In Brief

'The Gazette' adds four-color printing, redesigns Web
site
With the first issue of the 2003-2004 academic year,
the 33-year-old Gazette is moving to four-color printing on
a regular basis. In addition, several design changes have
been instituted, including the use of a more
reader-friendly sans serif typeface, which appears in
captions and several other regular usages.
On the Web (
www.jhu/edu/~gazette), readers will find a new, lively,
easy-to-navigate Gazette home page that provides access to
all the paper's current editorial content, back issues,
electronic forms for submitting calendar events and
classifieds, and links to Blue Jays athletics, local
weather and frequently used Johns Hopkins Web sites,
including the universitywide calendar. A link to the search
engine is provided on all pages.
Any feedback is welcome. Please send your comments and
suggestions to
[email protected].

Johns Hopkins moves up again in 'U.S. News'
rankings
Johns Hopkins moved up a notch again this year in the
U.S. News & World Report annual rankings of the top
25 national universities, sharing the No. 14 spot with
Cornell. Last year, Hopkins and Rice tied at No. 15. The
previous year, Hopkins tied at No. 16 with Brown.
The top spot this year was shared by Harvard and
Princeton, followed by Yale and MIT. The No. 5 spot was
held by Caltech, Duke, Stanford and Penn.
In the rankings of best undergraduate engineering
programs among schools whose highest degree is a Ph.D.,
Hopkins moved up two notches, landing at 13 in a tie with
Northwestern and Wisconsin. Last year, it shared the No. 15
spot with Penn State, RPI, Texas A&M and Virginia Tech.
For a complete list of the magazine's 2004 rankings,
go to
http://www.usnews.com

International Nursing is theme of annual JHU
conference
International Nursing is the theme of the annual Johns
Hopkins Nurses' Alumni Association education program to be
held on Friday, Sept. 19.
The conference will take place from 8:15 a.m. to 1:30
p.m. at the School of
Nursing.
Speakers will be the Hon. Linda Tarr-Whelan, former
ambassador to the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women,
whose topic is "Nurses and International Health Policy";
Mary Lou Fisher, emergency medicine nurse practitioner at
JHH, "A Nurse Practitioner Involved in International Health
Care"; Joe Capozzoli, child psychiatry nurse manager at
JHH, "Lessons Learned: Psychological Relief for Children
and Adolescents"; Kathy Hale, risk manager at JHH,
"Operation Smile"; and, from the School of Nursing,
instructors Sara Groves and Phyllis Mason and assistant
professor Beth Sloand on "Haiti: An International
Opportunity for Nursing Practice and Education."
The program will conclude with the Doris Armstrong
Luncheon Forum featuring Nancy McKelvey, chief nurse at the
American Red Cross' national headquarters.
The conference is sponsored by the Johns Hopkins
Nurses' Alumni Association, the Institute for Johns Hopkins
Nursing and the School of Nursing. Cost for the day is $85,
$75 for Hopkins School of Nursing alumni and $25 for
students; $25 for the Doris Armstrong Forum and luncheon
only. For registration information, contact Melinda Rose at
[email protected]
or 410-955-4285.

Peabody Prep announces adult workshops for coming
year
The Peabody Prep's Adult Studies Division has
announced its lineup of adult workshops for the coming
academic year. All held on Saturdays, the one- or
two-session programs are Romantic Era Piano Music;
20th-Century American Art Song; La Boheme and La Traviata:
Two Girls, Two Worlds, One Fate; and Ba Duan Jin Seminar, a
study of exercises designed to develop inner power, enhance
health and promote a long life.
Registration fees begin at $20 ($150 for eight
workshops if received by Sept. 26). For details, call
410-269-5343.

Art historian looks at landscape tradition in American
art
Susan Ross, a doctoral candidate in the
Art History Department, will
present a gallery talk titled "The Landscape Tradition in
American Art" on Sunday, Sept. 7, at
Evergreen House. The talk is presented in conjunction
with Maggie Thomas: The Evergreen Paintings and Mary
Woodall: Elements and Other Work, a dual show exploring how
two artists use different media to examine encounters with
the natural world.
In her talk on the development of American landscape
painting, Ross will examine the ability of landscape
imagery to evoke in the viewer a sense of national identity
and shared experience. By surveying the evolution of
landscape imagery from the 19th century to the present day,
Ross will explore the change from realist depictions of the
American landscape to more abstracted ones alongside
related shifts in the organization of American society.
The gallery talk, to begin at 2 p.m. in the Bakst
Theatre, is free and open to the public. Admission to the
museum is free for members of Evergreen House, $6 for
adults, $5 for seniors and $3 for students and children
over 6; admission to see only the exhibitions is $3. The
Thomas and Woodall exhibitions are on display through Sept.
14.

Correction
Charlene Moore Hayes' current position was stated
incorrectly in the caption accompanying her photograph in
the Aug. 18 Gazette. Hayes, who has been named vice
president for human resources at Johns
Hopkins, is now associate vice chancellor for human
resources at N.C. State.
GO TO SEPTEMBER 2,
2003
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
GO TO THE GAZETTE
FRONT PAGE.
|