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Andrew Nacin

anacin@gwhatchet.com · @nacin
Tuesday, March 24, 2009 4:19 p.m.

Student Court keeps Boyer off ballot

This post was written by Alli Hoff and Andrew Nacin.

The Student Court ruled on Tuesday to uphold the Joint Election Committee’s decision to disqualify presidential candidate Kyle Boyer from the Student Association runoff election.

In a 2-1 decision, the Court found that the Joint Elections Committee did not “abuse its discretion” in disqualifying Boyer, a junior. Senior Brand Kroeger said he was the dissenting vote, voting in favor of Boyer.

The runoff will take place Wednesday and Thursday between sophomores Julie Bindelglass and Nick Polk.

“While the members of this Court disagree with the analysis of the JEC, and perhaps even the outcome, they recognize the deference due to the JEC and cannot find an instance of abuse of discretion,” wrote Chief Judge Chris Wimbush. The Court has 30 days to publish majority and dissenting opinions.

Boyer did not respond to requests for comment but posted a message to his friends on Twitter.

“I mean everything happens for a reason, I could quote a scripture but you already know that God is awesome,” Boyer wrote on Tuesday night. “And no, I’m not voting tomorrow.”

The violations levied against Boyer concerned his compliance with the JEC’s standards for reporting campaign finances. According to the JEC, Boyer should have claimed the fair market value of a car he used to display posters on H Street during the general election two weeks ago. The car was borrowed for the campaign from Boyer’s friend Dave Fowler, and therefore had no specific attached cost. The JEC said that the fair market cost of the 1997 Jeep Cherokee could be compared to the rental cost of a mid-sized SUV.

Boyer, the SA’s executive vice president, contended in court that Fowler’s car was in poor condition and would not be available to rent on the market, thus no fair market value exists for the car. Boyer added that even if the JEC determined that Boyer had to report the fair market value of the car, the vehicle should have been reflected in a lesser price estimation than the JEC’s $206 estimation.
Read more…

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Multiple GW buildings remain closed after heating oil leaked from underground tanks into the basement of Lisner Hall.

Multiple GW buildings remain closed after heating oil leaked from underground tanks into the basement of Lisner Hall. Andrew Nacin/Hatchet photographer

Updated March 15, 5:45 p.m. Multiple GW buildings were evacuated Saturday night after “possibly a few hundred gallons” of heating oil leaked from underground tanks into the basement of Lisner Hall, a University spokeswoman said.

University spokeswoman Tracy Schario said the heating oil came from two underground tanks adjacent to Lisner Hall, each able to hold 6,000 gallons. Schario said someone reported an odor to the University Police Department at about 8:30 p.m. UPD evacuated the building and contacted the D.C. Fire Department. The odor was still perceptible in the area for much of the evening.

The emergency response included more than a dozen DCFD units, among them a hazardous materials team and at least four fire chiefs.

The emergency response included more than a dozen DCFD units, among them a hazardous materials team and at least four fire chiefs.

The incident elicited a large emergency response, including more than a dozen DCFD units. Among them were a hazardous materials team and at least four fire chiefs. Schario said a member of D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty’s staff was on scene, as was John Petrie, GW’s assistant vice president for Public Safety and Emergency Management. DCFD cleared the area shortly after 11 p.m., once the spill was believed to be contained.

She said about 60 people were evacuated from the Law School complex, which includes Bell, Lisner, Stuart and Stockton halls, and the law library. While the rest of GW just started Spring Break, the Law School is currently in session. Schario said Sunday the complex reopened after cleanup efforts early Sunday, but had no new information.

Schario said late Saturday there was no indication what caused the leak. “We don’t know whether it was a spill or a leak,” she said. “We’re classifying it as a heating oil fuel spill.”

The environmental impact will be part of the assessment, she said Saturday, noting that the tanks were underground. The D.C. Water and Sewer Authority and Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs were notified of the incident.

There were no injuries reported. A DCFD spokesperson was unavailable for comment.

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1:56 p.m. — A valve on a 30-inch water main was turned off at 17th and M streets N.W., according to Alert DC at about 1:30 p.m., so the water authority can repair a six-inch water main break on 12th Street between O and P streets.

Students in Foggy Bottom may have difficulty taking a shower or washing their dishes this afternoon.

Foggy Bottom is “experiencing low water pressure,” according to the GW Campus Advisories Web site.

The advisory, posted at 12:15 p.m., said the D.C. Water and Sewer Authority is working to resolve the issue. A Hatchet reporter in Ivory Tower says water pressure has returned to the building.

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Monday, Sept. 15, 2008 3:17 p.m.

Live blogging the secretaries of state

Related: Secretaries of state meet in Lisner for historic event | Officials spent year planning

4:45 p.m. Outside. With buses and limos lining H Street, traffic near H and 21st streets is heavy. About 150 people are waiting near the stage entrance as the secretaries begin to exit Lisner. Albright, Powell and Kissinger are signing autographs. And that concludes our live blog. (Jump to start of live blog.)

4:39 p.m. The handshakes. More than 90 minutes after they sat down, the crowd gives the secretaries a standing ovation. The secretaries, still on stage, shake hands.

