Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Official Statement on Eric Fatla's Death
GW Law Student Dies After Tragic Fall
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Snow Expected Thursday
Monday, December 13, 2010
Richard Holbrooke Dies at GW Hospital
Holbrook, perhaps best known for negotiating the Dayton accords ending the Bosnian conflict in 1995, was in Washington working in his capacity as special envoy to the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. He began to experience medial difficulties during a meeting with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and as quickly rushed to the hospital.
Ambassador Holbrooke was 69 years old.
Friday, December 10, 2010
Semi-Formals in the Midst of Controversy
This year, however, the events are happening amidst investigations into 9 different fraternities and sororities on allegations of hazing, underage drinking, and possession of other illegal substances.
When asked how these investigation and controversies were effecting semi-formal events, and if there were any concrete rule changes this fall due to said investigations, the office of Greek life declined to comment.
Sigma Phi Epsilon, better known as Sig Ep, and Pi Kappa Alpha, better known as Pike, are unable to hold semi-formal events in the time being because each has been put on differed suspension by the university and their national organizations. This means that the two fraternities are not allowed to hold any events or meetings whatsoever.
Beyond these controversies, many other fraternities and sororities held very successful and problem free events last weekend. The same is expected of this up coming weekend.
Finals Stress Is Up, Amsterdam's Elevators Are Down
-Joseph Rabinowitz
Tim Geithner to undergo surgery at GWU Hospital
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has joined the legions of political "celebrities" who have visited our very own George Washington University Hospital.
According to Treasury Department spokesman Steve Adamske, Geithner is scheduled to undergo surgery for kidney stones this afternoon after being admitted Thursday night with severe pain. Adamske said that Geithner is expected to return to work Monday.
Here's a look back at some other political celebrities who have been treated at the hospital over the years, in some cases leaving a lasting impression:
- Ronald Reagan: The 40th president was brought to GWU's emergency room on March 30, 1981 after he was shot at in an assassination attempt. His visit there led to the renaming of the emergency room area as the Ronald Reagan Institute of Emergency Medicine.
- Dick Cheney: The former VP has been admitted to the hospital most frequently of those on our lists, having been admitted for heart problems twice this year alone. Cheney has had five heart attacks since 1978. He and his wife Lynne helped to start the Richard B. and Lynne V. Cheney Cardiovascular Institute there in 2006.
- Tom Reed, then Congressman-elect from NY: Reed was hospitalized at GWU hospital in mid-November of this year after blood clots were discovered in his lungs. He was both released from the hospital and sworn into office on November 18th, also his 39th birthday. He is currently in office to complete the term of former Representative Eric Massa, though in January he will begin his own two-year term. Massa stepped down from the position in March amid allegations of sexual misconduct and a recurrence of cancer.
- Laura Bush: W's First Lady was treated at the hospital in 2007 for a pinched nerve, which at the time prevented her from joining the president on a trip to Australia.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Metro Buses Late Over 50% of the Time
DC News Roundup
Elliott School Warning About Wikileaks
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
"Study Zones" for Finals
The Smithsonian Video Controversy
Monday, December 6, 2010
Kennedy Center Honors lights up D.C.
Moonlight Cleaning
Kind, Gentle Doris Harris Has Worked the Nightshift at Gelman for 31 Years
Lunchtime for Doris Harris is just like any midday break for a hardworking person: she sits down at her favorite table, eats her chicken salad, and relaxes by playing solitaire, keeping in mind that the second half of her day is fast approaching.
It’s 2:30 a.m. and Harris is at the midway point of her job; she works the night shift at Gelman Library.
“I really don’t eat breakfast,” she stated with a soft hum, referring to the meal most people eat when they wake up. “Since I wake up in the afternoon, by this point, I’m really hungry.”
Born Doris Brooks in 1960, she was raised in Raleigh, North Carolina, the daughter of a welder and a housewife, and the oldest among her two brothers and three sisters.
