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Asher Corson, seen here as a senior in 2006, was recently named the new president of the Foggy Bottom Association. Hatchet file photo.

L. Asher Corson, seen here as a senior in 2006, was recently named the new president of the Foggy Bottom Association. Hatchet file photo.

A GW graduate and current GW student have taken the helm of the Foggy Bottom Association, a community group that meets monthly to inform Foggy Bottom residents of current affairs and promote the residential quality of the area.

L. Asher Corson, a 2007 graduate, currently serves as president of the association. No stranger to the community, Corson has also served as the chairman of the Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2A, and works as a communications director for D.C. Councilmember Mary Cheh (D-Ward 3).

Lev Trubkovich, a current student, was selected last week as vice president. Born in Moscow, Trubkovich immigrated to New York as a political refugee after the fall of the Soviet Union, and expects to graduate this semester after taking last spring off to get a head start on job hunting. He said he decided to take the three-year position after being asked by Corson because of an interest in politics and an appreciation for the neighborhood.

Trubkovich said that his unique position as both a member of the Foggy Bottom community and a member of the GW community will allow him to foster a better relationship between the school and its neighbors.

“I think that there’s definitely going to be a much more symbiotic relationship with the entities around us and that’s a great thing,” Trubkovich said. “I think an antagonistic relationship with anybody in the neighborhood is not progressive. I think we’re going to foster a good relationship.”

Both Corson and Trubkovich said the FBA’s biggest concern at this time is a membership drive to both increase participation and the number of members paying dues.

“Since Asher and I are both younger, and we definitely were members of the student community at GW, I think one of the biggest new things that we want to do with the FBA is get a lot of student members,” Trubkovich said. “We’re going to try to get more students involved, we’re going to try to raise our membership, we’re going to continue great things that we’ve done.”

Corson said he also hopes to use his relationships with the community and GW to further communications between the vastly different residents of Foggy Bottom.

“I do think I have a better understanding of both GW’s needs and the neighborhood’s needs, just because I can see the needs from both perspectives,” Corson said. “In the past it’s been an unhealthy, uncommunicative relationship, and I hope that we can move forward, keep the lines of communication open on both ends and further the progress in the relationship that my predecessors started.”

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This post was written by Staff Writer Ashley Roberts.

Though the nationwide unemployment rate has reached well above nine percent, some recent GW graduates are discovering a booming job market in D.C. thanks to economic factors and undergraduate experiences.

Earlier this year, the District was named the best big city for college graduates to find a job by University of Toronto business professor Richard Florida, and the city’s unemployment rate, 6 percent, is significantly lower than the national average.

Michael Bradley, a GW economics professor, said D.C.’s job market is so hot because of the federal government, private sector and government regulation of the economy. Because the federal government is expanding its budget, it requires additional employees to monitor these programs and additional spending is being funneled into the private sector where government contractors have close proximity to the agencies which they serve.

“Thus, they locate here and this also adds jobs to the Washington D.C. area,” Bradley said.

2009 graduate Jeremy Sapriel, a business manager in D.C. at THEO, Inc., said that though finding a job was hard, his experience was easier than that of many of his peers.

“It was difficult for me. However, most of if not all of my graduating class friends seem to have had a far more difficult time. If D.C. truly is one of the better places for a college graduate to find a job, I can only imagine how hard it is in other cities,” Sapriel said.

But some graduates who have stayed in D.C. to work also said connections built at GW played a significant role in job hunting.

John Carlos Estrada, a 2009 graduate, found his job as a desk assistant at the ABC News Washington Bureau through the GW network on Facebook.

“I did a search on Facebook for ABC News and I found out that a mutual friend worked for ABC’s This Week with George Stephanolopous (sic).  I sent her a facebook message telling her I was a graduating GW student looking for a job at ABC after graduation.  She wrote me back and gave me the name of the person at ABC who hires desk assistants, the entry level job at any network,” Estrada said in an e-mail.

Other students have turned internships held during the school year into paying jobs. Riki Parikh, a 2007 graduate and communications employee in Sen. Mark Warner’s office, D-Va., said he interned for Warner the year before he graduated and was able to parlay that into a job on his Senate campaign.

“I have always believed that I would not have my job today had I not gone to GW or been in DC.  My internship with Warner in 2006 was in Alexandria, VA, just a few metro stops away.  My class schedule allowed me to hop on the Metro three times a week to the internship.  The more I went, the more involved I became, which helped get me the full-time gig in the summer of 2007, which led to my job post-grad, which led to my job in the Senate now. Very few areas in the country would give me the opportunity to take that internship I had during school and run with it the way I did,” Parikh said in an e-mail.

Alumnus Kirsten Marie Vernegaard said she made the connection that led to her current position as a federal analyst at Deloitte Consulting LLP in D.C. through GW alumni dinners.

“A Deloitte partner and Deloitte manager signed up for one of these GW events, to take out approximately ten students to for dinner at a nearby restaurant.  In addition to a free, delicious meal, which is always nice in college, Deloitte practitioners were able to give us career advice and speak about their consulting experiences,” Vernegaard said in an e-mail. “Networking goes a long way in finding a job and the GW Alumni Office does a great job bringing people together.”

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Thursday, Dec. 18, 2008 6:36 p.m.

New SEC chief is a Law School alumna

While many GW seniors might hope to land an entry-level job in the Obama Administration after they graduate, one alumna already has her position sewn up, pending senate approval, of course. Mary Schapiro, a 1977 graduate of the Law School was nominated by President-elect Obama Thursday to chair the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Described by the Washington Post as a “veteran regulator,” Schapiro most recently served as the CEO of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, a self-regulatory organization that oversees the securities industry. During the Clinton Administration, she was the chairwoman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

At the SEC, Schapiro will lead an agency that has been widely criticized for its handling of the recent financial crisis. The agency admitted last week that it had failed to properly investigate the business dealings of Bernard Madoff, a financier accused of defrauding investors of $50 billion.

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Monday, June 2, 2008 5:22 p.m.

GW graduate wins Miss DC

GW graduate Katie Marie Grinold was named Miss DC 2008 at the Lincoln Theatre Saturday night. Grinold graduated two weeks ago from The Elliott School of International Affairs. Her platform for Miss DC was focused on improving public education available in the District. For the talent portion she performed a ballet routine to music from “Don Quixote.” See a full story in the CI Edition of The Hatchet next week.

A YouTube video of the announcement can be found here.

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Sunday, Feb. 10, 2008 10:03 p.m.

Eight Reps To Debate At SMPA

GW gets its fair share of political celebrities, but on Feb. 25 eight congressmen will come together on stage at the Jack Morton Auditorium to participate in the first of many “Congress Debates.” This came up on our radar when the GOP issued a news release Friday about the events. Essentially it seems that each debate focuses on one crucial issue and Representatives from both parties can civilly speak their peace.

Reliable Sources

The Jack Morton Auditorium in 2006, during a taping of the CNN show “Reliable Sources.” (Hatchet file photo)

The GW debate will focus on the question “How can America foster economic growth and opportunity?” It will be moderated by Ron Brownstein, a former Los Angeles Times columnist.Rep. Steve Israel, a GW alumnus (D-NY)

The GOP release states that the following congressmen will be in attendance: Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D-IL), Rep. Adam Putnam (R-Fl.), Rep. Rob Andrews (D-NJ), Rep. Eric Cantor (R-Va.), Rep. Artur Davis (D-AL), Rep. Steve Israel (D-NY), Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-WA), and Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI).

Israel (right) graduated from GW in 1982, and Cantor in 1985.

 

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