The GW Hospital and GW Medical Center
were mentioned in stories about the hospitalization and release of the
Vice President Cheney by States News
Service, NBC Nightly News,
Broadcast News, Kyodo News, Reuters, Xinhua News Agency, Agence France Presse,
Associated Press and Dow Jones
(11/13), Sunday Mecury, The Seattle Times, New York Daily News, Houston Chronicle, NBC Sunday Today, Agence France Presse, Deseret Morning News, People, SBS World News, The Sunday Mirror, Sunday Mail, The New York Times, The Washington Post, AFX UK Focus,
Xinhua News Agency, Australian
Broadcasting (11/14), The Record, The Times, Irish Times, Geelong Advertiser, and the New Zealand Herald (11/15).
The GW Medical Center was
mentioned by Managed Care Weekly Digest, Biotech Business Week, Bioterrorism
Week, Health & Medicine Week
(11/1), Life Science Weekly, Science Letter (11/2), Biotech Week (11/3), Obesity Fitness & Wellness (11/6),
and Medical Devices & Surgical
Technology Week (11/7) in regards
to the VisualDx diagnostic software it will be using to accurately diagnose and
treat patients with visual symptoms of disease.
The results of the last GW Battleground
Poll prior to the presidential election were mentioned by BusinessWeek (11/1), Dow Jones, and the Associated Press (11/5).
A segment on WTTG-TV (Fox 5, Washington D.C) regarding nutritional
dining options on college campuses profiled GW's newly-renovated J
Street dining facility and the District Market
(11/8).
GW was mentioned in a Washington Post editorial as one of the
local educational institutions using special financing structures for
construction projects (11/7). GW was mentioned by The Washington Post as the "hottest
university for political junkies" (11/9).
GW was mentioned in Construction
News in regards to new micro tools being researched at the University that
will cut patterns in glass and ceramics without breaking the material into tiny
chunks (11/11).
Gordon Adams, director of the security policy program,
was interviewed by Bloomberg News about Osama Bin Laden making plans to bankrupt
the United States
through war (11/1).
Adams was interviewed by Santa Barbara News-Press on the next
round of military base closures (11/11).
Martin Adelman, Theodore
and James Pedas Family Professor of Intellectual Property and
Technology, was quoted by Pharma Japan about the ongoing research
on anti-AIDS drugs (11/15).
Christopher
Arterton, dean of the Graduate School of Political
Management, was quoted by The Washington Post in regards to the
outcome of the presidential election (11/3).
Nathan Brown, professor of political science and
international affairs, was interviewed by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty about
U.S. polls
showing Arab Americans turning away from President Bush (11/2). Brown was quoted by the Pittsburg Post Gazette (11/5) and San Francisco Chronicle (11/7), in
regards to Yasser Arafat's failing health providing President Bush with the
opportunity to promote a dialogue with the Palestinians.
Dana Tai Soon Burgess, assistant professor of theater
and dance, was mentioned in The
Washington Post in regards to his dance performance, Tracings (11/8).
Frank Cilluffo, GW associate vice president for homeland
security, was quoted by the Associated Press, in regards to Asa Hutchinson,
under secretary for Border and Transportation Security, debating whether to
continue working in the Department of Homeland Security or move to the private
sector (11/11). Cilluffo was quoted
by Federal Computer Week on about
issues surrounding the interoperability of voice and data communications among
first responders in homeland security (11/15).
Charles Cushman, associate professor of political
management, was quoted by the Chicago
Tribune about the disputed deal between Boeing and the U.S. Air Force for
new refueling tankers (11/5).
Cushman was quoted by Environment
& Energy Daily on the looming energy debate in Congress
(11/12).
Christopher Deering, professor of political science, was
quoted by The Milwaukee Journal in regards to Republicans
preparing the agenda for the next four years (11/4).
Michael Duffey, associate professor of engineering
management, wrote an op-ed for The
Washington Times about theories and prices of oil supplies.
(11/3).
Henry Farrell, visiting assistant professor of political
science, co-authored an article in the November/December issue of Foreign Policy, that addresses the
influence of bloggers on the political scene.
Ambassador Edward "Skip" Gnehm, J.B. and Maurice C.