In 1974 she came to Forestville, Maryland “a few years after graduating high school” to find work.
Soon after, she found a job at a toy factory, Taka Toys, in Landover and in December 1975 married Joseph Harris, an employee for Giant Food.
After Taka Toys shuttered its doors, Harris quickly found work at Gelman Library as a nighttime custodian, or housekeeper, as she prefers to be called. She learned about the opportunity from a man in her apartment building who, at the time, was also employed in the library.
“I started here June 5, 1978 and I’ve been here since,” she said in her soft-spoken voice. “I’ve always done the night shift. I’ve been doing the same thing for 31 years. I dust, vacuum, pull trash, and that’s it. I don’t do no mopping.”
Harris, an ample, dark-skinned woman of medium height and short dark hair, attentively cleans the library from Sunday to Thursday while most of the campus sleeps. Everyday she dresses in her light blue smock, dark blue trousers, and chocolate brown crocs.
Though the shoes are technically out of regulation, “tennis shoes hurt my feet, especially with all the walking I do,” Harris stated.
She starts her shift at 11 p.m. with the seven other custodians, beginning with the seventh floor. She and the others slowly work their way down, each cleaning a particular section.
“Though we’re supposed to stay together, during the school year we divide up,” Harris explained. “I get the right side when exiting the elevators.”
Though the staff is required to move down, cleaning each floor in order, “oftentimes, though, we have to skip the sixth floor because it gets crowded,” she admits. “We just can’t clean with that many people.”
Normally, by the time she finishes cleaning the third floor, another popular area for students, it’s 2:30 a.m. and time for her hour-long “lunch break.”
At 7 a.m. her shift ends, and Harris gets in her car to drive home.
“Some mornings I’m really sleepy,” she said. “But usually I make it home just fine.”
Harris has had 31 years to adjust to her hours, and, as she explained, she’s become nocturnal.
“Lack of sleep bothered me at first, but then I got used to it,” she says.
The hours don’t really bother her anymore. Instead she has a whole new problem: arthritis.
“I feel it in my legs. I feel it in my knees,” she says softly. “I’ve had it for about four years. We just walk around a lot and it hurts.”
“After 31 years I want to retire,” Harris continued. “This is my last year, but don’t tell anyone. I don’t want everybody to know right now; they’d worry me to death. They’d be asking me a lot of questions. I want to leave peacefully. I also want to be able to change my mind.”
Her plans for retirement are simple, she stated.
“Oh lord. I want about a month’s rest. Then I want to travel and retire with my grandkids,” Harris asserts.
Doris Harris expects to move back to North Carolina, returning to her childhood home of Raleigh. She wants to live near her daughter, who is married and has three children.
“It’s a really nice place to live,” she says. “You can get lost now though-they built it up.”
Though Harris divorced her husband in 1991, “we still talk; we’re still friends. He got married again. I didn’t,” she explained.
Did her job strain her marriage?
“No,” Harris replied. “He sometimes had to work nights also.”
As for her remaining nights, Doris Harris remains focused on continuing her routine.
“I get home around 7:30 a.m., have breakfast and coffee, and relax for a couple hours,” she explained. “Between 10 and 11 I go to sleep until five p.m. when I wake up and head to work.”
It fits that she is retiring in June, Harris says, because that’s when the students will leave too.
“I see a lot of different faces, but sometimes the same faces,” she stated, smiling softly. “I enjoy seeing the students and when school is closed it gets lonely.”
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Rep. Steven King Speaks to CRs
Iowa Republican Rep. Steven King spoke to the College Republicans Thursday night, answering questions from students and discussing the future of the political party.
As part of the Congressional Dinner Series, the five-term Congressman spoke to the CRs at Meiwah Restaurant, a Chinese restaurant on 21st and M Street.
“We’ve been in the trenches a long time,” the Rep. stated about the recent minority status of his party. “We did our business. We were pretty responsible.”
Rep. King praised his audience and their benefit to the Republican Party, commending them for their efforts during the recent election cycle.
