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The newspaper of The Johns Hopkins University October 2, 2006 | Vol. 36 No. 5

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  FRONT PAGE
 

A new approach for United Way
Shorter campaigns, more personal approach are hallmarks for 2006


Jim Zeller and Frank Bossle led a Johns Hopkins team that participated last week in United Way's "Share Yourself Makeover Challenge."

Utilizing a more streamlined and personal approach than in previous years, Johns Hopkins' three 2006 campaigns for United Way of Central Maryland — for the university, Johns Hopkins Medicine and the Applied Physics Laboratory — will either kick off or swing into high gear this month. (SAIS' donations are reported to the Washington National Capital Area campaign.)
Full story...

 

Internet2 takes JHM to India
Imagine Johns Hopkins faculty members performing microsurgery in Tanzania from a computer terminal in a Baltimore operating room, or health care experts in Vietnam presenting an avian influenza patient to medical students gathered in the Johns Hopkins Outpatient Center.
Full story...

Experts: Protect most vulnerable from flu pandemic
The influenza pandemic of 1918 killed more than 50 million people. In the face of the possibility that another virulent pandemic might occur, a group of international experts convened by Johns Hopkins is urgently calling on policy-makers and public health officials to disseminate a new set of principles to better take into account the interests of those who will be the worst affected: the world's most poor and disadvantaged.
Full story...

  OTHER NEWS
 

Thinking Out Loud: Thank you, Rotary International

Time Out With... Tim Phelps, medical illustrator and flame painter

Rainy-day friends

Evergreen House celebrates art, wine, food of Italy

CSOS grants will support work with Baltimore Head Starts

APL-built mineral-mapping imager begins mission at Mars

SAIS to inaugurate U.S.-Korea Institute

Whole-genome scan for OCD links reveals genetic susceptibility

Tracking computer-based med errors improves patient safety

Model predicts colon cancer's inheritable defects

Hopkins lab scientists identify, tame overactive CF protein

     

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