2005 Index ◆ 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2005 Index ◆ 1 ◆ 2005 Index 1 “Saving the Stories,” Dec 46–47 Exhibits report, Aug 70–72 Albany (Oreg.) PL Inaugural banquet, Aug 60 2005 Index “Silence Is Olden,” Jan 48–51 Opening session, Aug 58 Alexander, Linda B., Aug 14 Programs, Jn/Jl 56–65 “The Importance of Workplace Speech,” Oct Registration and information, Jan 93–107 41 Report, Aug 53–69 Alford, Larry, (photo) Feb 43 Restaurant guide, Jn/Jl 66–70, (response) Author/subject index to volume 36, numbers Alfred Dickey PL, Jamestown, N. Dak., Oct 51 Aug 38–39 1–11 (January–December 2005). Indexed by Algeria, Mar 22 Scholarship Bash, Apr 8 Jennifer Henderson. Alire, Camila, (photo) Jan 13 Annual Conference (2006), Oct 38, Dec 33 Alito, Samuel A., Jr., Dec 11 “Fate Uncertain for Annual in New Or- Allegheny County (Pa.) Library Association, May leans,” Oct 6 A 20 “New Orleans It Is!” Nov 7 Abeel, Samantha, (photo) Sep 60 Allen, Gerald, Jan 33 Registration and information, Dec 74–85 Abercrombie, Karen, (photo) Apr 20 Allen, Kirsten L., (responses) Mar 28–29, Apr 26 “What It Would Mean to Miss New Or- Abercrombie, Suzanne, (photo) Feb 41 Allen County (Ind.) PL, (photo) May 14 leans,” Oct 39 Abeysinghe, W. A., (photo) Feb 11 Allende, Isabel, (photo) Jan 21 Annual Report (2003–2004), Jn/Jl 12 Ables, David, Feb 13 Alliance Defense Fund, Aug 27–28 Campaign for America’s Libraries, Mar 62 Abraham, Philip, Feb 17 Alliance Library System, East Peoria, Ill., (photo) “Investor Education @ your library,” Jn/Jl Abraham Lincoln Bicentennial Commission, Sep 8 Aug 64 12 Abram, Stephen, Apr 9, (photo) Aug 34 Allied Professional Association (ALA), Mar 59, 63, “Join the Major Leagues @ your library,” Abrams, Floyd, (photo) Aug 64 Jn/Jl 78 (photo) Jan 9, Feb 8, Apr 8, Jn/Jl 12 Abramson, Ilene, (photo) Jn/Jl 12 Academic Libraries Working Group, Jn/Jl 13 Logos in Italian, (photo) Jan 10 Academic librarians, Jn/Jl 13 Advocacy video, Jan 9 “Looking Back, Moving Forward @ your “Professional Values: Priceless,” Jan 52–55, Awards, Sep 70, Dec 7 library,” Jn/Jl 75–77 (response) Mar 28 “Certification Draws Closer,” Aug 74, Dec 55 “Many Voices, One Nation,” Mar 5, 45 See also specific institutions Certification program, Jan 8–9, Sep 6, Nov 9 “Put It in Writing @ your library,” Apr 8 Access to information, Mar 11, Dec 11 “Developments, Donations, and Deficits,” Aug Chapters, May 5, 8, Aug 6, 10 “Documents to the People,” Aug 42–44, (re- 76 See also specific state and regional chap- sponse) Oct 40 “Why Library Education Matters—Part Two,” ters “Google Print vs. Onsite Collections,” Aug 45– Sep 5, (responses) Oct 38, Nov 40 Council 46, (responses) Sep 32, Oct 40 Alloway, Cathi, Aug 16 Additional nominees, Mar 6, Jn/Jl 8 Porn surfing problem, Apr 14, 16 Allyn, Richard, Feb 19 Biannual report, Mar 58–60, (response) “A View from the Right,” Jan 46, (response) Alpers, Rhiannon, (photo) Jn/Jl 31 May 28, Aug 73–75 Mar 28 Alquilar, Maria, Oct 30 Candidates sought, May 6–7 “What’s It All About? Beyond Equity of Ac- Amazon.com, Feb 6 2006 nominees, Dec 9 cess,” Nov 5 “Amazon, Random House, Microsoft Announce Counsel, Feb 6 Accessibility, (photo) Oct 30 Online-Books Initiatives,” Dec 16 Demographic survey, May 8 “Accommodating All Comers,” Jn/Jl 50 American Association of Law