conservatory in the United States. Located in Baltimore's Mount Vernon neighborhood, it became a division of Johns Hopkins in 1977. The Conservatory retains its own student body and grants its own degrees in musicology, though both Hopkins and Peabody students may take courses at both institutions.

[edit] Washington D.C.

[edit] Laurel, MD

[edit] Other Johns Hopkins Campuses

[edit] Profile

Johns Hopkins University Facts
Class of 2012 Applicants 16,006
Class of 2012 Students 1,235
Class of 2012 Accepted 22%
Average GPA 3.85/4.00
Middle 50% SAT 2010-2290
Middle 50% ACT 30-34
Undergraduates 4,478
Student:Faculty Ratio 10:1
Majors Available 49
Minors Available 39
Faculty with Terminal Degrees 92%
Four-Year Graduation Rate 86%
Classes taught by Faculty 96%

[edit] 2008

For students wishing to enter into the Class of 2012, the Johns Hopkins University received 16,006 applications, up 7% from the year before and up 79% since 2002. [16] Of the 3,578 admits, 49 percent are women, and 732 are minority students (351 African- American, 355 Hispanic, 26 Native American). The top 10 states of admitted students in descending order are New York, California, New Jersey, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Florida, Virginia, Texas and Connecticut. There are 254 students residing abroad and countries and territories from which more than one student was admitted include Australia, Brunei, Canada, China (and Hong Kong), Costa Rica, Honduras, Ecuador, France, Germany, Greece, Guatemala, India, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Puerto Rico, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom and Venezuela. The median SAT scores were critical reading 720, math 750, and writing 720. [15]

[edit] 2007

A total of 14,848 high school seniors applied for regular admission to the Johns Hopkins Class of 2011, an increase of 7 percent over the total for the Class of 2010 and of 30 percent over the Class of 2009.[17] Regular decision admission was offered to 3,145 students; those who enroll will join the 443 who were admitted early. The target class size is 1,205, with 800 enrolled in Arts and Sciences and 405 in Engineering.[17] The highest number of acceptances went out to, in order, applicants from New York, California, Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The total of admits includes 325 who identified themselves as African-American, 302 Hispanic and 21 Native American.[17]

Students residing in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. territories of Guam and Puerto Rico, and 57 countries were offered admission this year. The total number of non-U.S. citizens admitted was 189.[17] Once again, Baltimore students are well-represented in the admitted class, with 31 students selected for the Baltimore Scholars Program. The admittance rate was a strikingly low 24 percent. Just two years ago, the rate was 35 percent.[17]

Johns Hopkins accepted 27 percent of 13,869 applicants for entrance into the fall 2006 freshman class. Undergraduate students matriculate from all 50 states and more than 50 countries. Within six years of graduation, 85 percent of Hopkins students earn graduate degrees, the highest percentage in the nation.

The number of applicants has increased by 156 percent from 2002, one of the largest increases in the U.S.[citation needed] In 2006 the pool of admitted students closely resembled that of 2005. The average SAT score remained constant at 1440, while average high school GPA has increased by only 0.02 points, to 3.85.[18] Approximately 48 percent of undergraduates receive financial aid at the Johns Hopkins University. The average need-based financial aid package for freshmen totals $29,472 for the Class of 2010. Further, the total grants and scholarships awarded to students in 2004-2005 was $41,570,000. [3]

There are multiple scholarships available for students including, but not limited to the Baltimore Scholars Program, Bloomberg Scholarship, Hodson-Gilliam Success Scholarship, Hodson Trust Scholarship, ROTC (Army) Scholarship, Trustee Scholarship, Charles R. Westgate Scholarship, and the Woodrow Wilson Undergraduate Research Fellowship.[3]

[edit] Rankings

Johns Hopkins University Rankings
2009 U.S. News & World Report, National Universities 15
2008 U.S. News & World Report, Hospitals 1
2008 U.S. News & World Report, National Universities (Peer Assessment) 8
2009 U.S. News & World Report, National Universities (High School Counselor Ranking) 9
2008 U.S. News & World Report, Medicine (Doctoral) 2
2007 U.S. News & World Report, Public Health (Masters) 1
2005 Foreign Policy, International Studies (Masters) 1
2007 Shanghai Jiao Tong University’s Academic Ranking of World Universities 19
2007 The Times Higher Education Supplement (UK) 10 U.S.,

