By Menachem Wecker
Although she had not aspired to be a spokeswoman for an international automotive company growing up, Sona Iliffe-Moon had all the important parts in place.
A...
Browse past GW Today articles in our archives.
By Menachem Wecker
Although she had not aspired to be a spokeswoman for an international automotive company growing up, Sona Iliffe-Moon had all the important parts in place.
A...
Men’s Basketball Off to Strong Start
By Jamie L. Freedman
The GW Colonials launched their 2009-10 season with four straight victories, capped by a 65-50 win last night over Princeton. Freshman guard Lasan Kromah made national...
Don’t Feed the Plant that Bites You
The tale of a bloodthirsty plant—and the nerdy flower shop employee who discovers and stakes his claim to happiness on it—is center stage in a joint production by GW’s Department of Theatre and...
The Economics of Holiday Shopping
By Menachem Wecker
The latest headlines about the U.S. economy can sometimes seem like a ping pong match. One second there is a recession, and the next moment the recession has ended. The...
Is There a World War II–Scale Effort on Climate Change?
What would it take to mobilize Americans around the issue of climate change on a scale comparable to World War II?
Al Gore points to the need for a wartime effort in An Inconvenient Truth....
Health Care Sciences Professor Recognized for Innovative Technology Use
Assistant Professor of Health Care Sciences Ellen Costello received a 2009 Bender Teaching Award for her novel use of technology in her instruction, including digitized breathing sounds and music...
By Menachem Wecker
Graduate student Charlotte Brock grew up speaking French and English at home and quickly learned Portuguese and Spanish. Living in Jamaica, South Korea, the Cape Verde...
By Jamie L. Freedman
GW’s Innovation Task Force is moving into full swing, spearheaded by a 13-member steering committee, chaired by Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs Jeffrey...
By Menachem Wecker
Storied jazz musician Dave Brubeck has been earning a lot of presidential praise lately.
“You can’t understand America without understanding jazz. And you can’t...
By Rachel Muir
The tale of an old man’s death based on a stanza in Dante’s Inferno hardly seems the stuff of comedy, but as reimagined in Puccini’s one-act opera it becomes farce with greedy...