Libraries, Mar 11, Dues increase, Dec 5, 6, 54 “Digital Library Services for All,” Sep 46–49, Apr 6 Election dates, Mar 8, Dec 8 (response) Oct 39–40 American Association of Museums, Sep 6 Election process, Jn/Jl 8, Dec 8 Accreditation, Committee on (ALA) American Association of School Librarians (ALA), Election results (2006), Jn/Jl 6–8 Accreditation actions, Apr 7, Sep 6–7 Jan 9, Jn/Jl 10, 12 Endowment, Feb 7, Mar 58 Accreditation standards, Aug 5, (responses) Awards, Sep 61 Executive Board Oct 38, Nov 40 Hurricane Katrina Library Relief Fund, Oct 17 Quarterly report, Mar 62–63, (correction) Adams, Helen R. InfoLit discussion list, Oct 10 Apr 29, Jn/Jl 78–79, Aug 76–77, Dec “Have MLS, Will Travel,” Nov 54–56, (re- Information Power Action Research Project, 54–55 sponse) Dec 40 Sep 40–41 Executive Director Adams, Lisa, Mar 34 National Conference (2005), Feb 8, Nov 32– “Why ‘Business as Usual’ Just Won’t Do,” Adams, Necola, Apr 15 33 Nov 6 Adams, Marcia, (photo) Dec 56 National School Library Media Program of the Freedom to Read statement Adler, Allan R., Aug 15 Year Award, Jn/Jl 12 “The Scoop on Patron Privacy,” Feb 30–32, Advocacy, Jan 5, Mar 47, May 5, Aug 57–58 No Child Left Behind brochure, Jan 8, Apr 10 (response) Apr 26 Advocacy webinar, Aug 10 Partnership for 21st Century Skills, May 7–8 Goals and emphases “Getting Out the Vote in Fargo,” Jan 79 School Library Media Month, Oct 10 “Why ‘Business as Usual’ Just Won’t Do,” “Grassroots Advocacy Works,” Jn/Jl 5 Supports DOE education plan, Mar 6–7 Nov 6 “Looking Back, Moving Forward @ your li- 3M Salute to Schools project, Feb 8 Graphics, Mar 8, (response) Jn/Jl 40–41, Sep brary,” Jn/Jl 75–77 American Bar Association 8, Nov 7 “Stand Up for Libraries,” Jn/Jl 46–50 Patriot Debates, Apr 10 Hurricane Katrina Library Relief Fund, Oct 17, “Straight Answers from Kerry Healey,” Jan 38 American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expres- Nov 7, Dec 6–7 See also American Library Association, Cam- sion, Aug 21 Library Bill of Rights, Jn/Jl 22–24 paign for America’s Libraries American Civil Liberties Union, Mar 11, Jn/Jl 18, Membership, Mar 47, May 6 Afghanistan, Nov 26 Aug 21, Sep 11, Oct 12, Nov 13, Dec 11, 20 Membership meetings, Mar 62, Jn/Jl 8, Aug African Americans American Council on Education, Dec 13 55–56 Civil Rights movement, Apr 16–17 American Libraries Midwinter Meeting (2005), (response) May “A Dream Deferred: School Libraries and Seg- Annual index, Jan 10 29 regation,” Feb 33–35 Full-text online through Ebrary, May 8 Exhibits report, Mar 54–57 “Schomburg Launches Black Migration Site,” “New Job-Ad Site to Launch This Fall,” Jn/Jl 10 Preview, Jan 64–70 (photo) Mar 16 American Library Association Registration totals, Mar 48 Age discrimination, (response) Jan 42 ALA Ahead to 2010 plan, Mar 46, Nov 6, Dec Report, Mar 44–53, (correction) Apr 29 Aguiñaga, José, (photo) Aug 73 54 Restaurant guide, Jan 72–74 Aiani, Candace, Nov 54–56 ALA’s Attic, Mar 6 Midwinter meeting (2006) Akin, Lynn, (photo) Sep 53 Annual Conference (2005), (response) Aug 38 Registration and information, Sep 88–93, Akron–Summit County (Ohio) PL, (photo) Apr 38 Attendance figures, Aug 67 Oct 90–101 Alabama antigay bill, Jan 33 Book cart drill team, (photo) Aug 63 Nominations sought, Sep 7–8 Alabama Library Association, Mar 