15 Global

At the undergraduate level, in its National Universities ranking for 2009, U.S. News placed the Johns Hopkins University 15th (surrounded by Cornell University on one side and Brown University on the other).[19] Hopkins ranked 8th in that publication's peer assessment category last year, is ranked as the 9th most prestigious school in the U.S. by college counselors, and is also one of a select group of universities to have been ranked top 10 in the nation overall.[20]

Gate Entering Homewood Campus at the Johns Hopkins University
Gate Entering Homewood Campus at the Johns Hopkins University

The Johns Hopkins University is particularly regarded for its schools of medicine, public health, nursing, and international studies. The Johns Hopkins Hospital, which is affiliated with the university though legally a separate corporation, was ranked as the top hospital in the United States for the eighteenth year in a row by the U.S. News and World Report annual ranking of American hospitals.[21] For medical research, U.S. News ranked the School of Medicine second nationally and School of Public Health first nationally for 2007,[22] and, in an August 2005 study,[14] the School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) was ranked as the top master's program in international relations. U.S. News and World Report also ranked the School of Nursing 4th nationally among peer institutions in 2007.[23]

Meanwhile, comprehensively, the 2007 Academic Ranking of World Universities, popularized by The Economist and produced by Shanghai Jiao Tong University’s Institute of Higher Education, ranked Johns Hopkins the 19th best school in the world in terms of quality of scientific research leading towards numerous awards.[24] Further, in the annual rankings by the The Times Higher Education Supplement, based on a subjective peer review by scholars, Hopkins placed 10th nationally and 15th worldwide. [2].

[edit] Research

The opportunity to be involved in important research is one of the distinguishing characteristics of an undergraduate education at Johns Hopkins. About 80 percent of the university's undergraduates engage in some form of independent research during their four years, most often alongside top researchers in their fields.[25] Johns Hopkins receives more dollars in federal research grants than any other university in the United States.[26] 32 Nobel Prize winners have been affiliated with the university as alumni or present or former faculty members[27]. It boasts a wide spectrum in terms of its academic strengths, particularly in art history, biological and natural sciences, biomedical engineering, creative writing, English, history, economics, international studies, medicine, music, neuroscience, nursing, political theory, public health, public policy, and the Romance languages.

Johns Hopkins is one of fourteen founding members of the Association of American Universities (AAU) and a member of the Consortium on Financing Higher Education (COFHE).

The Johns Hopkins University performed $1.55 billion in science, medical and engineering research in fiscal year 2006, making it the leading U.S. academic institution in total R&D spending for the 29th year in a row, according to a new National Science Foundation ranking.[9] The university also ranked first on the NSF's separate list of federally funded research and development, spending $1.55 billion in FY2007 on research supported by such agencies as the National Institutes of Health, NASA, the NSF and the Department of Defense.[9] In FY2002, Johns Hopkins became the first university to cross the $1 billion threshold on either list, recording $1.14 billion in total research and $1.023 billion in federally sponsored research that year.

[edit] Library

Peabody Library at the Peabody Conservatory Division of Hopkins
Peabody Library at the Peabody Conservatory Division of Hopkins

The Johns Hopkins University Library system houses more than 3.6 million volumes.[28] It includes ten main divisions: the Sheridan Libraries at Homewood, the Medical Institutions Libraries, the School of Nursing Library, Abraham M. Lilienfeld Library at the Bloomberg School, the Peabody Institute Library, the Carey Business School and School of Education libraries, the School of Advanced International Studies Libraries (Sydney R. and Elsa W. Mason Library and Bologna Center Library), the R.E. Gibson Library at the Applied Physics Laboratory Library and other minor satellite locations, as well as the archives.

The Milton S. Eisenhower Library (called "MSE" by students), located on the Homewood campus, is the main library. It houses over 2.6 million volumes and over 20,000 journal subscriptions. The Eisenhower Library is a member of the university's Sheridan Libraries encompassing collections at the Albert D. Hutzler Reading Room (called "The Hut" by students) in Gilman Hall, the John Work Garrett Library at Evergreen House, and the George Peabody Library at Mount Vernon Place. Together these collections provide the major research library resources for the university, serving Johns Hopkins academic programs worldwide. The library was named for Milton S. Eisenhower, former president of the university and brother of former U.S. president Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Only two of the MSE library's six stories are above ground; the rest are beneath, though architects designed the building so that every level has windows and natural light. The design accords with a bit of traditional campus lore which says no structure on campus can be taller than Gilman Hall, the oldest academic building. There is no written rule regarding building height, however, and the library's design was chosen for architectural and aesthetic reasons when it was finally built in the 1960s.