4:35 p.m. The election. “We ought to be talking about our problems,” says Powell, referencing the economy, education and energy as examples. “They’re all linked.”

Christopher says “we’ve come to perhaps a bit of a silly period (in the campaign),” but we’re coming to a serious point.

Kissinger says we’re in a 24-hour news cycle. Candidates and the public are distracted by focus groups: “Don’t blame the candidates.”

4:25 p.m. Darfur. “You look at something like Darfur, it breaks your heart,” Powell says. “We have spent a lot of money on the people and Darfur.” Is Darfur genocide? “If you’re the United States, you’re dammed if you do and dammed if you don’t,” Albright says.

The U.S. should not commit troops to something not supported by the American people, Baker says. They are “the final arbiters.”

“Once it is declared genocide, we must do something,” Albright says. “I didn’t call it genocide,” Baker replies.

Powell says we asked the United Nations to make an assessment, and they said it wasn’t genocide. “We don’t have the resources or capability to put our troops” in Darfur. Peace can only be achieved by “political reconciliation.”

4:21 p.m. Powerful messages. Harris Davidson of Conn. says that electing an African American president would send a powerful message abroad: would McCain do the same? Baker, who says he endorsed McCain: yes, abroad and at home. Albright: it would send a huge message. She added to applause, “I’m of course supporting Sen. Obama.”

“We have to make a judgment here. I have not decided who I will vote for,” Powell says. “We have to get off this lipstick on a pig stuff.”

Sesno asks about Powell’s personal interest in an Obama presidency as the first African American secretary of state: “I’m an American, first and foremost,” he says to loud applause.

4:17 p.m. Africa. Powell says Bush has done a good job in Africa, but that Africa and health must “be a priority for the next president.”

4:13 p.m. Christopher on U.S. power. “The United States as an enormous power has declined, at least in an economic sense,” he says. The question is whether the United States and China can look at themselves “not as adversaries.”

4:05 p.m. Climate change. When Amanpour asks the secretaries whether climate change was caused by mankind, Albright joked, “except in Alaska,” alluding to Alaskan Gov. Sarah Palin, the Republican vice presidential nominee. Baker says climate change is a “global problem” and we need leadership: “It’s one of the major responsibilities of the new president of the United States, but … in a way that’s not detrimental to the U.S., like (Kyoto).”

4:00 p.m. Iraq. With the conversation shifting to Iraq, Christopher says, and Powell agrees, the next president needs to put pressure on Iraq to make political progress. Albright: we need a diplomatic solution to Iraq, and Syria needs to be involved. Powell says the Iraq government is giving us a timetable; Kissinger says to consider the intentions of Iraqi President Maliki’s proposed timetable: “the right outcome is to continue what we we’re doing.”

3:53 p.m. Baker on power. “We need to beef up elements of soft power,” says Baker, adding, “it’s not just the military.” Baker says “the new president can re-establish the consensus for foreign assistance” and use the presidency as a bully pulpit to re-establish free trade.

On Syria: “we could flip Syria,” and the new administration should re-establish relations. “There is a Syrian deal to be had,” he says, and adds it is easier to get a Syrian deal than a Palestinian deal.

3:50 p.m. Powell on Afghanistan. After a commercial break, Powell says the next president will need more troops in Afghanistan, and the Afghan government will need to “create a relationship with Pakistan” to control tribal areas. Kissinger added it will take much more time to finish the job in Afghanistan.

3:40 p.m. Iran. Albright says it is important to engage Iran, and Powell agrees. Christopher added that military options in Iran are poor.

Kissinger is in favor of negotiating with Iran “without conditions,” but that we first need to have a clear understanding of what it is we are trying to prevent. The issue of nuclear proliferation is “one of the fundamental problems the new administration will face,” Kissinger says.

3:33 p.m. Kissinger on Russia, Albright on Iran. Asked for recommendations to give to the next president, Kissinger says cooperation should not be decided by what is happening in the conflict with Georgia. Cooperation with Russia is imperative for energy issues, Albright says.

3:28 p.m. Wall Street. Discussion has turned to the economy in the wake of the financial crises on Wall Street which came to a head over the weekend. Baker, a former secretary of the treasury in the Reagan administration, says the economic crisis is very serious and could have global effects, but that the U.S. should not bail out additional corporations.

3:25 p.m. Amanpour and Sesno are pressing the secretaries how to improve America’s role in the world which they says is severely diminished. Baker says one of the best things to happen would be to close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp. Albright says the U.S. should take a more active role in fighting global warming and AIDS. Powell says that America’s culture and economic systems are still some of the strongest in the world despite reputation damage.

3:13 p.m. We’ll be live-blogging today’s roundtable of five secretaries of state. The event, “The Next President: A World of Challenges,” is in Lisner Auditorium and will air on CNN next week. The panel — Madeleine Albright, James Baker, Henry Kissinger, Colin Powell, and Warren Christopher — is moderated by GW professor Frank Sesno and CNN special correspondent Christiane Amanpour.

The Hatchet’s Alexa Millinger and Tim Gowa are reporting from Lisner, with Andrew Nacin compiling and writing the live blog.