7, Dec 6 “Books Still Key Conference Draw,” Jn/Jl Online communities, Mar 6, 63 Alabama Public Library Service, Oct 20 112 Policy on disaster assistance, Apr 6 Alabama Women’s Hall of Fame, Apr 16 Conference-at-a-Glance, Aug 61 “What Is ALA Doing about It?” Feb 27 Alaska Library Association, May 5, Dec 46 Conference within a Conference, Aug 56, Policy on governmental intimidation Alaska Sisters in Crime, May 19 (response) Aug 39 “The Scoop on Patron Privacy,” Feb 30–32, Alaskan natives Exhibit locator, Jn/Jl 72–74 (response) Apr 26 American Libraries ◆ 2005 Annual Index 2 ◆ 2005 Index Poor people’s policy, May 6, Aug 61, (re- Awards, Sep 67 mation Science Students, Feb 8 sponse) Sep 32 Association of American Publishers Mora, Estela and Raúl, Award winner, Dec 8 Presidential candidates “How a Book Gets Published,” May 27 Newbery, John, Medal winner, (photo) Mar Announced for 2007, Dec 6 “Publishers Question Google Print Library 47, 48 Answer questions at Midwinter, (photo) Project,” Aug 15–16, Sep 17, Nov 22–23, Inaccurate list on Amazon.com, Feb 6 Mar 66–68, (response) May 27–28 Dec 14 Printz, Michael L., Award winner, Mar 48 Candidates sought, May 6–7 Association of American University Presses Round Table awards, Sep 69–70 Statements, Mar 64–65 “Publishers Question Google Print Library Schneider Family Book, Award winners, Mar Read posters, (photo) Jan 8, (photo) Apr 6 Project,” Aug 15–16 50, Sep 60 Treasurer’s reports, Mar 58–59 Association of College and Research Libraries Sibert, Robert F., Award winner, Mar 48 Voter registration project, Jan 8 (ALA), Feb 7 Stonewall Book Awards, Oct 10 Website, Jan 8 Awards, Sep 61–63 Sullivan Award winner, Sep 55–56 See also specific divisions and offices “Fine-Tuning Your Field of Focus,” May 63 Thomson Gale Financial Development Award American Veterans in Defense of Democracy, IMLS grant, Sep 6 winner, Sep 66 (photo) Nov 21 InfoLit discussion list, Oct 10 Wilder, Laura Ingalls, Award winner, Mar 48 Americans for Libraries Council, Apr 21–22 Institute for Information Literacy, Nov 9 Wilson, H. W., Library Staff Development “Telling Their Own Stories,” Apr 72–74 National conference (2005), Jn/Jl 14–15 Grant winner, Sep 68 See also Libraries for the Future “New Job-Ad Site to Launch This Fall,” Jn/Jl 10 Awasom, Innocent Afuh, (response) Apr 27 Amirkhani, Gholamreza, (photo) Apr 17, 29 Preconference (2006) on libraries, archives, Azerbaijan, Feb 21 AmRhein, Richard, Jan 49 and museums, Sep 6 “Aid to Struggling Libraries in the South Cau- Amsterdam Marathon, Oct 10 Scholarly communication toolkit, Jn/Jl 13 casus,” Sep 24–25 Andersen, Hans Christian Virtual Conference (2006), Dec 8 Azis, Bachtiar, Feb 11 “Hans Christian Andersen’s Birthday Bash,” Jn/ Association of Research Libraries, Apr 6 Azrieli, Stephanie, Jan 34 Jl 36 Association of Specialized and Cooperative Li- Anderson, Avery, (photo) Aug 70 brary Agencies (ALA), Jn/Jl 7 B Anderson, Eva, Mar 33 Awards, Sep 65 Babanoury, Betty, Aug 18–20 Anderson, Floyd Survey of library networks, Nov 8–9 Babar, Mohammed Junaid, Mar 10, Oct 13 “How to Sell the Public on a New Community Astin, Sean, (photo) Mar 16 Bacon, Bridget Library,” Apr 66 Asturrizaga, Sebastian, (photo) Oct 31 “Success the Second Time Around,” Apr 64–66 Anderson, Karen, (photo) Sep 44 @ your library.