[edit] Student life

The blueprints for a new programming board called The Hopkins Organization for Programming ("The HOP") were drawn on up during the summer and fall of 2006.

In addition Charles Village, the region of North Baltimore surrounding the university, has undergone several restoration projects, and the university has gradually bought the property around the school for additional student housing and dormitories. The Charles Village Project, scheduled for completion in 2008, will bring new commercial spaces to the neighborhood. The project includes Charles Commons, a new, modern residence hall that includes a Barnes & Noble and a Starbucks.[29] A Chipotle Mexican Grill and Starbucks have moved in, and the university itself has installed a new Einstein Bros. Bagels[30] franchise in Wolman Hall.

Hopkins has also invested heavily in improving campus life for its students with creation in 2001 of an arts complex, the Mattin Center; and a three-story sports facility, the O'Connor Recreation Center. The large on-campus dining facilities at Homewood were renovated in the summer of 2006, and the caterer was switched from Sodexho to Aramark.

Hopkins has also advertised the "Collegetown" atmosphere it shares with neighboring institutions, including Loyola College, UMBC, Goucher College, and Towson University, as well as the proximity of downtown Baltimore's Inner Harbor.

The Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender student organization, The Diverse Sexuality and Gender Alliance, affectionately called DSAGA, at Hopkins is well known. Annually DSAGA organizes and oversees the Awareness Days Program. This program is a series of events and speakers with the focus on LGBTA inclusivity and awareness.

[edit] Greek Life

The Johns Hopkins University Office of Greek Life currently supports eleven fraternities and eleven sororities. Ten of these fraternities are sponsored by the Inter-Fraternity Council, including the fraternities Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon ("SigEp"), Sigma Alpha Epsilon ("S.A.E."), Lambda Phi Epsilon, Beta Theta Pi ("Beta") , Alpha Delta Phi ("Wawa"), Alpha Epsilon Pi ("AEPi"), Phi Kappa Psi ("Phi Psi"), Phi Gamma Delta ("Fiji"), and Pi Kappa Alpha ("Pike"). Four sororities are sponsored by the Panhellenic Council, including Kappa Kappa Gamma ("Kappa"), Kappa Alpha Theta ("Theta"), Alpha Phi and Phi Mu. One fraternity, Alpha Phi Alpha, and three sororities, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta and Sigma Gamma Rho, are historically African-American and are supported by the National Pan-Hellenic Council. Four multicultural sororities, Delta Xi Phi, Sigma Omicron Pi (historically Asian-American), Lambda Pi Chi (historically Latin-American) and alpha Kappa Delta Phi (historically Asian-American), are also supported by the Office of Greek Life. In addition, Delta Phi Fraternity ("St. Elmo's") maintains a chapter exclusive to students at Johns Hopkins, though it is not recognized by the University's Office of Greek Life.

As of Spring 2008, 1,080 students were members of one of the Johns Hopkins University fraternities or sororities and the All-Greek Average GPA was 3.22, the same as the average GPA for all Johns Hopkins University Undergraduates.[31] Approximately 1/5 of male undergraduates and 1/5 of female undergraduates belong to the Greek system.

Many of the fraternities maintain houses off campus, but none of the the sororities do. As at many American universities, it is a widely believed rumor that the sororities are not permitted to have houses because of a state "Brothel Law" prohibiting the cohabitation of more than eight women. The Johns Hopkins News-Letter even reported the existence of such a law in 2001.[32] Snopes.com reports that such laws do not exist.[33]

Recruitment for fraternities and sororities takes place during the spring semester for freshmen, though some chapters recruit upperclassmen during the fall semester. All students who wish to participate in Recruitment must have completed one semester at Johns Hopkins University or elsewhere. Participants in Formal Recruitment for one of the four Panhellenic sororities must register with the Office of Greek Life.

