College Media Network

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Justin Guiffre: Flexibility for the future

by Justin Guiffr?

Every year students living in Thurston Hall are given T-shirts that proclaim the infamous sexual habits of the storied dorm. Yet this year's version reads simply "Future President."

Staff Editorial: Board of Trustees should implement student fee increase

As the Board of Trustees convenes for its fall meeting Friday, the University's highest governing body has a fair share of issues to tackle.

Alex Eisner: Pondering parental invasion

by Alex Eisner

Parents' weekend brings a chance to see your new world through all-too-familiar eyes.

Snapshot: Maroon croon

Adam Levine of Maroon 5 performs at Verizon Center Tuesday night.

Greek Brief: Pi Kappa Phi holds War of the Roses Fundraiser

by Alyssa Vincent-Hill
Hatchet Reporter

The Pi Kappa Phi fraternity held its second annual War of the Roses fundraiser this week.

GW Brief: Alumni Relations relocates office, leaves Alumni House

by Nathan Grossman

The Office of Alumni Relations relocated to the space once occupied by RH Bistro, allowing renovations to Alumni House to move forward.

SA to charge students for use of Colonial Coach

by Jennifer Easton

A free bus service that took students to area airports during holiday breaks will now cost $5.

Correction

Campus Calendar

Letters to the Editor

Campaign manager discusses her Latina heritage

by Eric Thibault

Sen. Hillary Clinton's campaign manager told students that she is honored to work with the New York Democrat as the first Latina to run a presidential campaign.

Hot Hot Heat fires up

by Jaclyn Winkelman
Hatchet Reporter

Very few bands consistently create the type of music that makes you want to get up and dance.

What’s on our iPod: Broken Social Scene presents Kevin Drew

$5 – $10 – $20: An entertainment guide for the cash-strapped college student

Cat Power and Dirty Delta Blues

by Amanda Pacitti
Hatchet Reporter

Cat Power played 9:30 Club Tuesday with the same smooth, faultless vocal rasp that first earned her attention more than 10 years ago.

Bar Belle: The Great Outdoors

Certain things are granted to you as a senior that you just don't have access to before putting in those three long years.

The art of storytelling

by Kyle Landman and Katie Buckland
Hatchet Reporters

JONESBOROUGH, Tenn.—Mixed in with the jargon of Southern tongue and hillbilly laughter is a fierce loyalty to the oral tradition, the National Storytelling Festival.

NPR star promotes book

by Eric Roper

Time slowed down for a moment Monday evening when radio host Garrison Keillor took the stage at Lisner Auditorium.

Ross Romano: Club sports impeded by funding

by Ross Romano
Sports Columnist

The University should set up a separate fund for club sports teams. It truly is a shame that such solid organizations get so little respect from the university.

Despite injuries, cross country ahead of course

by TJ Donegan
Hatchet Reporter

For a sport that is by its very nature individualistic, there is a whole lot of team in GW's cross country program.

Study discovers ‘poli-fluentials’

by Megan Buerger
Hatchet Reporter

GW's Institute for Politics, Democracy and the Internet released a new study of the 2008 presidential election political junkies.

Sports Calendar, Dinner on the Diamond

Clinton aide named counsel

by Marissa Bialecki

The White House counsel to former President Bill Clinton was appointed as the next University vice president and general counsel Tuesday afternoon.

Students use trading floor for Wall Street Prep

by Matt Lurrie
Hatchet Reporter

The Finance and Investment Club brings Wall Street Preparation to the School of Business.

Student barred for class conduct

by Jessica Calefati

The University barred a student from campus after he was accused of harassing and threatening his English professor and classmates, a University spokesperson said.

Grad programs draw foreign students

by Ursula Jonsson
Hatchet Reporter

Cost, reputation and location draw international students to GW's graduate programs.

Tibetan leader defines peace

by Sarah Scire

The Dalai Lama spoke about the need for peace in front of thousands on the West Lawn of the Capitol yesterday after accepting Congress's highest civilian honor.

Bats fly into Guthridge and HOVA

by Michael Moffett
Hatchet Reporter

Bats flew into three residence halls this week, twice entering rooms in the Hall on Virginia Avenue, and once entering a room in Guthridge Hall.

D.C. cabs to adopt meter system

by Bryan Han

District taxicabs will soon switch from the zone system to time and distance meters, Mayor Adrian Fenty announced Wednesday.

GSEHD gets $3 million

by Danielle Meister
Hatchet Staff Writer

The Graduate School of Education and Human Development uses a $3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education to teach bilingual special education.

Late rush helps numbers

by Alyssa Vincent-Hill
Hatchet Reporter

This year 100 more women received bids to join Pan-Hellenic sororities than last year and members of the Greek-letter community said they believe the increase is due to the time of year the organization chose to hold recruitment.

Students tackle immigration

by Eric Thibault

Students discussed why immigration is viewed as a problem in the United States and how it can be solved during Monday's R.E.A.L Conversation.

GSPM graduates apply lessons

by Jordan Steinmann
Hatchet Reporter

Alumni hold important positions in lobbying and political consulting, as well as on Capitol Hill and in the executive branch.

Crime Log

by Amy D'Onofrio

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by Andrew Nacin

This is a test. 01/16/2008 per Web Editor.