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Brave New World at JHU
Accuracy in Academia ^ | September 13, 2006 | Malcolm A. Kline

Posted on 09/13/2006 1:09:46 PM PDT by JSedreporter

Johns Hopkins is mostly known as a staid old Baltimore institution famous for the breakthroughs of its medical researchers but the university’s alumni magazine shows a campus that is more new age than old guard.

President Bush did speak there, a rarity in an academy that loathes the Republican chief executive, but the appearance did not sit too well with students and alums. “The sheer narcissism, risk-aversion, deference, and partisanship of the event and its report in the magazine betray the intellectual and political standards Johns Hopkins values,” Sayres Rudy, a visiting scholar at Amherst College writes. “I know that [the School of Advanced International Studies] SAIS is a policy school, and I am glad that some students there ‘signed a memo’ that ‘respectfully criticized’ Bush’s foreign policy.”

“But it is a disgrace if Johns Hopkins or SAIS is obsequious enough to slave for the president without mentioning publicly—even as a minority criticism—that Iraq ‘fell’ to illegal and murderous invasion and occupation by a war-criminal administration carrying out a vicious and self-defeating ‘war on terror’ with equally thuggish allies and uncounted civilian corpses to show for it.” Rudy, a 1990 SAIS graduate, may have a better handle on “intellectual and political standards Johns Hopkins values” than the rest of us.

But wouldn’t it be interesting to know if Rudy participated in the time-honored SAIS tradition of short sheeting the hotel beds of visiting dignitaries? Believe it or not, the reaction to this prank by former U. S. Secretaries of State breaks down along party lines though not as you might expect: Republican Henry Kissinger thought it was funny, Democrat Madeleine Albright did not.

For her part, JHU lecturer Joanne Cavanaugh deals with unruly students by sparing the rod but not the karma. “Because I teach elements of communication—literature and writing—I’m wondering how to help my students focus,” Cavanaugh writes in Johns Hopkins magazine. “Multi-tasking, after all, is the anti-Zen,” she explains.

“Living—really living [italics in original]—requires concentration, not distraction,” she elaborates. It seems that students spend their class time with Cavanaugh paying more attention to their cell phones and i-pods than they give her.

“So instead of keeping pace with the Multimedia Madness, I want to alter the rhythm—bring in a yoga instructor and assign more readings in transcendental meditation,” Cavanaugh concludes.

Cavanaugh strives to achieve empathy with her students. “But didn’t we all have distractions as college students?” she asks. “TV. Significant others. CDs. Wine coolers with Skittles chasers.”

Meanwhile, a new school at JHU may add a new twist to the old doctor-patient relationship. “So researchers at Hopkins and elsewhere began to formulate a new ecological health paradigm,” Dale Keiger writes. “They began to move away from the old model, of marshalling and conveying facts to persuade individuals to make sounder decisions, toward attempts to change social norms.”

“The outcome was that on August 1, 2005, the new Department of Health, Behavior, and Society figuratively hung out its shingle,” Keiger reports. “HBS began life with a chairman, David Holtgrave, recruited from the federal Centers for Disease Control, 20 core faculty members, 67 graduate students, and that $20 million endowment.”

“Its stated purpose is to study how behavior shapes health, how special forces shape behavior, and how public health specialists can intervene to encourage wise choices.” What really bothers the researchers is that people still smoke.

Malcolm A. Kline is the executive director of Accuracy in Academia.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: education; highereducation; johnshopkins; karma; newage; writing; zen

1 posted on 09/13/2006 1:09:51 PM PDT by JSedreporter
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To: JSedreporter

Only a Civil Altercation may remedy our situation.


2 posted on 09/13/2006 1:16:54 PM PDT by Khepera (Do not remove by penalty of law!)
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To: JSedreporter

Trivia point: That's where Woodrow Wilson (the only president with a Ph.D) earned his doctorate after Princeton undergrad years.


3 posted on 09/13/2006 1:24:08 PM PDT by T.L.Sink
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To: JSedreporter
“But it is a disgrace if Johns Hopkins or SAIS is obsequious enough to slave for the president without mentioning publicly—even as a minority criticism—that Iraq ‘fell’ to illegal and murderous invasion and occupation by a war-criminal administration carrying out a vicious and self-defeating ‘war on terror’ with equally thuggish allies and uncounted civilian corpses to show for it.”

Wow, I actually felt the spit hit my face as I read this.

4 posted on 09/13/2006 1:26:21 PM PDT by The Blitherer (You were given the choice between war & dishonor. You chose dishonor & you will have war. -Churchill)
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To: Khepera

Hopkins went P.C. at least two decades ago. Too bad. Was a good school.


5 posted on 09/13/2006 1:30:42 PM PDT by cosine
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To: JSedreporter

The writing in this report is as muddled as the invective being reported upon. I think the commentator is trying to show that Hopkins students at the School of Advance International Studies (SAIS) are all infected with BDS (Bush Derangement Syndrome). But where's the balance? A writing teacher from a different department dithering about Transcendental Meditation?


6 posted on 09/13/2006 1:44:16 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (Got freedom? Thank a veteran!)
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To: JSedreporter

RITALIN was concocted at a laboratory at Johns Hopkins.

Based on that alone, Johns Hopkins stinks.


7 posted on 09/13/2006 1:56:00 PM PDT by sandra_789 (.)
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To: The Blitherer

"Wow, I actually felt the spit hit my face as I read this."

I would have except I was laughing too hard. I guess I'm just not obsequious enough.


8 posted on 09/13/2006 1:59:51 PM PDT by Prokopton
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To: sandra_789
Drugs are tools. Misuse of tools stinks.

Education is a tool. Misuse of education stinks.

9 posted on 09/13/2006 2:14:31 PM PDT by Calvin Locke
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To: T.L.Sink

Another trivia point:

Alger Hiss got this undergraduate degree from John Hopkins in the 1920s.


And I am a JHU grad.


10 posted on 09/13/2006 3:32:40 PM PDT by WOSG (Broken-glass time, Republicans! Save the Congress!)
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To: WOSG

Very interesting - I didn't know that about Hiss but I'm sure such a distinguished university has a very long list of outstanding and famous alumni.

Just curiosity, because I'm too lazy to check dates right now but -- I wonder if Nixon was at Duke Law around the same time? Nixon, Hiss, and the "pumpkin papers" are an indeliable part of modern American history.


11 posted on 09/13/2006 9:33:21 PM PDT by T.L.Sink
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To: T.L.Sink

Nixon went to a humble college ... Whittier?

Hiss v Chambers was a great case, and a great elites v ordinary folks story.

ONly because the bad guy was a leftist was the story never told by hollywood.


12 posted on 09/13/2006 9:58:35 PM PDT by WOSG (Broken-glass time, Republicans! Save the Congress!)
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To: WOSG

Yes, I know Nixon went to Whittier in CA but I thought he went to Duke Law School -- Perhaps I'm mistaken. Let's both check on that -- thanks,


13 posted on 09/14/2006 1:17:16 AM PDT by T.L.Sink
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To: JSedreporter
Sayres Rudy, a visiting scholar at Amherst College writes....“But it is a disgrace if Johns Hopkins or SAIS is obsequious enough to slave for the president without mentioning publicly—even as a minority criticism—that Iraq ‘fell’ to illegal and murderous invasion and occupation by a war-criminal administration....”

HA HA HA!! And just wait and see what this idiot writes NEXT year when she's a sophomore!

14 posted on 09/14/2006 1:40:37 AM PDT by Lancey Howard
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