[edit] Student publications

Homewood House.  Acquired by The Johns Hopkins University in 1902, Homewood stands today as one of the nation's best surviving examples of Federal Period architecture
Homewood House. Acquired by The Johns Hopkins University in 1902, Homewood stands today as one of the nation's best surviving examples of Federal Period architecture

Hopkins has many publications that are produced entirely by students. The Johns Hopkins News-Letter, founded in 1896, is the oldest continuously published weekly college newspaper in the nation.[3] The Hopkins Donkey is a political newspaper with a Democratic perspective on international, national and state-wide political topics. The Carrollton Record is a political newspaper with an American conservative perspective on campus and city-wide politics.[4] Thoroughfare, Zeniada and j.mag are literary magazines. Prometheus is the undergraduate philosophy journal.[5] Frame of Reference is an annual magazine that focuses on film and film culture [6]. The New Diplomat is the multi-disciplinary international relations journal. Foundations is the undergraduate history journal. Américas is the Latin American Studies journal. Argot is the undergraduate anthropology journal.[7]

The Black & Blue Jay is among the nation's oldest campus humor magazines. It was founded in 1920.[34] According to The Johns Hopkins News-Letter, it was the magazine's name which led the News-Letter to first use the moniker Blue Jays to refer to a Hopkins athletic team in 1923.[35] While the magazine enjoyed popularity among students, it received repeated opposition from the university administration, reportedly for its vulgar sense of humor. In October 1934, Dean Edward R. Berry removed financial support for the magazine; without funding, the magazine continued under the name The Blue Jay until Berry threatened to expel the editors in 1939. The magazine had a revival in 1984, and has published intermittently since then.[36]

[edit] Controversy

Johns Hopkins is on the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education's (FIRE) "red alert" list. FIRE is a nonprofit educational foundation advocating freedom of speech, legal equality, due process, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience. Currently, a handful of schools in the United States are on the list.

According to FIRE, Johns Hopkins University earned its Red Alert designation by suspending eighteen-year-old junior Justin Park for posting an offensive Halloween party invitation on the popular social networking site Facebook.com. His penalty was later reduced.[8]

[edit] The 'Green Campus' at Hopkins

Johns Hopkins University has a significant and complex approach to implementing sustainability initiatives. As of May 2008, they include the following [37]:

  • Designing and implementing green roofs
  • Exploring the use of alternative sources of energy
  • Developing a transportation plan to reduce pollutants
  • Working on green building designs
  • Improving the efficiency of the way energy is used
  • Engaging students through education and competition
  • Managing storm water runoff
  • Maximizing the amount of organic and locally-sourced food

Johns Hopkins has students known as Eco-Reps on campus. The purpose of the ECO-Rep program is to increase environmental awareness and sustainable actions among Johns Hopkins freshmen through focused activities, the dissemination of information, and the promotion of competition. Up to 10 Freshmen will be selected each September to become ECO-Reps for the school year. [37]

[edit] Climate change and energy

The new Manager of Energy and Environmental Stewardship began work in spring 2006 to upgrade inefficient appliances and lighting on campus. Energy retrofits in certain buildings have resulted in energy conservation of over 50 percent.[38] Carbon emissions are currently being inventoried and electric vehicles are used for some campus transportation needs. Another portion of transportation needs on the main campus are being met by a partnership with Flexcar, which has four vehicles stationed on-site. The University intends to secure a percentage of green electricity by working with wind power developers and with a local dairy farm that converts food and farm wastes into green electricity through anaerobic digestion. Plans are being developed to install solar thermal panels on the recreation center to provide heating and hot water needs.[38]

[edit] Food and recycling

Johns Hopkins recently switched its dining services providers from Sodexho to Aramark, citing improved environmental services as an influential reason for the change.[citation needed] Dining services managers prioritize the purchasing of locally sourced produce and seafood, and organic food is being integrated into the menu.[38] In addition, the smaller cafés around campus sell exclusively organic, shade-grown coffees. There is currently a small pilot composting program on the undergraduate campus.[38]

[edit] Green buildings

The University is currently pursuing LEED certification for several new and existing buildings and typically considers the feasibility of LEED programs for all new projects that involve upgrades of existing buildings or new construction. For minor renovations, the University uses LEED principles as guidelines.[38] Retrofits include a green roof deck, experimentation with waterless urinals and low-flow shower heads, and upgraded fluorescent lighting that has reduced lighting load on one campus by over 40 percent. Similar lighting retrofits are underway at all other campuses. In 2004, one campus completed a water conservation retrofit that annually saves over eight million gallons of water.[38]

[edit] Sustainability and student groups

Johns Hopkins students have historically been active in sustainability activities. Students have contributed significantly to many of our environmental successes, such as getting the JHU recycling program off the ground, hosting a national "Greening" conference, launching a transportation shuttle service between campuses, and making the campus more bike-friendly. Each year students are involved in countless activities that promote sustainability on Hopkins campuses. Some of the active groups on campus include[37] Students for Environmental Action, Engineers for a Sustainable World, the Roosevelt Institution, Hopkins Energy Action Team and Engineers Without Borders among others.

