Japanese-American graduate recalls wartime ordeal

Yoshio Matsumoto was among the 110,000 Japanese-Americans seemingly bound for an internment camp soon after America entered World War II when WUSTL agreed to take him in.

References:
- Aug. 31,
2009
—
Japanese-American graduate recalls wartime ordeal
in the Associated Press
and 42 others.
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Analysis: Obama tries evenhanded approach
 WUSTL presidential rhetoric specialist Wayne Fields comments on Obama's Cairo speech.

Nancy Benac reports on Obama's Cairo speech in which he tried to explain the American mindset to Muslims and the world of Islam to Americans. Various experts comment on the speech, including WUSTL presidential rhetoric specialist Wayne Fields.

References:
- June 6,
2009
—
Analysis: Obama tries evenhanded approach
in the Associated Press
and 51 others.
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Guarding the U.S.-Mexico border, live from suburban New York
 WUSTL immigration law professor Stephen Legomsky comments on a Web site that allows people around the world to watch the U.S./Mexico border for illegal activity.

A Web site funded by a grant from the state of Texas, allows people around the world to watch the U.S./Mexico border for illegal activity. WUSTL immigration law professor Stephen Legomsky comments.

References:
- March 12,
2009
—
Guarding the U.S.-Mexico border, live from suburban New York
in the CNN.com
and 1 others.
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Briefing: A rocky start for war crimes world court

The arrest warrant for Sudan's president for war crimes is indicative of the mounting pressure on the International Criminal Court to show results. Includes comments by WUSTL law professor Leila Nadya Sadat, who was a delegate to the diplomatic conference at which the ICC was established.

References:
- March 6,
2009
—
Briefing: A rocky start for war crimes world court
in the The Christian Science Monitor
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Fulfilling a father's dream

Two Kenyan brothers are in this country studying to be doctors. They are also fulfilling their father's dream of building a clinic in their remote home village to fight AIDS, the disease that killed both of their parents. Milton Ochieng is a resident at WUSTL's medical school. Fred is at Vanderbilt.

References:
- Feb. 8,
2009
—
Fulfilling a father's dream
in the CNN Newsroom (national)
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Under Obama, 'war on terror' catchphrase fading
 WUSTL professor Wayne Fields comments on how America's image is being repaired with a new administration.

The "War on Terror" is losing the war of words. The catchphrase burned into the American lexicon hours after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, is fading away, slowly if not deliberately being replaced by a new administration bent on repairing the U.S. image among Muslim nations. Includes comments by WUSTL English and American culture studies professor Wayne Fields, who is an expert on presidential rhetoric.

References:
- Feb. 1,
2009
—
Under Obama, 'war on terror' catchphrase fading
in the Associated Press
and 18 others.
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Obama Dips Into Think Tank for Talent
 WUSTL economics professor Murray Weidenbaum comments on Obama and Washington think tanks.

The Center for a New American Security, a small think tank here with generally middle-of-the-road policy views, is rapidly emerging as a top farm team for the incoming Obama administration. Includes comments by WUSTL economics professor Murray Weidenbaum, who wrote a book on Washington think tanks.

References:
- Nov. 16,
2008
—
Obama Dips Into Think Tank for Talent
in the The Wall Street Journal online
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Military use of robots increases in U.S.

Robots are increasingly taking over more soldier duties in Iraq and Afghanistan, with predictions that as much as 30 percent of the U.S. Army will be robotic by 2020. Two WUSTL scientists, Bill Smart and Doug Few, are on the cutting edge of this new wave of technology.

References:
- Aug. 4,
2008
—
Military use of robots increases in U.S.
in the Xinhua News Agency (China)
and 2 others.
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Bush Ex-Official Says Corrupt Afghans and a Hesitant Military Hinder Drug Fight

Corrupt Afghan officials, a reluctant military and divisions over policy, as much as the Taliban, have contributed to a failing policy to fight narcotics in Afghanistan, a former Bush administration official writes in an article in The New York Times Magazine on Sunday. The author, Thomas Schweich, was the senior counternarcotics official in the U.S. Embassy in Kabul for two years. He is now a visiting professor of law at WUSTL.

References:
- July 24,
2008
—
Bush Ex-Official Says Corrupt Afghans and a Hesitant Military Hinder Drug Fight
in the The New York Times
|
Republicans tense as voter disillusionment sets in
 Stem cell research divides Republican party, says Arts & Sciences political scientist Michael Minta.

Iraq is one of several tides running against GOP candidates, driving away independent voters and some party faithful. Except for Missouri, independent voters in five Senate races polled by USA Today were swinging toward the Democrat. Party loyalty was stronger among Democrats than Republicans in every state but Ohio. Michael Minta, professor of political science in Arts & Sciences, comments on how the stem cell research issue is dividing Republicans in Missouri.

