Monday Mark Lerner Interview on WRGW Co-owner of the Washington Nationals and GW alumnus Mark Lerner will call in for an interview. Listen at www.gwradio.com. 4 to 6 p.m. Sponsored by WRGW Tuesday Second Freshman Feast Enjoy Mediterranean food in J Street 6 to 9 p.
by Cory Struble
Hatchet Reporter
University Police Officer Yolanda Myles cruises her usual route through campus Friday night, checking the more remote areas for unreported trouble.
"Friday nights really aren't as bad as you'd expect them to be," the officer said. She said that even on the weekends she averages about five calls per night.
The Luther W. Brady Art Gallery is showing off its most recent acquisitions in an exhibit this month.
The exhibit, which began earlier this month, showcases 15 of the gallery's most recent additions to the gallery that has been a part of the university since 2001.
After a month of blank screens, the GWTV news channel recently began broadcasting "The Source," a news program created by a School of Media and Public Affairs class. The GWTV student organization's members have blamed the sparse programming on inadequate University support and poor interest.
by John McCormack
When GW failed to crack the U.S. News and World Report's top 50 schools yet again this year, University President Stephen Joel Trachtenberg dismissed the importance of our rank at No. 52.
Still, the U.S. News rankings do tell an important story, especially if you break down the numbers behind our ranking.
Last week, Gallaudet University students effectively shut down their campus during protests over the school's incoming president. GW Student Association President Lamar Thorpe visited the scene last weekend; now he and other SA leaders plan to propose supporting the protestors with food and blankets.
by Brendan Polmer
While living here this fall, I have come to realize that there's really no place like home. As much as I try to blend into the British culture over here, there will always be a part of me that wants to sing the "Team America: World Police" theme song (America! F*** yeah!) while riding the Tube on a Friday night.
by Diana Kugel
Take a look at any college brochure cover and you will undoubtedly see countless pictures of a group of students laughing together as they cross a grassy quad, or chatting happily as they sit on the marble steps of an ivy-covered building. Sounds nice, right? However, if you stop to really look around, you'll find that these picturesque scenes of social interaction are becoming much rarer on campuses.
"Why do all the hot guys have to be gay?" We've probably all heard the stereotype and these types of conversations. Some experts believe the answer to this question partially has to do with heightened awareness about body image among gay men. Trey Watkins, a graduate assistant who deals with men's issues at Student Health Services, said the pressures on gay males are different than other social groups.
At the onset of her fourth year in college, Eve has learned quite a few things about sex. Eve, The Hatchet's anonymous sex columnist, will share her observations and (sometimes dirty) thoughts about sex at GW with the population that fuels her fire.
Editor's note: names have been changed to protect the naughty.
by Megan Marinos
Hatchet Reporter
When Rupert Bazambanza woke up in Rwanda the morning he said genocide started in 1994, people were already dead. No one knew what was going on, and most people did not even know what genocide was.
"Overnight, our friends and neighbors became our enemy and wanted to kill us," he said.
by Nathan Grossman
It was a typical spring morning last April when Reed Kavner walked into Student Health Services for what he thought was a pulled muscle or a pinched nerve.
"I'd been doing some heavy lifting at my job at CNN. and I figured that was where the pain came from," said Kavner, who at the time was a freshman majoring in journalism.
by Allison Sylvetsky
Hatchet Staff Writer
Cosmopolitan Magazine will decide Tuesday between a GW freshman and 49 other finalists for their first-ever "Bachelor of the Year" award.
Featured in Cosmopolitan's "Man Hunt 2006" section in November's issue, freshman Cory McCrummen represents South Carolina as one of the "hottest, sexiest, single dudes" in the country.
by Jennifer Easton
Hatchet Reporter
Sophomore transfer student and Israeli national Adi Timor found herself in an uncomfortable situation last month at a dinner party. At the event, hosted by George Mason University's Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, she found herself sitting across a dinner table from a Palestinian man.
by Hadas Gold
Hatchet Reporter
Students in an Introduction to Theater Production class had an unexpected guest speaker Thursday: actress Emmy Rossum.
Rossum, who has appeared in films like "Poseidon," "The Day After Tomorrow," and "Phantom of the Opera," has been named the celebrity ambassador of YouthAIDS and spoke with students about the organization's goals of informing youth about the dangers of the disease and to teach them about preventing it from spreading.
by Stephanie Newman-SmithHatchet Reporter
Two GW organizations co-hosted a panel discussion on how Latina women can become successful in the business world while also giving back to the community.
The fourth annual "Hispanic Women of Excellence" panel spoke to an audience of about 25 in the Mount Vernon Hand Chapel on the topic of their struggles and how they have succeeded as Hispanic women.
by Kaitlyn Jahrling
GW alumnus and former Virginia Gov. Mark Warner announced Thursday he would not run for U.S. president in 2008. Talk of the former Thurston resident's national ambitions has floated around since he was term-limited out of the governorship in fall 2005. Many members of his Forward Together Political Action Committee were eager to help him win the election.
by Bryan Han
Hatchet Reporter
President George W. Bush dedicated the United States Air Force Memorial Saturday, making it the last branch of the U.S. military to receive a memorial in the D.C. area.