Shapiro Visiting Professor of International Affairs, was interviewed by Voice of
America about the resignation of Secretary of State Colin Powell
(11/15).
Stephen Hess, distinguished research professor of media
and public affairs, was quoted by The
Washington Post on the
association Democrats have with the color blue and Republicans with the color
red (11/2).
Dr. Judith Hsia, professor of medicine, was quoted by
Reuters Health E-Line in regards to exercise curbing the chances of diabetes
more for some people than others (11/8).
Ambassador Karl Inderfurth, professor of the practice of
international affairs, wrote an op-ed for the Financial Times about
U.S. policies
toward Pakistan
(11/9).
Lynda Maddox, professor of business administration, was
interviewed by the San Antonio Express-News in regards to an upcoming
ad campaign featuring characters from the animated movie The Incredibles (11/3).
George Novak, senior research scientist at the Aviation
Institute, was quoted by St. Louis
Post-Dispatch about figures released by The Air Transport Association
showing the airline industry losing more than $23 billion since 2001
(11/7).
Dr. Michael Olding, associate professor of surgery, was
quoted by The Washington Post about a
new technique called "facial aerobics" that is intended to decrease wrinkles on
the face (11/2).
Spencer Overton, associate professor of law, was
quoted by The Irish Examiner, Dow
Jones International, Associated
Press (11/2), Kitchener-Waterloo Record, The Western Mail, Desert Morning News (11/3), and NPR Morning Edition (11/5), on problems
associated with the
U.S. voting
system and the turnout of voters.
Overton was quoted by The Irish
Examiner, Associated Press,
St.
Louis
Post-Dispatch and Dow Jones International (11/3), and The Advertiser (11/4) about the results
of the presidential election.
Jerrold Post, professor of the practice of political
psychology and international affairs, was quoted by The Sydney Morning Herald about
Turkmenistan
President Saparmurat Niyazov, who has appointed himself "president for life"
(11/6). Post was quoted by The Gold Coast Bulletin about the most
recent video appearance of Osama bin Laden
(Australia,
11/11).
Walter Reich, Yitzhak Rabin Memorial Professor of
International Affairs, wrote an op-ed for the Baltimore Sun about the life and
political goals of Yasser Arafat (11/12).
Jeffery Rosen, associate professor of law, was quoted by
the Financial Times about several
U.S. Supreme Court decisions (11/5). Rosen was interviewed by NPR Talk of the Nation about the
responsibilities of the
U.S. attorney
general (11/10).
Stephen Saltzburg, Wallace
and Beverley Woodbury University Professor, was quoted by The New York Times in regards to a
U.S. judge
halting a war crime trial at
Guantanamo (11/9). Saltzburg was also quoted by The Washington Post (11/9) about Jeffrey
K. Skilling, chief executive of Enron Corp., having his blockbuster fraud trial
moved out of
Houston.
David Shinn, adjunct professor of international affairs,
was quoted by the U.S. State Department
Daily News about a speech he gave to launch West
Virginia University's
Robert M. Maxon Fellowship in African History (11/1). Shinn was also quoted by the U.S. State Department Daily News about
the likelihood that President Bush and presidential hopeful Sen. John Kerry will
focus on issues in Africa (11/1). Shinn was quoted by The East African in regards to the Bush
administration's attitude towards Africa
(11/11).
Jonathan Turley,
J.B.
and Maurice Shapiro Professor of Public Interest Law, was
interviewed by CBS Morning News about
how long Americans will have to wait for the outcome of the presidential
election (11/2). Turley was quoted
by The Columbian about the chances of
polygamy being legalized (11/6).
Turley was quoted by Agence France Presse in regards to the possibility
that judges appointed by President Bush will give the U.S. Supreme Court a
conservative edge (11/7). He was quoted by National Journal about conservative
attacks on the new film about Alfred Kinsey (11/13). Turley was quoted by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer (11/13) and
Houston Chronicle (11/14) about possible candidates to replace Chief Justice William
Rehnquist when he leaves the bench.
Bernard Wood, Henry R. Luce Professor in Human
Origins, was quoted by The
Australian, in regards to the discovery of a skeleton of a human dwarf
species found in
Indonesia
(11/10).