“You’re new blood and new ideas. So is this class of 2010 that’s come in here,” he asserted.
Rep. King also spent time, however, criticizing his political opponents.
His party suffered massive losses in 2006 and 2008 because, as Rep. King explained, “Democrats beat up on George W. Bush. The Democrats went to the media and beat us up.”
Things have changed now, “Nancy Pelosi is seeing her office get cleaned out,” he added to a round of applause. “It’s because we came together as a nation.”
Rep. King also described President Obama as “a pretty gimpy first term president. He’s a one term Democrat.”
Expounding upon a common criticism, he also claimed that Obama “took his playbook off the socialist website” and explained that the president’s agenda is “an assault on our liberty.”
When asked about the middle class tax cut proposal that passed the House on Thursday, Rep. King stated, “We just needed to vote no.”
Failing to cut taxes for the upper class, King explained, sends the wrong message.
“If you’re going to produce and achieve, we’re going to punish you greater,” he stated.
He sounded a similar note when asked about the estate tax and its effect on millionaire’s inheritance, calling it “outrageous,” and stating that it must end.
Responding to a question about the expiring unemployment benefits, Rep. King stated that he was opposed to extending the measure.
Stating that “99 weeks provides no incentive to get to work,” he was prodded further about what unemployed Americans should do.
“They should start a business or get a job,” Rep. King declared. “I mean, how long do we have to pay these guys?”
Friday, December 3, 2010
National Pinball Museum Opening in Georgetown
Describing the new installation as an arcade, however, may be an understatement. Filling nearly 14,000 square feet of space in the Georgetown Shoppes, owner and curator David Silverman prefers to think of the collection as a museum, and not without merit; Silverman's personal hoard of over 850 pinball machines spans nearly three centuries of gaming.
The National Pinball Museum, though, is not all fun-and-games. Silverman views the pinball machines both as entertainment and totems of the culture in which they were created; to seem them is to catch a glimpse of American history that is slowly fading away.
The museum's experience is designed to be an interactive one, with 40 of the machines open to the general public for play. Silverman also intends to offer educational programs at the museum, including classes on pinball electronics, woodworking, and art design.
Admission is $13.50 for adults and children over 9 years old; those younger are free. The museum's Georgetown opening is December 4th, and is open from 10am to 8pm. For more information and tickets, visit www.nationalpinballmuseum.org.
DC Music Legend Nominated for Grammy
Gender-neutral housing coming to GW
GW announced late Thursday afternoon that gender-neutral housing will be offered for the 2011-2012 academic year. The Equal Housing Opportunity Act (EHOA), a proposal presented by current senior Michael Komo to the GW Student Association Senate last January, was the catalyst for the decision. After the SA voted to approve the motion last year, it was sent on to the GW administration for consideration. Their decision yesterday came after months of debate by students and administration staff alike.
The new program will allow all students to live with one another, regardless of gender or sexual orientation. Begininning this fall, all GW students, including freshmen, will be able to opt-in. Students will not be randomly assigned in to the program to live with students of different genders; all students who wish to live in opposite-sex housing must specifically request to live with students they know.
Hundreds Gather for National Menorah Lighting
Thursday, December 2, 2010
The Sixth Annual World AIDS Day
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
'Tis the Season to Celebrate and Give
BIKES!? 15th STREET!? WHAT IS THIS MADNESS!?
Well really, it isn’t madness at all. The already existing fifteenth street bike lane has been extended from one-lane to two-lanes. One goes north, the other south. The construction has done away with many parking spaces which have been amply replaced on other parts of 15th Street. In fact, while it is not too terribly pertinent to GW students who rarely drive, there will be, when construction is finished, a net gain of 7.5 parking spaces according to the District Department of Transportation.
District Department of Transportation, has gone on to say that this will lead to a 40% increase of bicycle traffic on 15th Street. The new two-way lane has settled the nerves of bikers, half of whom said they felt unsafe on the previously shared 15th Street bike lane.