Friday, November 13th, 2009

HOYAS at Tulane LIVE BLOG

Georgetown's men's basketball team opens their season tonight in New Orleans, La. against Tulane. Tipoff is scheduled for 9:20 p.m. Check THE HOYA's live blog as the No. 20 Hoyas take on the Green Wave.

GU Marks Fall of Wall

By Bonnie Duncan | Nov 13 2009

Kicking off a week of festivities, speaker events and a reconstruction of the Berlin Wall in Red Square and the Intercultural Center, Georgetown began its celebration of the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall on Monday.

Students to Rally for DPS

By Stephen Szypulski | Nov 13 2009

A coalition of students is set to hold a rally demanding better university support of Department of Public Safety staffers today at 1 p.m. in Red Square.

2010-2020 Campus Plan Drafted

By Caitlin Mac Neal | Nov 13 2009

The university announced the first draft of the 2010-2020 Campus Plan yesterday in a meeting with student media. The plan will focus on the quality of community and academic life, civic engagement and sustainability.

DPS Blotter

Wednesday, November 4

Graffiti, Exterior of Hoya Kids Learning Center, 12:57 p.m.

A fence in the area of ...

Students Advocate GU Space

By Clare Scanlan | Nov 13 2009

After a meeting with student leaders and university officials last month, the Georgetown Student Space Working Group continues to advocate the improvement of student space on campus.

New Scientology Church Opens

By Kate Kauffman | Nov 13 2009

Located at 16th and P Streets — about a half-mile away from the White House — the new Scientology church opened on Oct. 31 and drew nearly 3,000 at the opening, according to Business Wire.

Officials to Close Public H1N1 Vaccine Clinics

By Mary McGuire | Nov 13 2009

District health officials plan to close public H1N1 virus vaccine clinics and redistribute doses to doctors and community health centers in an effort to more effectively provide the vaccine.

District Works Toward Improving 2010 Census Response

By Yuse Lajiminmuhip | Nov 13 2009

D.C. officials hope to secure billions of dollars in federal funding by improving the traditionally poor response rate of District residents to the U.S. Census, according to The Washington Post.

Turning the Luck Around for Black Cats

By Matt Joseloff | Nov 13 2009

Black cats are adopted far less than their less ominously colored counterparts, but it’s not because people consider the cats frightening.