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Emily Cahn

a campus news editor at The Hatchet, is a junior majoring in political communication. She was previously the assistant news editor and has been writing for The Hatchet since her freshman year as the Student Association beat reporter. Like many GW students, Emily calls New Jersey home.
ecahn@gwhatchet.com

After months of attempting to procure H1N1 vaccinations, the University began administering the vaccine to students Wednesday afternoon.

Isabel Goldenberg, director of the Student Health Service, said 277 students received the H1N1 vaccine from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Wednesday, adding that an additional 550 doses remain.

An Infomail was sent to the University community at about 1:30 p.m. Wednesday afternoon, telling students that SHS received the H1N1 vaccine and would start distributing it to students in the SHS office on a first-come, first-served basis. By 2 p.m., SHS was filled with students hoping to receive the vaccine.

“We have 550 doses left, mainly nasal spray,” Goldenberg said in an e-mail. “We are expecting more allocations from the Department of Health. Most likely they will come after the Thanksgiving holiday.”

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Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2009 5:13 p.m.

Flavor Flav to shut down roads on campus


View Flavor Flav’s flatbed truck route in a larger map

Hip hop artist Flavor Flav and his activist rap group Public Enemy will shut down roads on campus tonight, when they travel down G and H Streets on a flatbed truck.

Flavor Flav and Chuck D, another member of Public Enemy, will embark on their flatbed truck ride on 18th and G Streets, and end their route at Lisner Auditorium, where they will have a concert to support the Sasha Bruce House, a local organization that helps mentor homeless, runaway, abused, neglected and at-risk youth in the District, according to an AlertDC e-mail.

The flatbed truck will begin its ride at 7:45 p.m.

According to the AlertDC e-mail, “The university and District agencies, including the Metropolitan Police Department, are actively working together to minimize disruptions to the campus and neighborhood.  The estimated duration of the procession is approximately 15 minutes within the time frame of 7:30 p.m. and 8:15 p.m.”

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The University announced Monday that the former spokeswoman for the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority will serve as GW’s chief spokesperson, a position that has been vacant for nearly six months.

Candace Smith – who served as a media crisis communications coach as well as the communications adviser to Metro’s general manager – will “oversee media relations activities and strategy, sports information and serve as an integral part of the University’s safety and security communications team,” according to a press release.

Before becoming a communications strategist, Smith worked as a journalist both in the U.S. and abroad, and covered major stories including the anthrax scare, D.C. sniper shootings and the Sept. 11th attack at the Pentagon.

“GW is an exciting and complex institution, and I’m thrilled to have the opportunity to promote the students, faculty and staff as well as the research discoveries,” Smith said in a press release.

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Thursday, Nov. 12, 2009 7:17 p.m.

Univ. receives small quantity of H1N1 vaccine

Senior Brandon Mansur receives a seasonal flu shot during one of the free flu shot clinics back in September. The University announced that H1N1 vaccines have arrived, and more will trickle in for distribution in the coming weeks. Media Credit: Jordan Emont/Hatchet photographer

Senior Brandon Mansur receives a seasonal flu shot during one of the free flu shot clinics back in September. The University announced that H1N1 vaccines have arrived, and more will trickle in for distribution in the coming weeks. Media Credit: Jordan Emont/Hatchet photographer

The University received 500 doses of the H1N1 vaccination this week, and plans to begin distributing these vaccinations to “high risk groups” – which includes pregnant women and caregivers for children younger than six months of age – according to an Infomail sent Thursday afternoon.

These high risk groups will receive the vaccine free of charge beginning Friday from the Student Health Service.

Because many students do not fall into these two “high risk” groups, a University official said the University’s H1N1 task force will determine the next group to receive the leftover H1N1 vaccine.

“After tomorrow’s H1N1 vaccine clinic, the University will evaluate next steps in accordance with CDC guidelines,” said Edwin Schonfeld, co-leader of the University’s H1N1 task force efforts and senior associate vice president for administration, referring to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s H1N1 guidelines.

More H1N1 vaccines will make their way to the University in coming weeks, according to the Infomail, however a recent Washington Post-ABC News poll found that 70 percent of college-age people do not plan on getting the vaccine. The Post highlighed GW students in their story, which also said GW administrators requested 14,000 H1N1 vaccinations from the D.C. Department of Health, the agency distributing the vaccine.

The University has also rescheduled another seasonal flu clinic on Tuesday Nov. 17, where 1,400 doses of the seasonal influenza vaccine will be distributed free of charge to students, faculty and staff. The clinic will be held in the Marvin Center Grand Ballroom from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

In October, the University was forced to postpone two scheduled seasonal influenza clinics, after they exhausted the 4,500 dose supply.

