More than 100 pro-Palestinian protesters gathered at the Black Lives Matter Plaza in the hour hour before D.C. polling sites closed on Election Day to condemn presidential candidates for aiding or ...
Junior Grace Munn thought she was picking up her South Carolina ballot when she visited the GW Mail and Package Services center last month, but when a mailroom employee handed her a Massachusetts ...
Each year, graduating editors are given 30 final column inches – “30” was historically used to signify the end of a story – to reflect on their time at The Hatchet, published in the final issues of ...
Despite University President Thomas LeBlanc’s efforts to enhance STEM research and enrollment at GW, mathematics and engineering professors said they’ve been disappointed in his inability to unite the ...
Tyler, the Creator quite literally brought the fire to a packed crowd at Capital One Arena Monday night with an electric and dynamic performance highlighting his 2021 album “Call Me If You Get Lost.” ...
Administrators on call at Shenkman Hall alerted GW Police Department officers to a grinder and rolling paper left on a coffee table. The drug paraphernalia was taken by GWPD to the Academic Center for ...
A former employee is suing the University for wrongful termination. In a 13-page complaint filed in the D.C. Superior Court Friday, former technology research director Donald DuRousseau alleges that ...
Officials will debut a Uyghur language studies program as part of the Classical and Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations Department this academic year. The department, housed within the Columbian ...
Editor’s note: This article contains The Hatchet’s live coverage of day three of the encampment. To read The Hatchet’s coverage of day four, click here. Night has fallen on the pro-Palestinian ...
A psychology professor accused of discriminating against Jewish and Israeli students left the University amid an ongoing federal investigation into her alleged misconduct. Lara Sheehi, an assistant ...
Certain ghosts and ghouls rumored to haunt iconic locations in District might give locals as much of a fright as the upcoming election. Be they political luminaries who now inhabit lantern-lit halls ...
During the height of segregation in D.C., the city’s U Street corridor came to be known as “Black Broadway ” because Black residents congregated there for business, poetry slams, open mic nights and ...