Recommended publications
  • Peabody Computer Music: 46 Years of Looking to the Future
    ICMC 2015 – Sept. 25 - Oct. 1, 2015 – CEMI, University of North Texas Peabody Computer Music: 46 Years of Looking to the Future Dr. Geoffrey Wright Dr. McGregor Boyle Mr. Joshua Armenta Peabody Computer Music Peabody Computer Music Peabody Computer Music [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] Mr. Ryan Woodward Ms. Sunhuimei Xia Peabody Computer Music Peabody Computer Music [email protected] [email protected] ABSTRACT and tape). In addition, there were compositions by three of her former students: McGregor Boyle, Scott Pender, and Ge- There are many significant firsts in the history of Peabody offrey Wright. In between the performances friends and for- Computer Music (PCM). It is the first electronic and com- mer students of Ivey shared their memories of her–resulting in puter music studio in a conservatory in the United States [1]. a touching tribute to this wonderful composer, teacher, men- Peabody itself is the first conservatory of music in the U.S., tor, and friend. [1] and our parent institution, the Johns Hopkins University, is America’s first research university [2]. For 46 years PCM has been training highly-skilled musi- cians to use computers and technology for composition, per- formance, and music-related research. We work within the context of a conservatory that prizes the great accomplish- ments of the past even as we develop new musical vocabular- ies and techniques for the expressive musician of the future. New dean Fred Bronstein is a vital force in leading the old- est music conservatory in the U.S. into the 21st century [3].
    [Show full text]
  • Open Merfeldlangston.Pdf
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School Department of French and Francophone Studies THE VILLAGES DU LIVRE: LOCAL IDENTITY, CULTURAL POLITICS, AND PRINT CULTURE IN CONTEMPORARY FRANCE A Thesis in French by Audra Lynn Merfeld-Langston © 2007 Audra Lynn Merfeld-Langston Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 2007 The thesis of Audra Lynn Merfeld-Langston was reviewed and approved* by the following: Willa Z. Silverman Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies and Jewish Studies Thesis Advisor Chair of Committee Thomas A. Hale Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of African, French, and Comparative Literature Head of the Department of French and Francophone Studies Greg Eghigian Associate Professor of Modern European History Jennifer Boittin Assistant Professor of French, Francophone Studies and History and Josephine Berry Weiss Early Career Professor in the Humanities *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School iii ABSTRACT Over the past several decades, the cultural phenomenon of the villages du livre has exploded throughout the Hexagon. Taking their cue from the original book town, Hay-on-Wye, in Wales, rural French communities once in danger of disappearing have reclaimed their economic future and their heritage. Founded in 1961, Hay-on-Wye has served as a model for other towns to establish a used book trade, organize literary festivals, and promote the practice of traditional book arts that include calligraphy, binding, paper-making, and printing. In the French villages du livre of Bécherel (Bretagne), Montolieu (Languedoc), Fontenoy-la-Joûte (Lorraine), Montmorillon (Poitou-Charentes), and La Charité-sur-Loire (Bourgogne), ancillary enterprises such as museums, bookstores, cafés, and small hotels now occupy buildings that had stood vacant for years.