[edit] Campus expansion and developments

The Johns Hopkins University, working with Collegetown Development Alliance, a joint venture team composed of Struever Brothers, Eccles & Rouse and Capstone Development recently teamed up to develop a mixed use project featuring student housing, a central dining facility and a major campus bookstore.

The site, called Charles Commons and completed in September 2006, is located at 33rd Street between Charles and St. Paul Streets. The approximately 350,000 sq ft (33,000 m2) development includes housing for approximately 618 students, with supporting amenity spaces; a central dining facility and specialty dining area with seating capacity of approximately 330; an approximately 29,000 sq ft (2,700 m2). bookstore run by Barnes and Noble College Division which includes the traditional offerings of a college bookstore (textbooks, school supplies, dorm product, etc.) as well as a cafe that serves Starbucks coffee, an extensive assortment of general books, and convenience products.

Mason Hall (2007), the Visitor's Center & Admissions Office at the Johns Hopkins University
Mason Hall (2007), the Visitor's Center & Admissions Office at the Johns Hopkins University

The Decker Quadrangle development constitutes the last large building site on the contiguous Homewood campus of the Johns Hopkins University, making it the most important project on campus since the development of the two original quadrangles. In this first phase, the project includes a visitors and admissions center, a computational sciences building [39], and an underground parking structure, creating a new quadrangle, south of Garland Hall, named in honor of Alonso G. and Virginia G. Decker. Importantly, the project establishes a new public entrance for the campus and recognizes the potential for future growth of campus activities sited across Wyman Park Drive.


Recently, the university announced a $73 million renovation of Gilman Hall, the academic centerpiece of the Homewood Campus. The renovation will include updating all classrooms in the building, as well as a full replacement of the infrastructure of the building. Gilman hall, superficially renovated in the 1980s will now include a movie theater and a large atrium, with a glass roof. The atrium will have a sky-walk from the entrance of the building to the Hutzler Undergraduate Reading Room and will contain the university's premier archaeological collection. The project is slated for completion for the 2010-2011 academic year.[40]

[edit] Athletics

Athletic teams at Johns Hopkins are called the Blue Jays. The university's athletic colors are Columbia blue and black. (Sable and gold are used for academic robes.) Hopkins celebrates Homecoming in the spring to coincide with the height of the lacrosse season. Outside of the Men's and Women's Division I lacrosse teams, Hopkins participates in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division III and the Centennial Conference.

The school's most prominent team is its Division I men's lacrosse team, which has won 44 national titles - nine NCAA Division I (2007, 2005, 1987, 1985, 1984, 1980, 1979, 1978, 1974), 29 USILA, and six ILA titles. Hopkins' primary national lacrosse rivals are Princeton University, Syracuse University, and the University of Virginia; its primary intrastate rivals are Loyola College, Towson University, the United States Naval Academy, and the University of Maryland. The rivalry with Maryland is the oldest, the schools having met 103 times since 1899, with two of those meetings being in playoffs.

Johns Hopkins Men's Lacrosse Team
Johns Hopkins Men's Lacrosse Team

Hopkins also has several notable Division III Athletic teams. 2006-2007 saw Hopkins winning the Centennial Conference titles in Baseball, Men's and Women's Soccer, Men's and Women's Tennis and Men's Basketball. Hopkins also has an acclaimed fencing team, which has ranked in the top three of Division III teams in the past few years and in both 2008 and 2007 defeated the University of North Carolina, a Division I team. In 2008 they defeated UNC by one bout, winning the MACFA championship. The Swimming team also has ranked in the top two of Division III for the last 10 years. The Men's Swimming team placed second at DIII Nationals in 2008. The Water Polo team has been number one in Division III for several of the past years, playing a full schedule against Division I opponents. Hopkins also has a century-old rivalry with McDaniel College (formerly Western Maryland College), playing the Green Terrors 83 times in football since the first game in 1894. In 2008, the Hopkins Blue Jays Baseball team played, and lost, in the final of the Division III College World Series.[41]

[edit] Lacrosse

The women's lacrosse team is also developing into a top ten calibre team, ranking number 8 in the 2007 Intercollegiate Women's Lacrosse Coaches Association (IWLCA) Poll for Division I. The team's losses in 2007 were to Princeton University, Georgetown University, the University of Maryland, the University of Pennsylvania, Vanderbilt University, Duke University, and Northwestern University (regular season and conference playoff).

