In Brief

Maw opera 'Sophie's Choice' to have North American
premiere
The Washington National Opera last week announced a
2006-2007 lineup that includes the North American premiere
of Sophie's Choice by
Peabody faculty
member Nicholas Maw, a British-born composer. The opera,
based on the William Styron novel of the same name, was
first produced in 2002 by London's Royal Opera.
The production is scheduled for six performances in
September and October and will be conducted by Marin Alsop,
who this summer was named the next music director of the
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra.

University, hospital founder to be remembered on Dec. 24
Saturday, Dec. 24, is the 132nd anniversary of the day
on which Johns Hopkins made Johns Hopkins possible.
Mr. Hopkins, the Baltimore merchant who died that
morning in 1873, left $7 million in his will to establish
the university and hospital that bear his name. It was at
that time the nation's largest philanthropic bequest; it
was a gift destined to revolutionize higher education and
health care and, in many ways, to make the world a better
place.
Each Christmas Eve, members of the Johns Hopkins
family — descendants of his either by blood or by
association with the institutions he established —
gather at his grave to remember a great man and his great
act of generosity.
All faculty, staff and students are invited to join
the group when it meets this year at 10 a.m. on Dec. 24 in
Green Mount Cemetery. The brief, informal ceremony, led by
university Vice President and Secretary Emeritus Ross
Jones, will include remembrances of Mr. Hopkins and a
wreath laying. To reach the gravesite, enter at the main
gate along Greenmount Avenue, about five blocks south of
North Avenue; drive straight up the hill and park near the
crest. For more information, contact dro@jhu.edu.

Moravia materials remain available during move to new
facility
In a move that began Nov. 14 and continues through
Dec. 16, all materials at the Moravia Park Shelving
Facility are being relocated to the new JHU Libraries
Service Center on the campus of the Applied Physics
Laboratory. During the move all services will remain
available, and readers should continue to submit their
requests in the usual manner.
The new Libraries Service Center has the latest in
environmental conditions for housing library materials
along with an efficient new workspace to quickly process
requests. Users can depend on the once-per-day delivery
service to the Welch Library and on electronic posting of
periodical articles shelved at the LSC. As materials are
moved, their new location, "Libraries Service Center," will
appear in the JHU Libraries online catalog, found at
catalog.library.jhu.edu.
For more information, contact Deborah Slinghuff,
associate director for library services and collections, at
410-516-8254.

Vernon Rice Memorial Butterball Turkey Program
continues
Contributions to the university's Vernon Rice Memorial
Butterball Turkey Program, which helps families in need
during the December holidays, are being accepted until
Friday, Dec. 16. A donation of $15 purchases a Butterball
gift certificate, which is given directly to an
agency-identified family; checks or money orders should be
made payable to JHU Butterball and sent or delivered to the
Office of Faculty, Staff and Retiree Programs, Evergreen
House, 3rd floor, 4545 N. Charles St., Baltimore, MD
21210.
For more information, go to
www.jhu.edu/hr1/fsrp/butterball.html or contact Matt
Smith at
mattsmith@jhu.edu or 410-516-0345.

JHPIEGO sponsors global meeting on cervical cancer
screening
Cervical cancer is the leading cause of death among
women in developing countries, and last week more than 100
leading clinical experts and reproductive health
professionals from the United States, Asia, Africa and
Latin America convened in Bangkok, Thailand, to address
cervical cancer prevention in low-resource settings. The
meeting, "Preventing Cervical Cancer: From Research to
Practice," was sponsored by
JHPIEGO, in
collaboration with the Chulalongkorn University Faculty of
Medicine.
Hosted by the Royal Thai Ministry of Public Health and
JHPIEGO President and CEO Leslie D. Mancuso, the panel of
speakers — which included Paul D. Blumenthal,
professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine; Khunying
Kobchitt Limpaphayom, JHPIEGO's Cervical Cancer Project
director and a faculty member of Chulalongkorn University;
and representatives from the World Health Organization
— discussed innovative cervical cancer screening
techniques and how to implement a high-quality, sustainable
program.
JHPIEGO's Cervical Cancer Prevention Program has
demonstrated that a "single visit approach" using visual
inspection with acetic acid, linked with cryotherapy
treatment, is safe, acceptable, feasible and
cost-effective, therefore offering significant public
health benefits in countries where no preventive efforts
exist.
Funding for the meeting was provided by the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation and Glaxo Smith Kline and Digene.

Deadlines are today, Dec. 12, for last 'Gazette' issue of
semester
Because of the upcoming midyear vacation, The Gazette
will not be published Dec. 26 or Jan. 9. Next week's
calendar will include events scheduled from Monday, Dec.
19, through Monday, Jan. 9. The deadline for that issue's
calendar submissions and classified ads is noon today, Dec.
12.
GO TO DECEMBER 12,
2005
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
GO TO THE GAZETTE
FRONT PAGE.
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