    [Show full text]
  • Concept and Types of Tourism
    m Tourism: Concept and Types of Tourism m m 1.1 CONCEPT OF TOURISM Tourism is an ever-expanding service industry with vast growth potential and has therefore become one of the crucial concerns of the not only nations but also of the international community as a whole. Infact, it has come up as a decisive link in gearing up the pace of the socio-economic development world over. It is believed that the word tour in the context of tourism became established in the English language by the eighteen century. On the other hand, according to oxford dictionary, the word tourism first came to light in the English in the nineteen century (1811) from a Greek word 'tomus' meaning a round shaped tool.' Tourism as a phenomenon means the movement of people (both within and across the national borders).Tourism means different things to different people because it is an abstraction of a wide range of consumption activities which demand products and services from a wide range of industries in the economy. In 1905, E. Freuler defined tourism in the modem sense of the world "as a phenomena of modem times based on the increased need for recuperation and change of air, the awakened, and cultivated appreciation of scenic beauty, the pleasure in. and the enjoyment of nature and in particularly brought about by the increasing mingling of various nations and classes of human society, as a result of the development of commerce, industry and trade, and the perfection of the means of transport'.^ Professor Huziker and Krapf of the.
    [Show full text]
  • Johns Hopkins University Style Guide Contents Introduction Names
    JHU Office of Communications Style Guide page 1 Johns Hopkins University Style Guide Contents • Introduction • Names: Johns Hopkins University and its divisions • Style guidelines Introduction These guidelines were compiled by editors in the Office of Communications to encourage consistency and correct usage of terms across the many publications produced by JHU offices. The guidelines draw from The Associated Press Stylebook 2019 and the 17th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style. Written from a Johns Hopkins point of view, the guidelines are intended to complement AP and CMOS and, when those sources disagree, to choose between them. For points not addressed in the university guidelines, AP is the preferred source. For points not listed in AP, use the dictionary it recommends: Webster’s New World College Dictionary. When the dictionary gives two spellings, use the first one; when the dictionary and AP give different spellings, use AP’s. A number of individual JHU publications have their own style sheets, more detailed and directed to handling specialized content. Johns Hopkins Medicine, for example, has posted its Branding and Use of Name Toolkit http://brand.hopkinsmedicine.org/gui/content.asp. The guidelines below will supplement those already existing and will contribute to the effort to bring overall consistency to university publications. Names: Johns Hopkins University and its divisions The Johns Hopkins University/The Johns Hopkins Hospital: The preferred shortened name for Johns Hopkins University is Johns Hopkins, not Hopkins. The acronym JHU can be used as a shortened form in informal or internal communications and to avoid repetition of the Hopkins name.
    [Show full text]
  • Freshman Fellows: Implementing and Assessing a First-Year Primary-Source Research Program
    Library Impact Practice Brief Freshman Fellows: Implementing and Assessing a First-Year Primary-Source Research Program Research Team Members: Margaret Burri, Joshua Everett, Heidi Herr, and Jessica Keyes Sheridan Libraries, Johns H opkins Univ ersity July 15, 2021 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Association of Research Libraries 21 Dupont Circle NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036 (202) 296-2296 | ARL.org Issue Libraries spend significant time and money collecting and making Special Collections materials available to researchers. A critical piece of this work is teaching students how to engage with rare and unique materials to answer research questions and make new contributions to knowledge. Five years ago, to give scholars starting their college journey the chance to conduct original research, the Sheridan Libraries at Johns Hopkins University established a Freshman Fellows (FF) program1 that partners first-year students with their own curatorial mentor for a one-year research project. This program graduated its first cohort of four fellows in spring 2020, and the research team designed an assessment project to see how this experience impacted the fellows’ studies and co-curricular activities at Johns Hopkins, as well as the mentors’ approach to the program and their larger work in Special Collections. Additionally, the team realized that the program would benefit from a structured way to review the fellows’ final projects, so we added the development of an assessment rubric (Appendix 4). A former colleague, Steph Gamble, suggested mapping various pedagogical measures, including the Association of College & Research Libraries (ACRL) Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education,2 into a rubric to be used to evaluate the work.
