Snapshot: Safety first
University Police Department officer speaks to an interested patron at an informational table set up as part of UPD's Safety Expo and Fire Prevention Week.
Stories from the October 11, 2007, Print Edition
University Police Department officer speaks to an interested patron at an informational table set up as part of UPD's Safety Expo and Fire Prevention Week.
About 50 students attended a panel discussion Wednesday night about religious and racial tolerance at Marvin Center.
The Sigma Psi Zeta sorority plans to promote Domestic Violence Awareness Month this month.
The Alcoholic Beverage Control board decided Wednesday morning it will hear Tonic Restaurant's case for a liquor license in late November.
This year's Iftar had the highest turnout since the event began in 2002, possibly spurred by the discovery of more than 100 controversial posters Monday.
Rep. Adam Putnam (R-Fla.) emphasized the need for the Republican Party to start looking at "generational issues" in a speech to about 40 students Tuesday night at the School of Media and Public Affairs.
Seven students signed confessions with the University Police Department Wednesday morning, admitting to their involvement in a controversial poster campaign that offended a slew of members of the GW community.
Conservative groups and national activists are calling for the expulsion of seven students for hanging controversial posters Monday morning, as campus groups begin to take sides on Islamo-Fascism Awareness week.
The seven students responsible for hanging controversial posters around campus Monday morning told members of the media Wednesday afternoon that they are anti-war and therefore anti-racism.
Within minutes of the revelation that the hanging of controversial Muslim posters was the work of anti-war students, the Internet was ablaze with commentary from pundits and bloggers.
In an unusually short three-hour sprint through the SA's quarter-million dollar allocation process, about 200 organizations received funding.