The Lacrosse Museum and National Hall of Fame, maintained by US Lacrosse, is located on the Homewood campus and is adjacent to the home field for both the men's and women's lacrosse teams, Homewood Field. In the past, Johns Hopkins lacrosse teams have represented the United States in international competition. At the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam and 1932 Los Angeles Summer Olympics lacrosse demonstration events Hopkins represented the US and team members received Olympic Gold Medals. This was the only such accolade in the history of U.S. college sports. They have also gone to Melbourne, Australia to win the 1974 World Lacrosse Championship.

[edit] Presidents of Johns Hopkins

Gilman Hall, as seen from the Upper Quadrangle in the winter
Gilman Hall, as seen from the Upper Quadrangle in the winter

[edit] Notable alumni, professors, and staff

See: List of Johns Hopkins University people

[edit] Affiliates

  • The Johns Hopkins Institute for Policy Studies, located on the Homewood Campus, is a nationally renowned center for the study of public policy. The Institute forms partnerships with other programs at Johns Hopkins to offer concentrations, specializations, certificates, and dual degrees related to public policy.
  • The Johns Hopkins University Press is a publishing house and division of the Johns Hopkins University that engages in publishing journals and books. It was founded in 1878 and holds the distinction of being the oldest continuously running university press in the United States.
  • The Human Language Technology Center of Excellence was established in 2007 and focuses on advanced technology for automatically analyzing a wide range of speech, text, and document image data in multiple languages.

[edit] The university in popular culture

[edit] In non-fiction

Johns Hopkins defeated Duke University in the 2005 and 2007 Division I National Lacrosse Championship Finals as well as the 2008 semifinal
Johns Hopkins defeated Duke University in the 2005 and 2007 Division I National Lacrosse Championship Finals as well as the 2008 semifinal
  • Johns Hopkins University hospital is the focus of 'Hopkins', an ABC News' six-part series which takes an intimate look at the men and women who call The Johns Hopkins Hospital their home. Began June 26, 2008. [42]

[edit] In fiction

  • In the Will Ferrell comedy Step Brothers (2008), Ferrell's character learns that his new stepfather attended Johns Hopkins. Perhaps in an attempt to disparage the man, Ferrell then claims to know "Johnny Hopkins" personally, stating: "[I] smoked pot with Johnny Hopkins."[43]
  • In the television series The Twilight Zone (Season 1 Episode 12), the character Andrew L. Gaddis graduates from the Johns Hopkins University, claiming to have done so "without any real difficulty".
  • In the television series NCIS (TV series), Special Agent Timothy McGee graduated from MIT and has a BS in Biomedical Engineering from Johns Hopkins, revealed in the Episode 'Sub Rosa.'
  • In the television series Grey's Anatomy, the character Dr. Preston Burke is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and was first in his class. Dr. Erica Hahn, the cardiac surgeon who performed Denny Duquette's heart transplant, graduated from Hopkins, ranking second only to Dr. Burke.
  • In the movie The Prince and Me, the character Paige Morgan is accepted into the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
  • In the television series The Simpsons, Dr. Julius Hibbert is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
  • In the television series South Park episode "Britney's New Look," Butters, mistaken for a talking squirrel, is taken to Johns Hopkins for evaluation.
  • In the television series Gilmore Girls, Paris Geller applies to Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and the Doctor that takes care of Logan Huntzberger is a Johns Hopkins Graduate.
  • In the television series House, the character Dr. Eric Foreman is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Dr. Gregory House attended Johns Hopkins for undergraduate and medical school, but was thrown out of the medical school for cheating.
  • In the season two finale of Nip/Tuck (2003), Christian Troy and Sean McNamara visit Johns Hopkins to find out more about Ava Moore.
  • In the television series Judging Amy, the character Kyle McCarty had attended Johns Hopkins medical school before being expelled.
  • In the Tom Clancy novels, Jack Ryan's wife, Cathy Ryan, is a doctor at the Johns Hopkins Wilmer Eye Institute. In real life, Clancy created the Tom Clancy Professorship at Wilmer on April 8, 2005.
  • In the movie The Rock (1995), Dr. Stanley Goodspeed receives his M.A. and Ph. D from Johns Hopkins.
  • In the science fiction movie The Island (2005), the retinal scans of Lincoln Six Echo are sent to Johns Hopkins for analysis.
  • In the television series "Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman" during the Great American Medicine Show episode, Dr. Eli says he graduated from Johns Hopkins in 1848, even though the university was not founded until 1876.
  • In the American television show Commander in Chief, President Allen asks about the results of a recent "John" Hopkins study in episode 18.
  • In an episode of the science-fiction television series Stargate Atlantis, the character Dr. Beckett comments on an applicant to the Atlantis mission as being much more qualified in medicine than he. The applicant was from "John" Hopkins.
  • In the movie "Outbreak" (1995), Major Salt, the character played by Cuba Gooding Jr., received his master's degree from the Johns Hopkins University.
  • In the movie "Getting In", a college graduate ends up sixth on the waiting list for the Johns Hopkins Medical School and attempts to "dissuade" six people in front from attending.
  • In the Babylon 5 universe, JHU was where the gene for human telepathy was discovered.
  • Dr. Hanibal Lecter from the Lecter Trilogy by Thomas Harris attends the Johns Hopkins University after leaving Europe for America.
  • On the HBO drama The Wire, Baltimore Police Major Howard Colvin looks into a retirement job as deputy director of campus security for JHU.
  • In the 1990 novel Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton, Dr. Lewis Dodgson of Biosyn Corporation is said to have been expelled from Johns Hopkins as a graduate student for planning human gene therapy without permission from the Food and Drug Administration.
  • In the movie Casper, a 1995 film, Dr. Harvey is shown to be an alumnus of the Johns Hopkins University.
  • In the movie Species II (1998) Senator Ross offers to take his son Patrick to Johns Hopkins after the latter was infected with alien DNA.