    [Show full text]
  • Teaching by the Book: the Culture of Reading in the George Peabody Library Gabrielle Dean
    JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY Teaching by the Book: The Culture of Reading in the George Peabody Library Gabrielle Dean First, there is a gasp or sigh; then the wide-eyed ing Culture in the Nineteenth-Century Library,” viewer slowly circumnavigates the building. In the which examined the intersections of the public George Peabody Library, one of the Johns Hopkins library movement, nineteenth-century book his- University’s rare book libraries, I often witness this tory and popular literature in order to describe the awe-struck response to the architecture. The library culture of reading in nineteenth-century America. interior, made largely of cast iron, illuminated by a I designed this semester-long course with two com- huge skylight and decorated with gilded neo-Gothic plementary aims in mind. and Egyptian elements, was completed in 1878 and First, I wanted to develop a new model for teach- fully expresses the aspirations of the age. It is gaudy ing American literature. Instead of proceeding from and magnificent, and it never fails to impress visitors. a set of texts deemed significant by twenty-first cen- The contents of the library are equally symbolic tury critics, our syllabus drew from the Peabody’s and grand, but less visible. The Peabody first opened collections to gain insight into what was actually to the Baltimore public in 1866 as part of the Pea- purchased, promoted and read in the nineteenth body Institute, an athenaeum-like venture set up by century. Moreover, there was no artificial separa- the philanthropist George Peabody; it originally in- tion between the texts we examined and their mate- cluded a lecture series and an art gallery in addition rial contexts.
    [Show full text]
  • Effects of Tourist Investments On
    THE EFFECTS OF TOURISM INVESTMENTS ON POVERTY REDUCTION IN RURAL COMMUNITIES IN TANZANIA: THE CASE OF SERENGETI DISTRICT BY RAPHAEL NYAKABAGA MALEYA A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF ARTS IN RURAL DEVELOPMENT OF SOKOINE UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE. MOROGORO, TANZANIA. 2009 ii ABSTRACT Tanzania is among the few countries in the world endowed with vast range of tourist attractions. The tourism industry is Tanzania’s greatest success story since the introduction of free market economy in 1990s. Despite its impressive recent economic performance, Tanzania remains a poor country. The purpose of this study was therefore to assess the effects of tourism investments on poverty reduction in rural communities in Serengeti district. The specific objectives were to: identify types of tourism investments; examine the effects of tourism investments; and determine the potential tourism development investments. Data were collected from 124 respondents, including 100 community members household heads and 24 key informants using questionnaires, researcher’s diary and checklist. Quantitative data were analysed by using SPSS computer software and “content analysis technique” was used to analyse qualitative data. The study identified different types of tourism investments in rural communities in the study area, their effects on poverty reduction, and potential for tourism investments development. It was concluded that: employment opportunities for rural communities were low in cadres with skills
    [Show full text]
  • Books in Book Towns
    Regenerating Regional Culture: A Study of the International Book Town Movement Jane Elizabeth Frank BA (Hons) The University of Queensland MBus (Arts Mgt) Queensland University of Technology School of Humanities Arts, Education and Law Griffith University Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy September 2015 Declaration This work has not previously been submitted for a degree or diploma in any university. To the best of my knowledge and belief, this thesis contains no material previously published or written by another person except where due reference is made in the thesis itself. Jane Frank September 2015 ii Abstract This thesis explores the international Book Town Movement that, from its beginnings in the small Welsh market town of Hay-on-Wye in the early 1960s, has escalated to incorporate more than 50 villages and towns in 27 countries. This phenomenon has enabled peripheral communities in Europe and across the globe to reclaim their economic futures and impact on the cultural sphere as increasingly powerful sites and sources of creativity. This study seeks to understand the reasons for this renaissance of interest in the preservation of traditional print culture in the countryside at a point in history when the book publishing industry is in a state of flux as it adapts to new digital technologies and globalisation of markets, leading to a clarification of the relationship between new books and the second-hand book economy. At the centre of this investigation is an acknowledgement of the book as a unique item of cultural consumption and a catalyst in book town creation – at once a remarkable artefact and a springboard for contemporary cultural debate.
