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By the time Natalie Punchak (C’11) graduated from Georgetown, she had already served as D.C.’s Public Defender Service’s youngest investigator, led a social justice campaign in Bolivia and worked for NBC. Read More
Former business students and founders of the popular D.C. salad restaurant shared the ingredients for a successful business with current MBA students. Read More
Alex Yale-Loehr (C’12) doesn’t have to worry during his last semester at Georgetown about finding a job – a scholarship he won in 2010 provides him with two years of guaranteed employment with the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) following graduation. Read More
Law professor Carlos Manuel Vázquez has been elected to the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination for a four-year term beginning this month. Read More
Georgetown will honor the life and legacy of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. with a week of musical, academic, theatrical, spiritual and service events, Jan. 16-21. Read More
A study being published tomorrow in a scholarly journal shows nicotine patches may improve mild cognitive impairment in older adults, possibly paving a way to slow down Alzheimer's disease. Read More
Blending his own life experiences and that of St. Ignatius, Rev. Kevin O’Brien, S.J., Georgetown’s vice president for mission and ministry, has written a guide to the Spiritual Exercises called The Ignatian Adventure (Loyola Press, 2011). Read More
Acupuncture significantly reduces levels of a protein linked to chronic stress, according to a study with rats by researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center (GUMC). Read More
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton comes to Georgetown to launch the U.S. National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security, the result of a U.N. resolution. Read More
Monica McNutt (C’11), who helped lead the Georgetown women’s basketball team to the NCAA Sweet 16 tournament, is now giving advice to high school student-athletes in a blog for The Washington Post. Read More