Going green before his time
SPARKS, Md. - Offering his lunch guests a touch of cool watermelon on warm Saturday afternoon, Steven Knapp instructs his eating companions to be careful what they throw away.
SPARKS, Md. - Offering his lunch guests a touch of cool watermelon on warm Saturday afternoon, Steven Knapp instructs his eating companions to be careful what they throw away.
Web UpdateSaturday, Sept. 1 11:39 a.m.University Police Department officers found a rabid juvenile bat this week in Funger Hall.
GW remains a leader in the financial aid section of the U.S. News & World Report's list of top colleges - a statistic administrators seem hesitant to promote.
This spring GW issued cease and desist letters to 19 students for the alleged illegal downloading in response to efforts of the RIAA and other companies to enforce copyright laws.
Three Safeway grocery stores in Northwest D.C. will accept Colonial Cash beginning this semester - the first grocery option on GWorld in more than a year.
Zipcar is no longer only for GW's upperclassmen.
Two incoming freshmen were found to have engaged in separate cases of underage drinking at CI this summer and at least one was spared expulsion by GW.
SJS found last year's SA President Lamar Thorpe guilty of disorderly conduct for "lewd and indecent behavior," according to SJS documents given to The Hatchet.
After more than two decades as a university administrator, Stephen Joel Trachtenberg is joining the private sector to help other institutions find qualified presidents, administrators and professors. GW's former president accepted a job earlier this month as a top executive at Korn/Ferry International, one of the nation's largest headhunting firms.
Grammy-award winning band OK Go will perform at Fall Fest on Sept. 8 in University Yard.
GW alumnus Audrey Quinby has had a tough time in Iraq. But when asked what her most intense experience has been, she can't single anything out.
GW took its first step toward achieving University President Steven Knapp's goal of increasing alumni relations by welcoming two new administrators.
U.S. News & World Report ranked GW 54th in its annual listing of the nation's top 100 undergraduate programs.
The College Democrats took second place in a national chapter of the year contest earlier this summer.
While most GW students might watch CNN or peruse a copy of The Washington Post to get their fill of pressing social issues, junior James Jones does more. Jones, the spokesperson for the Philadelphia-based Youth Action, handles the group's public relations and tries to encourage young African-Americans to be more politically aware.
After more than one year of renovations, Monroe Hall is open for business.
Because of efforts made by the Student Association, free newspapers will again be available the start of the fall semester.
Sophomores Mike Briscoe and Will Doar pick up a package falling off a cart the two used while moving into their new dorm early.