    [Show full text]
  • Everything You Wanted to Know About America's First Research University
    Everything you wanted to know about America’s first research university Information current as of April 2018 We began by asking big questions. JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY FACT BOOK RESEARCHFIVE FACTS IN ABOUT 24 TIME JOHNS ZONES HOPKINS AND 70 UNIVERSITY COUNTRIES “What are we aiming at?” 1. The university’s graduate programs in 3. It is the leading U.S. academic institution public health, nursing, biomedical in total research and development engineering, medicine, and education are spending. In fiscal year 2016, the university That’s the question Daniel Coit Gilman asked in 1876, considered among the best in the country, performed $2.431 billion in medical, science, and at his inauguration as Johns Hopkins University’s first according to U.S. News & World Report. The engineering research. It has ranked No. 1 in higher president. His answer, in part: “The encouragement master’s and doctoral programs in public health, education research spending for the 38th year in a the graduate program in biomedical engineering, row, according to the National Science Foundation. of research . and the advancement of individual and the master’s program in nursing all rank No. 1. The university also ranks first on the NSF’s list scholars, who by their excellence will advance the sci- The program in internal medicine is tied at No. 1. for federally funded research and development, ences they pursue, and the society where they dwell.” The Doctor of Nursing Practice program is No. 2. spending $2.104 billion in fiscal year 2016 on Gilman believed that teaching and research are The School of Medicine as at No.
    [Show full text]
  • B-967 Peabody Institute Conservatory & George Peabody Library
    B-967 Peabody Institute Conservatory & George Peabody Library Architectural Survey File This is the architectural survey file for this MIHP record. The survey file is organized reverse- chronological (that is, with the latest material on top). It contains all MIHP inventory forms, National Register nomination forms, determinations of eligibility (DOE) forms, and accompanying documentation such as photographs and maps. Users should be aware that additional undigitized material about this property may be found in on-site architectural reports, copies of HABS/HAER or other documentation, drawings, and the “vertical files” at the MHT Library in Crownsville. The vertical files may include newspaper clippings, field notes, draft versions of forms and architectural reports, photographs, maps, and drawings. Researchers who need a thorough understanding of this property should plan to visit the MHT Library as part of their research project; look at the MHT web site (mht.maryland.gov) for details about how to make an appointment. All material is property of the Maryland Historical Trust. Last Updated: 03-10-2011 Maryland Historical Trust Inventory No. B-967 Maryland Inventory of EASEMENT Historic Properties Form 1. Name of Property (indicate preferred name) historic Peabody Institute Conservatory and George Peabody Library (preferred) other Peabody Institute Library 2. Location street and number 1 & 17 East Mount Vernon Place not for publication city, town Baltimore vicinity county Baltimore City 3. Owner of Property (give names and mailing addresses of all owners) name JHP, Inc. c/o The Johns Hopkins University street and number 3400 N. Charles Street telephone 410-659-8100 city, town Baltimore state Maryland zip code 21218 4.
