The Johns Hopkins University SAIS Bologna Center

Coordinates: 44°29′41.39″N 11°21′20.61″E / 44.4948306°N 11.3557250°E / 44.4948306; 11.3557250

The Johns Hopkins University SAIS Bologna Center
Established 1955
Type Private
Academic affiliation Johns Hopkins University
Director Kenneth H. Keller
Postgraduates 190
Location via Belmeloro 11, Bologna, Italy
Website http://www.jhubc.it/

The Johns Hopkins University SAIS Bologna Center is the European campus of the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS), a division of Johns Hopkins University located in Washington, D.C.. The Center offers an interdisciplinary academic program that emphasizes international economics, international relations, languages, and specializations either in functional areas or regional studies.

The Center was founded in 1955 by C. Grove Haines as the European branch of SAIS. In 1961, the Center moved to its present location on Via Belmeloro and completed a major renovation of its facilities in 2006.

Read more about The Johns Hopkins University SAIS Bologna Center:  Overview, Degree Programs Offered, Research Institutions and Publications

Famous quotes containing the words johns, hopkins, university, sais, bologna and/or center:

    In love’s deep womb our fears are held;
    there God’s rich tears are sown
    and bring to birth, in hope new-born,
    the strength to journey on.
    —Rob Johns (20th century)

    Natural heart’s ivy, Patience masks
    Our ruins of wrecked past purpose.
    —Gerard Manley Hopkins (1844–1889)

    I was now at a university in New York, a professor of existential psychology with the not inconsiderable thesis that magic, dread, and the perception of death were the roots of motivation.
    Norman Mailer (b. 1923)

    It takes that je ne sais quoi which we call sophistication for a woman to be magnificent in a drawing-room when her faculties have departed but she herself has not yet gone home.
    James Thurber (1894–1961)

    I come from a long line of male chauvinists in a very traditional family. To rebel against my background, I didn’t shoot dope—I married a working woman.
    —Joe Bologna (20th century)

    Actually being married seemed so crowded with unspoken rules and odd secrets and unfathomable responsibilities that it had no more occurred to her to imagine being married herself than it had to imagine driving a motorcycle or having a job. She had, however, thought about being a bride, which had more to do with being the center of attention and looking inexplicably, temporarily beautiful than it did with sharing a double bed with someone with hairy legs and a drawer full of boxer shorts.
    Anna Quindlen (b. 1952)