University will receive swine flu vaccine
After months of anticipation, a University administrator announced Tuesday that GW will receive swine flu vaccinations for distribution.
Stories from the October 1, 2009, Print Edition
After months of anticipation, a University administrator announced Tuesday that GW will receive swine flu vaccinations for distribution.
The first e-mail from the University about Tuesday's bomb scare that closed a large swath of campus reached students more than an hour after Fulbright Hall and the surrounding area were evacuated.
Sophomore Ben Zack left his yellow, $900 specialized road bike outside Saturday night, locking it to a tree near his Winston House apartment. He looked out his window at about 1:30 a.m. and saw the bike was gone.
GW will welcome approximately 3,000 former students to campus this weekend with new programming, a handful of class reunions and special-interest events as part of its annual four-day Alumni Weekend.
For most high school seniors, the college admissions process is a private struggle to get into that perfect school. For GW freshman Tyler Calder, it was anything but private.
A D.C. councilmember assured Foggy Bottom residents Tuesday that, as long as the neighborhood is opposed to the selection, his committee would block the city's reported decision to develop apartments at the Stevens Elementary School site.
Adams Mill Bar and Grill, the bar in Adams Morgan where 19-year-old Laura Treanor drank the night she died of alcohol poisoning, had been closed by the city's Alcoholic Beverage Regulation Administration just a week before her death for serving alcohol to overly intoxicated patrons.
At least three Greek-letter groups living in University-owned townhouses were charged more than $10,000 each on Monday for failing to fill their houses during the summer, two Greek-letter presidents confirmed on Wednesday.
Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker Michael Moore spoke to a full house of students Tuesday in the Marvin Center about the problems facing the nation's economy and health care system.
Last year, some officials in GW's graduate schools were nervous about prospective graduate admissions; they thought the economy would lower their numbers.
GW has yet to receive tuition payments for the approximately 300 veterans on campus that were promised to the University under the Post-9/11 GI Bill, a University administrator said this week.
With the 2010 primary now less than a year away, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty has two opponents looking to take his position.
Calling China and India emerging post-colonial empires, Westminster University professor Dr. Dibyesh Anand said the two countries threaten global peace and minorities within their borders Monday at the Elliott School. In an event aimed to answer questions of power and identity, Anand, who teaches international relations in London, said that since China and India have large, diverse populations, the diversity is unbalanced because of concentrations of minorities along the borders.
When the girls of Thurston 532 woke up Friday, they were expecting a day of classes followed by a busy weekend with friends. They were not anticipating their room to fall apart in front of them.