For a number of other affiliated fictional characters, see List of Johns Hopkins University people#Fictional associations.

[edit] In film

  • The Nicole Kidman film The Invasion (film) (2007) was partly filmed in a laboratory in Mudd Hall on the Homewood campus.[44][45]
  • The film The Curve (1998) was filmed at the Homewood campus of the Johns Hopkins University.
  • The HBO film Something the Lord Made (2004) was filmed both on the Homewood campus and medical campus. However, the hospital depicted in the movie was actually the outside of Gilman Hall and Levering Hall located on the Homewood campus.

[edit] Photographs

[edit] References

  1. ^ "President Brody's release letter on June 12, 2008". WSJ.com (2007).
  2. ^ a b "At a Glance". Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved on 2008-04-15.
  3. ^ a b c "Hopkins Admissions", Johns Hopkins University (2007-03-05). Retrieved on 2008-04-15. 
  4. ^ www.jhu.edu/registrat/reports/fall07/headcount.pdf
  5. ^ "A Brief History of JHU". The Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved on 2006-08-28.
  6. ^ "On Campus: Johns Hopkins University". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved on 2006-11-14.
  7. ^ "Johns Hopkins Magazine". Johns Hopkins University (2007). Retrieved on 2007-01-01.
  8. ^ "Following the lead of the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, fifteen American institutions came to define the American research university..."
    Arizona State University president Michael Crow (November 2002). "Inaugural Address: "A New American University"". Arizona State University. Retrieved on 2006-08-28.
  9. ^ a b c "Johns Hopkins First in R&D Expenditures for 29th Year". Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved on 2008-09-15.
  10. ^ http://members.ucan-network.org/jhu | U-CAN: Johns Hopkins University :: Page 1
  11. ^ Laura Vozzella (2006-12-15). "Cheesecake on the Tart Side". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved on 2007-01-10.: "University spokesman Dennis O'Shea checked with Ross Jones, who was Eisenhower's assistant. And Jones confirmed it... Ross told O'Shea: 'I remember him telling me about it first thing after he got back. He was tickled with himself for picking up on it so quickly with that response. And then it became a legend! He would love the fact that it still has legs.'"
  12. ^ Headlines@Hopkins. "Commencement 2001". Retrieved on 2007-02-14.
  13. ^ "Krieger School of Arts & Sciences". Johns Hopkins University (2006). Retrieved on 2006-12-06.
  14. ^ a b U.S. News and World Report has also consistently ranked the school of public health #1 in the nation for many years. "What do you consider the top five terminal masters [sic] programs in international relations for students looking to pursue a policy career? [65% of respondents included Johns Hopkins.]" (p. 26)
    Peterson, Susan; Michael J. Tierney, Daniel Maliniak (August 2005). "Teaching and Research Practices, Views on the Discipline, and Policy Attitudes of International Relations Faculty at U.S. Colleges and Universities" (PDF).
    The study's results also appeared in Foreign Policy (Nov/Dec 2005).
  15. ^ a b "JHU Says 'Yes!'". Johns Hopkins University (2008). Retrieved on 2008-04-01.
  16. ^ "Johns Hopkins University Gazette". Johns Hopkins University (2008). Retrieved on 2008-02-13.