Built adjacent to Arlington Cemetery, the Air Force Memorial features three stainless steel spires that curve up 270 feet into the sky.
by David Ceasar
As GW searches for a new president, Gallaudet University police arrested more than 100 students and alumni Friday night after three days of the students blockading campus gates in protest of the school's incoming president. The country's only deaf liberal arts college had been shut down since Wednesday.
by Brandon Butler
GW's top leadership will look very different beginning this July.
Chairman of the Board of Trustees Charles Manatt announced at Friday's board meeting that he will step down from his position when his term expires at the end of June.
by Brandon Butler
GWTV may be back on the air, but that doesn't mean the student organization is back on track.
Two years ago GWTV was a student organization producing original content by students with the aid of faculty advisors. For the first six weeks of classes this year, channel six was a blank screen.
by Prerna Rao
It's 9:30 on a Thursday night in the outskirts of D.C.'s Chinatown at RNR Bar & Lounge, formerly known as Coyote Ugly, and people are lugging around cardboard boxes with flyers, setting up a cash register outside, and fixing last-minute details with bouncers and the club owner.
by Brandon Butler
More than 100 people have been nominated to assume GW's top post after University President Stephen Joel Trachtenberg steps down in July 2007.
by Alex Riley
Hatchet Reporter
After two straight losses at home, the GW women's soccer team added an important conference win with a 2-1 victory over St. Bonaventure Sunday afternoon at the Mount Vernon Athletic Complex.
With the Atlantic 10 tournament just three weeks away, the Colonials knew that the Bonnies were the first of four upcoming "must-win" games.
by Jake Sherman
A freshman water polo player was arrested Saturday night by Metropolitan Police on felony charges of possession of marijuana with the intent to distribute, said Antoinette Murray, a processing technician in the department's second district.
The student, whose name is being withheld by The Hatchet, was arrested in Thurston Hall and was in jail as of late Sunday nght.
by Joanna Shapes
This weekend, three friends from the University of Pittsburgh came down to visit. During dinner Friday night, each one took turns "going to the bathroom," only for me to later discover that their beloved college football team was in the middle of a game that was being shown at the bar.
Men's Soccer The men's soccer team posted a 3-3 tie Friday afternoon at Fordham in overtime before dropping a 2-1 decision at St. Bonaventure on Sunday. Senior Joseph Siegel tallied three goals over the weekend, two against the Rams and one against the Bonnies.
by Alyssa Wood
Hatchet Reporter
Celebrity guests determined the best appetizer, entr?e and dessert in Georgetown Saturday at the Taste of Georgetown.
The festival is an annual celebration of food along Wisconsin Avenue organized by the Georgetown Business Improvement District. Almost 30 restaurants participated in the event, which featured live music.
by Jennifer Easton
Hatchet Reporter
by Jennifer Easton
Hatchet Reporter
Zachary Schulman has studied abroad in both Panama and London, and has never paid a dime for long-distance phone calls.
The GW senior said that he used Skype, a free Internet phone service, to stay in touch with contacts in the States on both of his trips.
by Alexa Millinger
More than 350 environmentally friendly companies and organizations gathered in the Washington Convention Center this weekend for D.C.'s third annual Green Festival.
The event was organized by two nonprofit organizations, Global Exchange and Co-op America.
by Andrew Metcalf
The Puerto Rico Statehood Society hosted a "BBQ for Statehood" Saturday to promote the idea of the island territory becoming the 51st state. Students passing through Kogan Plaza enjoyed the group's music and free food while learning about the issues facing Puerto Rico today.
by Nic Gerschman
Hatchet Reporter
Alumnus Robert Efrus tried to dispel the bad reputation that can come with being a power lobbyist in Washington as he described his job to students Thursday night.
Efrus, vice president of the D.C. lobbying firm The Implementation Group, encouraged students to consider the industry and listed specific paths to become a lobbyist and skills that would put prospective applicants ahead of the pack.
by Samantha Strauss
After an airplane ride more than 10 hours long, Marla Harlan arrived at Ben Gurion Airport in Tel Aviv, Israel, tired, worried and eager to see her son Seth.
Seth met his mother in full military uniform with an M16 slung over his shoulder and flowers in his hands.
by Rob Tricchinelli
Cooperative housing, where students live together, pool their resources and share responsibility for cooking and cleaning, is growing in popularity on campuses across the nation.
Jim Jones, director of asset management for North American Students of Cooperation, credits the resurgence to an increased interest among students in building community relationships.
by Hallie C. Falquet
The protest is large and the message loud, but the scene silent. The students of Gallaudet University, the nation's only liberal arts university for the deaf and hard of hearing, did not wake up to go to class Monday morning.
Instead, they roused themselves to a fifth day of shutting down the campus in protest of the board of trustees' choice of Jane K.