Search committee will look for student input
The chairman of the committee searching for the University's provost said the group plans to solicit input from students through their Student Association representatives.
Stories from the September 28, 2009, Print Edition
The chairman of the committee searching for the University's provost said the group plans to solicit input from students through their Student Association representatives.
Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy will be the keynote speaker at the GW Law Review Symposium, the school's dean announced last Monday.
Rainy weather did not prevent more than 120,000 booklovers from showing up on the National Mall for the 2009 National Book Festival, sponsored by the Library of Congress.
The Office of Study Abroad is using a new online application system this semester to ease the study abroad application process.
Three of the University's oldest residence halls, Schenley, Crawford and West End, may be combined into one new residence hall, a University administrator confirmed last week.
The guidelines for the structures are simple: Tape and Velcro may be used, but the sculpture must be self-supporting - and entirely made of cans.
As part of the month-long Latino Heritage Celebration, the Organization of Latino American Students joined forces with the Minority Association of Pre-Medical Students last week to host their annual benefit showcase to raise money for La Clínica del Pueblo.
Forty GW College Democrats traveled to Bergen County, N.J., Saturday to campaign for Jon Corzine, the Democratic governor who is running for reelection this year.
All Marvin Center space will now be exclusively reserved during the academic year for student- and University-sponsored events, the University announced Friday.
More than 2,100 students, faculty and staff members, including University President Steven Knapp, turned out to receive a seasonal influenza vaccine at the first flu shot clinic of the season last week.
Members of the GW College Democrats and College Republicans engaged in a fiercely partisan debate on health care reform Thursday night in the Marvin Center Amphitheater.
Community groups are in an uproar this week after a D.C. government office reportedly selected Equity Residential, the company behind the 2400 M St. apartments, to develop the Stevens Elementary School site.
D.C. Department of Transportation officials submitted a proposal for key stimulus grants Friday to build a new K Street Transitway, a major project that would affect K Street from Mount Vernon Square to Washington Circle.