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U.S. Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan – the military psychiatrist accused of opening fire at the Fort Hood army base in Texas – attended “a number” of events at GW’s Homeland Security Policy Institute, according to HSPI’s director, but only attended the events as an audience member.

The Washington Examiner reported this morning that Hasan “was a participant in George Washington University’s Homeland Security Policy Institute task force that aimed at providing advice on security to the new administration.”

Yet Frank Cilluffo, director of the HSPI, said Hasan was not affiliated with the HSPI.

“There have been a lot of erroneous stories,” Cilluffo said, adding that Hasan has “no affiliation [with HSPI], was not a member of the task force, but participated in some of the meetings as an audience member.”

Cilluffo said Hasan RSVP’d to these HSPI events “in his capacity as a disaster and preventative psychiatry fellow with the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences” – a federal health sciences university which trains its students for “military medicine, disaster medicine and military medical readiness.”

“We try to err on the side of transparency and make available to everyone who is in attendance at our meetings, and that is I’m sure where the linkage came from,” Cilluffo said, referring to the Examiner’s misrepresentation of Hasan’s affiliation with HSPI.

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8:11 “We’ve got the tools, they are in this book. we have everything with the possible exception of political will. But ladies and gentlemen, political will is a renewable resource,” Gore said. The event is now over. Gore received a standing ovation. Those with books in the audience are now waiting to have their book signed. Thanks for reading, we hope you found this to be an informative live blog! Good night. 

8:10 Gore just asked how many students at GW have in the last three years formed a determination to focus on things to be a solution to the climate crisis. Dozens of hands were raised, and the audience applauded. Gore said he was 13 years old when he heard President John F. Kennedy say he wanted to land someone on the moon. He said many people thought that was a foolish commitment. Gore said, however, that Americans accomplished that goal. He said the people who believed in the goal were the young people of that generation.”Those of you who raised your hands represent the future of this world… you are the greatest asset we have going for us today,” Gore said. 

8:04 “There are ways we can form goals based on deep values and keep on our course for a sufficient period of time to solve this crisis,” Gore said, in reference to political solutions to the environmental crisis. “This is not a political issue, this is the moral issue of the present generation,” Gore said. This sentiment drew a loud applause from the crowd. 

8:02 Brazil and Indonesia are the biggest culprits for deforestation, Gore said. Gore said it is necessary to build back the world’s forests in order to improve the environment. Gore said the upcoming climate summit in Copenhagen will be important to try and solve this problem. 

8:00 “The biggest new source of energy is efficiency. The old technologies that are in common usage today, are for the most part incredibly inefficient,” Gore said. He added that 65 percent of energy from coal burning plants is used, the rest is wasted. Gore said that with new technology, it is possible to substitute old technologies with “far more efficient technologies.”

7:58 Gore is now talking about nuclear energy. He said that during his eight years in the White House, every problem with nuclear proliferation came from these nuclear enriching energy plants. He drew a comparison to Iran possibly trying to begin a nuclear proliferation program. Gore said it is hard to promote nuclear energy because the world does not want certain countries to have access to these nuclear technologies for safety reasons. 

7:52 It takes a lot of time, money and energy in order to capture geothermal energy, Gore said. It also can be unsafe, and it will take a lot of time, money and effort to find the sources of geothermal energy. He said this energy source does work and can be used, but wont be the option of choice most of the time because of the difficulties and expenses necessary to capture it. 

7:50 Gore is now talking about the economic issues with new, renewable sources of energy. He said the government will need to subsidize these new sources of energy in order to get them off the ground. 

7:46 Wind energy is now Gore’s topic of choice. Gore said we are not using wind resources enough because we do not have the technology to do so. Gore moved onto geothermal power, and said it is a widely overlooked source of power. Two kilometers below the earth’s surface, there is an abundance of heat that can also serve as a source of energy. “There is enough heat in much places to generate enormous quantities of energy,” Gore said. He added that there are now six publicly traded companies focused on marketing this source of energy. 

7:37 Gore moved onto his third chapter, the sources of renewable energy: wind, solar and geothermal energy. Gore said solar energy is the future, and scientists are working on improving ways of harboring that energy. “They are getting very good about capturing it and converting it into energy,” Gore said, referring to scientists capturing the sun’s energy. He said this form of energy is growing across the world, and other countries are utilizing solar energy better than the U.S. Gore said solar energy is actually a cost effective energy source and will save people money in the future. Gore said, however, that the only way these technologies will become cheap and accessible, is if people show a demand for it. This is the heart of Gore’s book, talking about the way improving the environment can actually be cost effective. 

