GW Brief: Move-in goes smoothly with the help of 600 student volunteers and President Knapp
More than 600 student volunteers and University President Steven Knapp were on hand to help students settle into freshman residence halls.
Stories from the September 4, 2007, Print Edition
More than 600 student volunteers and University President Steven Knapp were on hand to help students settle into freshman residence halls.
University officials found a rabid juvenile bat in a widely used academic building last week.
Freshmen Jaycee Sternlieb, Molly Lukash, Ashley Soble and Jeriel Kessel bring plastic bags filled with groceries back from Safeway. The students purchased their provisions with Colonial Cash.
Classics Professor Eric Cline may have sold more than 10,000 copies of his most recent book, but that does not mean he is receiving praise for his publication.
The D.C. City Council passed controversial "emergency" legislation this summer to sell the area surrounding the West End Library to a private developer without the approval of community groups.
Kosher dining is returning to campus in a new form this year after one-and-a half years without the option in Foggy Bottom.
After a little more than one year on the job, Director of the School of Media and Public Affairs Lee Huebner has already left his mark on the school.
New assistants are already shuttling University President Steven Knapp to and from meetings and making sure he is always on time and well-prepared.
Three study abroad programs affiliated with GW are suspected providing unlawful monetary incentives to universities who use their services and are now under investigation by the New York attorney general's office.
In an address laced with little-known GW facts at Opening Convocation, President Steven Knapp encouraged freshmen to take advantage of Foggy Bottom and the District.
TONIC restaurant is moving ahead with attempts to obtain a liquor license, but not without objections the restaurant's Foggy Bottom neighbors.
Thurston Hall's most recent renovation costs more than one-third of the building's total taxable value and is the largest exterior building renovation in University history.
The fall semester has just begun and almost all of the Student Association's goals for the school year have been met.
University President Steven Knapp and his wife Diane help move boxes from a vehicle outside Ivory Tower on 23rd Street during Move-In Saturday.