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FOX26
HURRICANE BRIEFINGS:
UH EXPERT APPEARANCES
Jay Neal
Conrad N. Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management
lecturer
Fox
News Web Site
Lloyd Pate
Clinical associate professor of optometry
Fox
News Web site
Dan Jones
Executive professor in the Bauer College of Business
Fox
News Web site
Don Van Niuewenhuise
Director of professional geoscience programs
Fox
News Web site
Bob Schneller
Director of environmental health and risk management
Fox
News Web site
James Lawrence
Associate professor of geosciences
Fox
News Web site
Cumaraswamy Vipulanandan
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering Chairman
Scheduled to appear Sept. 19
Bill Dupre
Associate professor of geosciences
Scheduled to appear Oct. 3
May Woo
Clinical assistant professor of pharmacy
Scheduled to appear Oct. 17
Hanadi Rifai
Professor of civil and environmental engineering
Scheduled to appear Oct. 31
Don Van Niuewenhuise
Director of professional geoscience programs
or
John Bowen
Conrad N. Hilton College of Hotel and Restaurant Management
dean
Pending: Nov. 14 and Nov. 28 |
University of Houston faculty members are fast becoming hurricane
media pundits.
UH’s Office of University Communication has developed
and distributed to the press a tip sheet listing various faculty
members who are experts on hurricanes or hurricane-related issues.
That tip sheet led to Fox 26, KRIV-TV, scheduling interviews
with a total of 12 UH experts. Six have appeared so far, and
the remaining faculty members will follow before the end of
hurricane season in November.
“The professors from UH have allowed us to cover a broad
range of hurricane-related subjects with expert analysis, and
our viewers have responded very favorably to the information
provided,” said Mike Iscovitz, Fox 26 meteorologist.
“A doctor from the College of Optometry (Dr. Lloyd Pate)
raised the issue of hurricane evacuees who had no glasses and
couldn’t see,” Iscovitz said. “That prompted
us to advise our viewers to take an extra pair of glasses and
to carry a copy of their prescription with them if they were
to evacuate. We also tackled the issue of food safety after
a storm and how food kept off temperature can cause serious
illness.”
Iscovitz said the atmospheric science professors here have
done impressive work.
“Jim Lawrence (associate professor of geosciences) has
been working on some unique and innovative research into hurricanes,”
Iscovitz said. “His research on the salinity of hurricane
rainwater may soon help us to better predict when a hurricane
is going through a strengthening phase.”
Another faculty member who was a Fox 26 hurricane expert was
Donald Van Nieuwenhuise, director of professional geoscience
programs. His research includes global warming’s links
to larger more frequent hurricanes – and their effects
on Galveston’s beaches.
Being a hurricane authority is an important responsibility
for Van Nieuwenhuise, so when reporters ask for interviews,
he responds.
“It is a great opportunity to publicly express what you
know as a scientist,” he said. “There are a lot
of qualified scientists in universities around the country who
are aware of these problems but do not often get the opportunity
to tell the public.”
Regarding his recent experience with Fox 26, Van Nieuwenhuise
said the interview “went really well. I discussed one
of my new research studies, and it was exciting to then see
him (Iscovitz) go back and report my research.”
John-Michael Haines
johnmichaelhaines@gmail.com