    [Show full text]
  • Mount Vernon: Baltimore’S Historic LGBT Neighborhood
    History in the Making Volume 9 Article 16 January 2016 Exhibition Review: Mount Vernon: Baltimore’s Historic LGBT Neighborhood Amanda Castro CSUSB Blanca Garcia-Barron CSUSB Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/history-in-the-making Part of the History of Gender Commons Recommended Citation Castro, Amanda and Garcia-Barron, Blanca (2016) "Exhibition Review: Mount Vernon: Baltimore’s Historic LGBT Neighborhood," History in the Making: Vol. 9 , Article 16. Available at: https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/history-in-the-making/vol9/iss1/16 This Review is brought to you for free and open access by the History at CSUSB ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in History in the Making by an authorized editor of CSUSB ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Reviews Exhibition Review: Mount Vernon: Baltimore’s Historic LGBT Neighborhood By Amanda Castro and Blanca Garcia-Barron Before John Travolta played Edna Turnblad in the 2007 remake of John Waters’ Hairspray (1988), the actress known as Divine played the famous role first. Divine, born Harris Glen Milstead, had been John Waters’ muse for twenty years prior to his most famous and successful film, Hairspray, in 1988. As a filmmaker, Waters has had a reputation for making underground satirical films set in the Baltimore, Maryland area that have often been deemed obscene. In the early 1960s and 1970s, Divine played many of the titular roles in films like Pink Flamingos, Female Trouble, and Polyester. Central themes of the films were fetishes, ennui in suburbia, and Baltimore. Deconstructed, Waters’ films reflected an exaggerated portrayal of the repressive attitudes toward homosexuality and sex in 1950s America.
    [Show full text]
  • Baltimore LEW Thank You Booklet for Annual Dinner 2018
    Thank You! April 26 – 28, 2018 LAND ECONOMICS WEEKEND Baltimore THANKS TO OUR 2018 ThanksLAND to our ECONOMICSWelce! 2018 Land Economics WEEKEND Weekend SPONSORS Sponsors Thanks to ourWelce! 2018 Land Economics Weekend Sponsors $5,000 PLATINUM SPONSOR $5,000 PLATINUM SPONSOR $3,000 GOLD SPONSORS $3,000 GOLD SPONSORS $2,500 SPONSOR $2,500 SPONSOR $2,000 SILVER SPONSORS $2,000 SILVER SPONSORS TheThe BrickBrick CompaniesCompanies Foundation Foundation withwith ToniToni Y.Y. Prince Prince $1,500$1,500 BRONZE BRONZE SPONSORSPONSOR $1,000$1,000 SPONSORSPONSOR $500$500 LEW CONTRIBUTORS AndrewAndrew C. C. Lemer, Lemer, Ph.D.Ph.D. Kaliber Construction, Inc.Inc. AnonymousAnonymous In In Memory Memory ofof BaltimoreBaltimore Chapter’s KCI Technologies, Inc.Inc. FoundingFounding President President MortonMorton Hoffman Millane Partners LLCLLC Century Engineering, Inc. Century Engineering, Inc. ParkerMuldrow && Associates,Associates, LLC LLC Cliftara CD Consultants Cliftara CD Consultants Real Property ResearchResearch Group, Group, Inc. Inc. Corporate Property Solutions, LLC Corporate Property Solutions, LLC Robust Retirement® LLCLLC Edds Consulting, LLC Edds Consulting, LLC Stephen L. RudowRudow Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, Urban Information Associates,Associates, Inc. Inc. EdwardEdward St. St. John John RealReal EstateEstate Program THANKS TO OUR LEW COMMITTEE MEMBERS Susannah M. Bergmann Chair Kaliber Construction, Inc. Melvin L. Freeman Chapter President Freeman Architecture - Freeman Consulting Group, LLP Nathan S. Betnun, Ph.D. Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated Joseph F. Consoli, MAI iRealty Research (iRR) Rachel F. Edds, AICP Edds Consulting, LLC Matthew L. Kimball, Esq. Niles, Barton & Wilmer, LLP Kathleen L. Lane, Assoc. AIA, LEED AP AIA Baltimore James S. Leanos Corporate Property Solutions, LLC Kim LiPira The Martin Architectural Group, P.C.
    [Show full text]