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Today
Special Collections Open House
6 - 8pm EDT
Special Collections, M-level, Brody Learning Commons Brody Learning Commons
Homewood Campus
Join the first Special Collections Open House of the year and enjoy highlights from the Book Arts collection, get some amazing women's suffrage stickers, and enter a fall-themed raffle.
Today
What is Project 2025? A Hop Talks Dinner Discussion
6:30 - 8:30pm EDT
Clipper Room, Shriver Hall Shriver Hall
Homewood Campus
Join the Center for Social Concern for a dinner discussion on Project 2025. What is it, and why should it matter to you?
Registration Required
Sept 18
Write Your Next Chapter: 5 Steps to Setting Your Retirement Date
12 - 1pm EDT
Online
For anyone starting to think seriously about when to retire, this webinar takes you through five steps to deciding when the time is right. A TIAA adviser will help you think through how to estimate what you'll need, adjust as needed, consider key milestones, and protect your savings.
Registration Required
Free
Sept 18
Duo Ingolfsson-Stoupel
12:30 - 1:30pm EDT
Peabody faculty violinist Judith Ingolfsson and pianist Vladimir Stoupel perform a recital featuring Rebecca Clarke's sonatas.
Sept 18
Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering Fall Seminar Series: Younan Xia
3 - 3:50pm EDT
Younan Xia, a professor and chair in the School of Chemistry & Biochemistry at Georgia Institute of Technology, will give a talk titled "Putting Chemistry to Work for Nano, Energy, and Medicine."
Sept 18
From Piggy Banks to Online Savings: Your Guide to Modern Banking
5 - 6pm EDT
Online
Students can get an overview of different banking institutions and account types from Student Financial Support.
Registration Required
Free
Sept 18
Non-Literary Fiction: Art of the Americas Under Neoliberalism
5:30 - 7:30pm EDT
Esther Gabara, professor of Romance studies at Duke University, will discuss her book: Non-Literary Fiction: Art of the Americas under Neoliberalism, which examines how contemporary art produced across the Americas has reacted to the rising tide of neoliberal regimes, focusing on the crucial role of fiction in daily politics.
Sept 18
CLE Connect
6 - 8pm EDT
Atrium Ballroom, Inn at the Colonnade (4 West University Parkway), Homewood Campus Homewood Campus
Hosted by the Center for Leadership Education, CLE Connect provides a space for Johns Hopkins undergraduate and graduate students to network with Johns Hopkins alumni and industry leaders in engineering, consulting, manufacturing, health care, marketing, finance, tech, media, and more.
Registration Required
Free
Registration Required
Free
Sept 19
Spending Wisely in Retirement
12 - 1pm EDT
Online
Discover wise spending strategies to make the most of your retirement without overdrawing your funds too soon.
Registration Required
Free
Sept 19
Digital Humanities Workshop Series: What Does Digital Humanities Mean to You?
12 - 1:30pm EDT
Room 429 (AGHI Common Room) or Zoom, Mergenthaler Hall Mergenthaler Hall
Homewood Campus
Panelists Craig Messner from the Center for Digital Humanities, Nadejda Webb from LifexCode, and Emily McGinn from Sheridan Libraries, moderated by doctoral candidate Ellie Palazzolo, will discuss how each panelist defines digital humanities and how to get involved with digital humanities on campus.
Registration Required
Free
Sept 19
Introduction to Data Visualization in Python
1 - 4pm EDT
Online
Visualizing data is critical for both understanding the meaning and patterns hidden in your data and communicating it to an audience. This workshop by Johns Hopkins Data Services serves as an introduction to using Python's data-visualization tools and techniques.
Registration Required
Free
Sept 19
Center for Africana Studies Fall Seminar: Tara Bynum
3 - 4:30pm EDT
Tara Bynum (PhD '08), an assistant professor of English and African American studies at the University of Iowa, will give a talk titled "Obour Tanner Remembers Phillis Wheatley; or How to Remember a (Famous) Friend."
Sept 19
Department of Biology Seminar Series: Joshua Bembenek
4 - 5pm EDT
Joshua Bembenek, associate professor and research educator in the Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology at Wayne State University School of Medicine, will be giving a talk titled "Cell Cycle Regulation of Membrane Trafficking in Oocyte Meiosis."
Sept 19
Critical Grove No. 3 | Martial Aesthetics: War, Scenarios, and the Securitization of the Novel
4:15 - 6pm EDT
Anders Engberg-Pedersen, a professor of comparative literature at the University of Southern Denmark, will give a talk titled "Martial Aesthetics: War, Scenarios, and the Securitization of the Novel" for the Alexander Grass Humanities Institute and the Department of Political Science.