References:
- Sept. 1,
2006
—
Republicans tense as voter disillusionment sets in
in the USA Today
|
Drug Informant Fights Deportation

A Nigerian immigrant here facing deportation says he's going to be tortured and killed if he is, in fact, sent back home. Frank Enwonwu was caught smuggling heroin 22 years ago. Since then he's lived the dangerous life of an informant for federal drug authorities.
He claims part of the deal was a promise to allow him to stay in the U.S. and escape revenge from the Nigerian drug dealers. Professor Stephen Legomsky, an immigration law expert at Washington University in St. Louis, comments.

References:
- Feb. 7,
2008
—
Drug Informant Fights Deportation
in the NPR Day to Day
|
A faith-based stop for the president

WUSTL American culture studies Professor Wayne Fields comments on President Bush's recent Mideast trip. "President Bush believes in a religion of dramatic revelations — his conversion and 9/11 being the most notable — in which a person's life is transformed or the world is changed," said WUSTL American culture studies professor Wayne Fields. "These moments ... are the sources of the important 'truths' which inform his understanding of life and shape his behavior as well as his rhetoric."

References:
- Jan. 11,
2008
—
A faith-based stop for the president
in the Chicago Tribune
and 1 others.
|
Analysis: Bush recasts war rationale

WUSTL English professor Wayne Fields, who is an expert on presidential rhetoric, comments on President Bush's speech on Iraq.

References:
- Sept. 14,
2007
—
Analysis: Bush recasts war rationale
in the Associated Press
and 38 others.
|
Ancient nomads offer insights to modern crises

Every summer for the past eight years, WUSTL anthropologist Michael Frachetti has come to the desert steppe that rolls like endless yellow waves across this expansive Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan searching for evidence of a vast, connected nomadic society.
His work concerns Bronze Age nomads, and his scholarship is aimed purely at a historical understanding of how a preliterate society functioned more than 3,000 years ago. But his work coincides with a geopolitical reality that has important implications for American foreign policy makers: many of the countries that most trouble the West -- like Afghanistan, Iraq and Somalia -- have government institutions that reflect a nomadic past.

References:
- Aug. 8,
2007
—
Ancient Nomads Offer Insights to Modern Crises
in the The New York Times
and 1 others.
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To set a pullout date or not: That is the question

House Democrats propose a measure to require that U.S. troops be withdrawn from Iraq by fall of 2008. Minnesota's delegation, regardless of party affiliation, stays on the fence, in one instance citing that people's opinions are "all over the map."
WUSTL political science professor Steven Smith comments on Nancy Pelosi's strategy.

References:
- March 8,
2007
—
To set a pullout date or not: That is the question
in the Minneapolis Star Tribune online
|
Scientists find potential weakness in plague germ
 WUSTL School of Medicine researchers find weakness in plague gene.

The germ that caused the plague epidemic that ravaged medieval Europe has a weakness that could help make a particularly dangerous form easier to treat, according to a study published on Thursday.
There are periodic natural outbreaks of pneumonic plague like one that started in 2005 in the Democratic Republic of Congo. There also is acute concern terrorists could harness the bacterium as an airborne germ warfare agent to spread pneumonic plague.
Writing in the journal Science, WUSTL scientists led by molecular microbiology professor William Goldman said experiments with mice showed that the onslaught of the bacterium slows markedly when the germ cannot use a key protein.

References:
- Jan. 25,
2007
—
Scientists find potential weakness in plague germ
in the Scientific American
and 3 others.
|
Bush domestic proposals address some Democratic concerns but will still be a hard sell

WUSTL presidential rhetoric specialist Wayne Fields is one of several experts analyzing the content and presentation of President Bush's State of the Union speech.

References:
- Jan. 24,
2007
—
Bush domestic proposals address some Democratic concerns but will still be a hard sell
in the Associated Press
and 17 others.
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Bush speech lacks knockout blow: analysts

WUSTL political science professor Steven Smith is one of several experts analyzing the content and presentation of President Bush's State of the Union speech.

References:
- Jan. 24,
2007
—
Bush speech lacks knockout blow: analysts
in the Agence France Presse -- English
and 2 others.
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U.S. to Deploy Proven Technology on Borders

The Department of Homeland Security today awards a multi-billion dollar contract to beef up border security. The anticipated winner is Boeing. Despite the aerospace giant's background, Boeing's border security plan is less high tech than you might expect.
WUSTL computer science professor Robert Pless comments on surveillance technology. He is assistant director of WUSTL's Center for Security Technologies.

References:
- Sept. 21,
2006
—
U.S. to Deploy Proven Technology on Borders
in the NPR - Morning Edition
|
Political pros sharpen their knives in press release wars

Article on the increasingly common attack fare in news releases from political operatives desperate to spin news coverage to their advantage.
WUSTL political rhetoric expert Wayne Fields, who directs the American Culture Studies program, says these tactics threaten to drain the substance out of political debate.

References:
- July 25,
2006
—
Political pros sharpen their knives in press release wars
in the Associated Press State & Local Wire
and 5 others.
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