7:36 Gore is now talking about the second chapter of the book, which focuses on energy sources across the globe. He said the single largest factor to global warming is energy. “The ways in which we burn coal and oil are horribly inefficient.” He said natural gas is an important fossil fuel, and can help de-carbonize our society. He said diesel fuel should be traded for natural gas, as it is a cleaner energy source. Gore also said the electric vehicle fleet is a great way to reduce emissions from energy. 

7:29 The former vice president and Nobel Laureate is discussing the major factors to global warming. Carbon dioxide, or Co2, is a large factor to global warming. He said it is the exhaling breath of the modern industrial society, and said it is very difficult to make changes in reducing these emissions. He said its half of the problem. Gore added that methane is another major factor to global warming. Methane comes from industrial livestock farming and coal burning, as well as rice farming that relies on flooded fields. A lesser known factor to global warming is soot, Gore said. He said much of the soot comes from the burning and destruction of forests across the globe. Gore said this soot stays on glaciers. Because the soot is black, it absorbs the sun and speeds up the melting process of glaciers.

7:23 Gore is telling jokes now. He said that while he was writing the book, he was sitting in a fast food restaurant with a friend. A woman walked by him and gave him an odd stare two times. Gore said he said hello to the woman, who proceeded to say to him, “Do you know if you dyed your hair black you would look just like Al Gore.” The joke drew laughter from the crowd. 

7:20 Gore said he is donating 100 percent of the profits of his new book to the Alliance for Climate Protection. Gore is not a static speaker, and is walking back and forth across the stage as he delivers his lecture to the audience.

7:19 Gore just took the stage to a standing ovation from the crowd. 

7:16 The president of Politics and Prose is now speaking, and said the bookstore is committed to the sustainability movement. She said she cannot understand how everyone in the U.S. is not on board with the movement, and said she feels Gore’s new book will be a great tool to get more Americans on board with the “Green Revolution.”

7:13 Knapp is highlighting GW’s commitment to sustainability, and said that the University wants “to make sure we practice what we teach” in terms of lessoning GW’s impact on the environment. Knapp said he views Gore as a leader in the sustainability movement, and told the audience that we are lucky to have Gore as a speaker here tonight.

7:11 The event is now underway. University President Steven Knapp is welcoming the audience. Gore’s wife, Tipper, is in the audience, as well as members of the Board of Trustees and the D.C. government.

7:07 We are still waiting for the event to start. Before we get underway, take a look at this article in Newsweek for a better explanation of the focus Gore’s new book, which he will talk about tonight. The difference between An Inconvenient Truth and Our Choice, according to this article, is that Gore’s focus has shifted from the individual and their impact on the environment, to corporate America and how big companies can make changes to lessen their environmental impact. 

7:00 Gore’s book is a follow-up to an An Inconvenient Truth, Gore’s award-winning documentary about the environment. According to a blog post on Gore’s Web site, “An Inconvenient Truth reached millions of people with the message that the climate crisis is threatening the future of human civilization and that it must and can be solved. Now that the need for urgent action is even clearer with the alarming new findings of the last three years, it is time for a comprehensive global plan that actually solves the climate crisis. Our Choice will answer that call.”

6:54 The event is scheduled to start in a few minutes. It is a full house here in Lisner and the crowd is anxiously awaiting Gore’s appearance. 

6:50 Gore appeared last night on the Colbert Report, where he debated the comedian on global warming. 

6:48 This is not the first time Gore has made an appearance on campus. He came to GW in 2007 for an environmental conference. The event was hosted by the GW Law School and was not open to the public or media.

6:41 Hey all, welcome to the live blog for tonight’s event with former Vice President Al Gore. The event starts at 7 p.m. and is being held in Lisner Auditorium. The former vice president will be promoting his new book, “Our Choice,” which focuses on climate change. The event begins in about 15 minutes, and the auditorium is quickly filling up. About 400 students are in the audience, as well as members of the D.C. community. The event is being held in conjunction with Politics and Prose, a bookstore in northwest D.C. that often hosts prominent authors. Stay with us as we offer live updates and analysis of the event!

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Program Board will open up ticket sales to the Maroon 5 concert – which will be held in the Smith Center on Nov. 13 – to all D.C. area college students after the show failed to sell out within the GW community.

PB announced that Maroon 5 would be performing in the Smith Center in September. D.C. area students must purchase their tickets in person with the presentation of a valid student identification card at the Marvin Center Ticketmaster, according to PB’s release.  Students can purchase a maximum of six tickets per person, at $30 each.

“Ticket sales will open to other schools on Tuesday, October 20th, and are expected to go quickly. GW students are encouraged to purchase tickets today,” said Wesley Callahan, executive vice chair of PB, in a press release.

