Archives

Browse past GW Today articles in our archives.

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A Job Well Done

Over the last seven months, more than 3,800 GW students, faculty, staff and members of the Board of Trustees have participated in community service projects throughout the Washington, D.C., area...

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Translational Research

By Menachem Wecker

If Cynthia Dowd has anything to say about it, tuberculosis may have to learn a lesson from the Borg of Star Trek fame: “Resistance is futile.”

Though TB is...

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Searching for Autism's Treatable Roots

By Danny Freedman

Down a side hallway and in a cluttered office tucked away inside a lab, Valerie Hu is attempting to crack one of biology’s most vexing riddles: her son.

Matthew,...

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Saying Goodbye to Dean Susan Phillips

By Jennifer Price

When a search committee from GW’s School of Business first approached Susan Phillips in 1998, she saw a challenge.

“While it was a good business school, it...

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Fellowships Offer $20,000 for Undergraduate Research

By Carrie Madren

George Washington undergraduates have a new opportunity to satisfy their intellectual curiosity. Two research awards, each totaling $10,000, will be given this year to...

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Eye Opening

By Jennifer Price

GW freshman Andrew Pangilinan has always loved to travel.

A first generation American, Mr. Pangilinan has gone on safaris in Kenya and Tanzania, climbed Mt....

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Emergency Education

As a pediatric emergency room doctor at Children’s National Medical Center in Northwest D.C., David Mathison sees firsthand the gap in health education with patients and it’s a problem he wants to...

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Supporting Legal Education

J. Richard Knop, J.D. ’69, had been out of touch with his alma mater when an article profiling...

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Commencement Countdown

George Washington’s class of 2010 will celebrate Commencement with the U.S. Capitol as a backdrop and First Lady Michelle Obama as speaker.

It promises to be an experience like no other....

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Supporting Veterans’ Education

When Anthony Rango was injured and honorably discharged from the military in 2002, his skills didn’t translate very well into the civilian world.

He got a job at the U.S. Department of...