Related: Secretaries of state meet in Lisner for historic event | Officials spent year planning

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Vice President Dick Cheney, who has a history of cardiac problems, visited GW Hospital this morning for his annual checkup. His press secretary told the Associated Press his heartbeat was normal and cardiac status was “stable.”

The 67-year-old has had four heart attacks, two artery-clearing angioplasties and quadruple bypass surgery. He has a defibrillator surgically implanted in his chest to regulate his heartbeat, which was replaced in July 2007.

Cheney last visited GW Hospital in November for an irregular heartbeat, determined to be atrial fibrillation. Doctors delivered an electrical shock to his heart to restore it to a normal rhythm.

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An air conditioning unit caused the May 2 fire on Schenley Hall’s second floor, a D.C. Fire Department incident report confirmed.

The May 5 report stated that the fire started when electrical wiring ignited due to a “spark, ember or flame from operating equipment,” and that the flames spread due to curtains and other fabric. Fire department spokesman Alan Etter told The Hatchet Friday night that the fire was caused by an air conditioner that caught fire.

The fire investigator’s report estimated the fire caused a loss of $75,000 — 60 percent of all property and contents — including $20,000 in damages to the room’s contents.

DCFD responded with 21 units, with the first arriving within three minutes of the 9:29 p.m. dispatch. Firefighters quickly extinguished the fire, which was contained to the second-floor room. The third floor received some smoke damage.

The report stated that the “cause of ignition was unintentional” and there were no human factors that contributed to the fire.

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Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008 8:30 p.m.

Live-blogging the EVP debate

The Hatchet live-blogged the second annual Hatchet-SA Debate tonight, from Jack Morton Auditorium. This blog post is for the executive vice presidential debate. For the preview, click here. For the live-blogging of the presidential debate, click here.

Analysis | 10:09 p.m. The only SA outsider running for president (Tarek Al-Hariri) fared better than Burnett, the only outsider running for EVP, who found herself at odds with both of her candidates on a few positions. She stumbled at times and appeared nervous, but positioned herself strongly as an outsider, a younger candidate and a candidate for change, which could help her in the election.

Boyer and O’Neil agreed on many points. Boyer was very articulate while championing and defending his work on reducing Metro fares — looking to use that experience to his advantage — while O’Neil was more bolder with his ideas, such as proposing a more dynamic Vern shuttle and changes to the use of study rooms in Gelman.

This is a young field – two sophomores and a freshman. In a race with two SA insiders, Read more…

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Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008 7:10 p.m.

Live-blogging the Hatchet-SA Debate

The Hatchet live-blogged the second annual Hatchet-SA Debate tonight, from Jack Morton Auditorium. This blog post is for the presidential debate. For the preview, click here. For the live-blogging of the executive vice presidential debate, click here.

Analysis | 11:45 p.m.
The only outsider and the only sophomore, Tarek Al-Hariri, fared well against three senators, all juniors. He received good reactions from the audience on his positions, and his rhetoric was well delivered. He wants to build an internship database (similar ideas were proposed by other candidates, whether for jobs, housing, sponsorships, etc.), explore other sources of funding (also emphasized by Aswani) and do something drastic with Read more…

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Tuesday, Feb. 19, 2008 3:59 p.m.

Hatchet-SA Debate tonight

Tonight’s Hatchet-SA Debate starts at 7 p.m. in the Jack Morton Auditorium (in the Media and Public Affairs Building.) Doors open at 6:30 p.m., with light refreshments to follow the event.

The participating presidential candidates:

  • Sophomore Tarek Al-Hariri
  • Junior Vishal Aswani, SA Senator (SEAS-U)
  • Junior Kevin Kozlowski, SA Senator (U-At Large)
  • Junior “OG” Oyiborhoro, SA Senator (CCAS-U)

The candidates for executive vice president:

  • Sophomore Kyle Boyer, SA assistant vice president of community affairs
  • Freshman Raven Burnett
  • Sophomore Ted O’Neil, SA Senator (ESIA-U)

There will also be a video shown tonight: “On Leadership: Advice for the Future, from the Past,” produced by Sam Sakin, The Hatchet’s multimedia editor. The debate will be moderated by The Hatchet’s senior editor, David Ceasar, and the panelists are

  • Andrew Ramonas, campus news editor of The Hatchet
  • Mallory Thompson, news director of WRGW
  • Lizzie Wozobski, opinions editor of The Hatchet
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Student Association President Nicole Capp confirmed she will not run for re-election today in a podcast recording for The GW Hatchet, to be published Monday.

Nicole Capp and Brand Kroeger

(Capp with SA Executive Vice President Brand Kroeger earlier this year. Tim Gowa / Hatchet photographer)

The Hatchet’s multimedia editor, Sam Salkin, asked, “Nicole, I know that you’re a junior and you could run again for president. Have you made any decision about you’re plans for next year?”

Capp: “I will not be running for next year.”

I hope that quells any rumors of a re-election situation, for Capp anyway.

Tune in to our award-winning GW Hatchet Podcasts this Monday, Feb. 4, and hear the rest of the interview.

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