Program Board chair Tiffany Meehan originally said in September that Program Board “will not be opening sales to the public. Just students, faculty, staff and alumni.” Meehan did not immediately return a request for comment about the number of remaining tickets and TicketMaster officials said they could not release that information without Program Board’s consent.

Maroon 5 will visit 11 other universities on their national “Back to School” tour, including Cornell University, Virginia Tech and the University of Delaware, according to the band’s Web site.

The group is best known for their songs “This Love,” “She Will Be Loved,” and “Sunday Morning,” and have sold more than 10 million albums in the United States.

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Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2009 6:34 p.m.

Student coffee cart allowed to reopen

The student-run coffee cart near Gelman Library will soon be back in business after a D.C. councilmember helped secure permission Wednesday for the cart’s owner to return to the H Street spot.

Junior Simone Freeman owns and operates Sol Cafe. Michelle Rattinger/Assistant Photo Editor

Junior Simone Freeman owns and operates Sol Café, near Gelman Library. Michelle Rattinger/Assistant Photo Editor

Junior Simone Freeman’s coffee cart – known as Sol Café – was shut down last week after a D.C. health inspector, government investigator and two police officers told her she was operating the cart with an illegitimate zoning license.

Freeman said the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs – which issues business licenses to D.C. establishments – could not give her a concrete answer as to why her cart was shut down last week.

“Different people were telling me different things,” said Freeman, who is a former Hatchet photographer. When she purchased the cart from previous owner Naceur Negra in March, Freeman said she was told that she was able to operate under Negra’s zoning license.
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Inter Fraternity Council leaders saw an increase in participation during fall recruitment, after 80 more men joined IFC fraternities than last year, IFC President Chas Pressner said.

Last year, 212 men joined IFC fraternities, whereas 292 men joined this year, a 37 percent increase.

Pressner attributed the increase to a longer recruitment process. IFC rush lasted for three weeks this year, due to the way the Jewish holidays fell on the calendar, Pressner said. In the past, the IFC recruitment period was two weeks.

“We switched to a more open recruitment system which allowed more potential new members to become familiar with Greek life before they joined,” Pressner said in a press release.

Phi Sigma Kappa President Daniel Blake said the longer rush period allowed for more creativity in recruitment events.

“I think the longer rush process allows Chapter’s [sic] to have a more creative and dynamic rush process,” Blake said in a press release. “It gives the Chapters more time to get to know rushees and rushees more time to get to know the different Chapters. I like the new format and hope the IFC continues to allow more freedom and creativity during the rush process.”

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Saturday, Oct. 10, 2009 12:12 a.m.

Student-run coffee cart on H Street shut down

The student-run coffee cart located on H Street near Gelman Library and Kogan Plaza was shut down Thursday, after a D.C. health inspector, government investigator and two policemen confronted the student owner for having an illegitimate zoning license, owner Simone Freeman said.

Simone Freeman

Junior Simone Freeman's coffee cart on H Street was shut down by D.C. authorities Thursday. Michelle Rattinger/Assistant Photo Editor

“They said I was not authorized to be there anymore,” said Freeman, a junior.

Freeman purchased her coffee cart – which she named Sol Café – in March from previous owner Naceur Negra. After 15 years of operation, Negra left and handed his business over to Freeman. Negra, however, returned to H Street this week with a new cart, and Freeman’s problems began.

Freeman, who worked as a Hatchet photographer last year, said because Negra’s coffee cart had been grandfathered into D.C. zoning laws – which are highly regulated – and was able to operate in the space without a zoning license.

“As soon as I bought the cart, I assumed, I was told, that I was grandfathered, that I didn’t need a zoning license,” Freeman said. Yet Negra’s return proved otherwise.

“As soon as the second cart was put there, the health inspectors and cops and everyone came and said the ‘grandfathered’ [privilege] had moved to the second cart and that my cart needed to be shut down right away,” Freeman said.

The ordeal has put Freeman and the cart’s 14 employees out of business. On Thursday, after her cart, which had sold coffee, tea and homemade baked goods, was removed, Freeman sat where the car had been and was visibly upset.

“As of yesterday, we are all unemployed,” Freeman said. “It was a big emotional mess, but everyone is showing a lot of support.”

Freeman, along with the cart’s employees and supporters, held a protest and gave out free coffee to supporters. She also started a petition in hopes that the D.C. government will allow Freeman to set up shop again and had gathered 24 signatures as of Friday night.

Though her business has been shut down, Freeman said she is not angry with the cart’s previous owner.

“[Sol Café] doesn’t want to have any issues with the previous owner,”  Freeman said, “I don’t know if he moved in with the knowledge that I would definitely be shut down.”

Kendra Poole contributed to this report.

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