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Stories from the January 14, 2010, Print Edition

Contract signed for degree audit system

by Matt Rist

The University has signed a contract to implement a degree audit system, which will automatically review students' records and determine whether they are making sufficient progress toward graduating.

University delays GCR changes

by Priya Anand
Hatchet Reporter

The reduction in Columbian College of Arts and Sciences' general curriculum requirements scheduled to affect the class of 2014 has been delayed a year, the University's chief academic officer said.

New bag fee prompts mixed reactions

by Samantha Stone
Hatchet Reporter

What costs 5 cents but is still a tough sell? In the District, plastic and paper bags.

Weekend warriors post activities online Web sites

by Matt Rist

With glorified stories of binge drinking, drug use, sex, and countless other compromising situations, students are posting their uncensored - but anonymous - dirty laundry on social media sites for the world to see.

Many professors miss grade deadline

by Gabi Marush
Hatchet Reporter

Grades from more than 400 classes have not been posted to the University's Banner online information system by the classes' respective professors, leaving students without final grades nearly one month after finals ended. University Registrar Elizabeth Amundson said professors have five days after the end of finals to submit grades to GWeb before they are not in compliance with the faculty code - a code mandated, but not enforced by the Faculty Senate.

Student Association to shift focus to larger problems

by Madeleine Morgenstern

Halfway through her term as Student Association president, Julie Bindelglass said she is proud of what the SA has accomplished so far this year and hopes to make progress on the two issues that consistently draw complaints from students: dining and advising.

Student finds knife blade in pita

by Amanda D'Ambra
Hatchet Reporter

A male student found a small piece of metal in his order at Pita Pit the week before winter break, the store's owner confirmed this week.

Growth was theme of decade for GW, administrators say

by Emily Cahn

Growth. That's what GW administrators say was the theme of the past decade.

Study: exercise regimens are harder to keep for obese

by Michelle Bradbury
Hatchet Staff Writer

While the Lerner Health and Wellness Center is bustling with increased traffic from students with fresh New Year's resolutions, a new University Medical Center study shows those who most need a fitness regimen have a harder time adhering to it.

Government simplifies aid form

by Madeleine O'Connor
Hatchet Staff Writer

College applicants and families who are applying for federal financial assistance for the 2010-2011 academic year will use a revised FAFSA form, designed to give more students access to a college education by simplifying the application process.

Faculty questions buyout

by Lauren French

Professors from all disciplines are urging senior administrators and the School of Engineering and Applied Science to put teaching first, after the University announced it is offering buyouts to 39 professors in SEAS.

Office space value on the rise in D.C.

by Emily Cahn

As property values for commercial office space are declining in cities like New York and San Francisco, the value for office space in the District is poised to take the No. 1 spot as the most expensive in the country.

Meghan McCain will speak at GW in February

by Madeleine Morgenstern

Meghan McCain, daughter of the former Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, will be the keynote speaker of Allied in Pride's "Marriage Equality Week."

Campus Calendar

Snapshot: Stitch ‘n Bitch

Congress passes District’s budget

by Andrea Vittorio
Hatchet Reporter

In a triumph for advocates of home rule, The District's budget for 2010 passed through Congress free of previous restrictions on medical marijuana, needle-exchange programs.

Plans submitted for neighborhood library and fire station

by Maryann Tadros
Hatchet Reporter

A developer for the West End Neighborhood Library and the West End Fire Station may finally be chosen after two proposals - including mixed-use plans to build apartments above the fire station - were presented last month.

Crime Log

by T.C. Flowers
Hatchet Reporter

Travel woes hit some students returning to campus

by Kira Brekke
Hatchet Reporter

After an attempted terrorist attack that threatened to blow up Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on Christmas Day, significant travel delays were to be expected. But more than two weeks later, some students traveling back to school still were still enduring the consequences.