The Georgetown Area

<p>Is it expensive to eat out a couple times a week for lunch or dinner? </p>

<p>What do students do for fun other than attend parties? </p>

<p>Can a student stay in his/her dorm room over the summer?</p>

<p>I was just in the D.C. area, and Sprint coverage was poor. Is this true in/around Georgetown? What cell carriers are the most common?</p>

<p>Thank you all for the help in advance.</p>

<ol>
<li><p>it depends where yougo to eat. you can drop five dollars at qdoba or $100 at 1789.... but nobody really does that.</p></li>
<li><p>just hang out, watch movies, go to dinner, go to basketball games, play sports... realy whateevr you want to do is available.</p></li>
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<p>3 you usually can't stay in your own room over the summer unless you are raelly lucky, but there is summer housing on campus in the apartment complexes like village b and nevilles.</p>

<p>and as for the cell service... i had tmobile and it sucked in dc so i got verizon and it's pretty good.</p>

<p>go hoyas</p>

<ol>
<li> yeah, I agree with Mike. The Qdoba 1/2 price mondays and Rugby 1/2 price Tuesdays are a pretty good double shot. I'm here over the summer right now and don't have a meal plan, and can't cook 'rill good, so it's been pretty expensive though-- it adds up!</li>
<li>Yes. Museums, concerts in the city/ on campus, midnight monuments, it's all fair game. this is not a place where you will find yourself easily bored.</li>
<li>Not your own dorm, but you can get housing pretty easily (?) I'm living in Village B right now, got free housing with GERMS, the EMT service on campus. All my friends are living in various townhouses with various programs. The easiest way is just to 'work for housing' over the summer. And you can live here. For free. Alternately, you can pay and live in a dorm/ get an apartment.</li>
<li>I have Cingular. It's pretty sweet.</li>
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