o ur 4 1 ST ye ar
S PA C E D I S C O V ERY
DES TINATION: NANJING
Covering Homewood, East Baltimore, Peabody,
Hubble telescope detects one
Chinese language and research
SAIS, APL and other campuses throughout the
of the most distant supernovae
program in technical fields
Baltimore-Washington area and abroad, since 1971.
yet observed, page 7
launches this summer, page 5
January 17, 2012
The newspaper of The Johns Hopkins University
G R A D U A T E
A F F A I R S
Volume 41 No. 18
H O M E W O O D
3 ... 2 ... 1 ... Intersession liftoff
A road map to academic leadership By Greg Rienzi
The Gazette
Continued on page 4
2
will kirk / homewoodphoto.jhu.edu
T
oday’s rising academic stars could be tomorrow’s deans, department chairs, center directors and provosts. They just might need a gentle push in that direction. In an effort to provide that nudge, Johns Hopkins New four-day has developed a new intersession program to nurcourse is ture the future leaders of acacreated for demia and demysgrad students tify the promotion process. The four-day and postdocs course, called Practicum in Higher Education Administration, is aimed at current graduate students and postdocs who want professional development and to lay the groundwork for leadership roles. It will be held from Monday, Jan. 23, through Thursday, Jan. 26, in the Hodson Hall boardroom on the Homewood campus. Although geared toward those in Engineering and Arts and Sciences, the course will accept grad students and postdocs from other university divisions if space allows. The program, sponsored by the Office of Graduate Affairs and Admissions, will feature many members of Johns Hopkins’ senior administration, who will share their stories of how they rose through the ranks and climbed the academic ladder, and how they have managed the nuances of their roles. Ben Vinson, vice dean for graduate education and for centers and interdepartmental programs in the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences and the course’s facilitator, said that the intention is to expand the horizons of graduate students and postdocs. “We want to prepare them for careers within and outside the academy,” said Vinson, a professor of history. “The course will highlight the evolution of this career path and help participants
Roberto Tron, at board, created Introduction to Model Rocketry as a way to teach basic engineering and mathematical principles and apply them to a practical, and fun, goal. The class ends later this month with a launch party in Wyman Park.
Model rocketry, Appalachian fiddle, Zumba and more By Greg Rienzi
The Gazette
W
hen launching a rocket, don’t fire the ejection charge too soon after thrust phase termination. Why? Well, imagine parallel parking at 50 miles an hour, or slamming on bike brakes going full speed downhill. Things could get messy. Don’t ignite the charge too late, either,
unless you want your re-entry parachute to deploy, or be shredded, just feet from reaching Mother Earth. The key to ejection charge timing and flight success lies in a mathematical formula based on Newton’s second law of motion. Students are learning about Continued on page 7
P R O G R A M
SAIS launches Global Politics and Religion Initiative By Felisa Neuringer Klubes
SAIS
T
he Henry Luce Foundation has awarded a two-year $440,000 grant to Johns Hopkins’ Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies to support a program on the study of religion and international affairs. The Global Politics and Religion Initiative at SAIS has three main components that will incorporate the study of the interaction between religion and politics
In Brief
Trio of Peabody flute concerts; Jhpiego in Angola; new MUSE platform goes live
12
into the school’s existing graduate-level international relations program: new master’s degree courses, faculty and community research seminars, and executive education training sessions. The initiative’s goal is to foster an appreciation and deeper understanding of religion and international affairs among students, scholars and practitioners who will shape and influence future policymaking. “We have entered an era when the resurgence of religion’s influence has caught the majority of scholars and analysts by surprise. Religion, in many cases, appears ready to
C A L E N D AR
Gateway Sciences Initiative Symposium; Chinese New Year; Blackboard 9.1
displace the spread of 20th-century secularizing regimes, ideologies and social trends in defining national policy goals,” said Charles Doran, director of the SAIS Global Theory and History Program and of the new initiative. “A perfect recent example of this trend,” he said, “is the potent role of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, which survived decades of harsh repression while managing to remain politically relevant both by serving as a highly effective opposition to a corContinued on page 5
10 Job Opportunities 10 Notices 11 Classifieds