  17. ^ a b c d e "Johns Hopkins University Gazette April 2, 2007". Johns Hopkins University (2007). Retrieved on 2008-04-15.
  18. ^ Mitrano, Erica (2006-05-05). "Class of '10 Follows Competitive Trend", The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved on 2006-11-22. 
  19. ^ "America's Best Colleges 2009: National Universities Rankings". U.S. News and World Report (2008). Retrieved on 2008-08-21.
  20. ^ [In sidebar] "Johns Hopkins...Last year...Tie for 13th"
    Shapira, Ian (2006-08-21). "Ivy Rankings? Rah, Rah, Sis-Boom-Blah". The Washington Post. Retrieved on 2006-08-28.
  21. ^ U.S. News & World Report's Best Hospitals
  22. ^ "America's Best Graduate Schools 2007: Top Medical Schools". Retrieved on 2006-08-28.
  23. ^ Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing - School Facts
  24. ^ "Top 500 World Universities". Shanghai Jiao Tong University (2007). Retrieved on 2007-09-12.
  25. ^ "Johns Hopkins News Release - JHU". Johns Hopkins University (2001). Retrieved on 2007-01-01.
  26. ^ "Johns Hopkins First in R&D Expenditures for 28th Year". Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved on 2008-04-15.
  27. ^ The Johns Hopkins University: Nobel Prize Winners
  28. ^ "American Library Association Fact Sheet". ALA (2007). Retrieved on 2007-04-26.
  29. ^ "Charles Commons". Retrieved on 2006-08-07.
  30. ^ [1]
  31. ^ Turning, Robert. "Greek Grade Information, Spring 2008", Office of Student Development and Programming, Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved on 2008-08-22. 
  32. ^ Saxe, Lindsay (2001-09-14). "A Strange Law Exists in Maryland", Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved on 2006-11-22. 
  33. ^ Mikkelson, Barbara (2003-10-07). "House of the Writhing Son". Snopes.com. Retrieved on 2006-11-22.
  34. ^ “With the publication of the first of The Black and Blue Jay in November 1920“
    Sean DiGiovanna; Wendell O'Brien & Charlene Mendoza. "Records of The Black and Blue Jay/The Blue Jay". The Ferdinand Hamburger Archives, The Milton S. Eisenhower Library. Retrieved on 2006-08-07.
  35. ^ Kwon, Yong (1997-09-25). "Where did they get that darn Blue Jay?". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved on 2006-08-07.
  36. ^ Krut-Landau, Raphael (2006-11-02). "The Black and Blue Jay returns to campus with a vengeance". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter.
  37. ^ a b c "2008 JHU Sustainability Initiatives". Johns Hopkins University (2008). Retrieved on 2008-05-25.
  38. ^ a b c d e f "2007 National Sustainability Report" (PDF). Endowments Institute of America (2007). Retrieved on 2007-01-24.
  39. ^ "Computational Science and Engineering Building (CSEB)". Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved on 2007-10-27.
  40. ^ "Johns Hopkins to Renovate Gilman Hall". Johns Hopkins University. Retrieved on 2007-04-14.
  41. ^ http://www.titans.uwosh.edu/NCAAChampionship/2008/ | 2008 NCAA® Division III Baseball Championship, University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh Titans website
  42. ^ Hopkins | Home
  43. ^ "Focus on the Family's Plugged In Step Brothers Review". Retrieved on 2008-08-02.
  44. ^ "The Hedgecock Laboratory - Article". Retrieved on 2007-08-18.
  45. ^ "Invasion Movie - Invasion Trailer - Nicole Kidman - Daniel Craig - Visiting Movie". Retrieved on 2007-08-18.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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