THE GRADUATION ISSUE
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 100, No. 27, © 2019
WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2019
Looking Back, Moving Forward Read senior artist reflections and get a look at D.C.’s summer art and entertainment offerings.
UNKNOWN ADVENTURES Ann-Kathrin Merz (SFS ’19) recounts the rewards of not following carefully laid plans.
STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS Seniors received Dean’s Awards, Fulbright Awards and the Yenching Scholarship.
OPINION, A2
NEWS, A6
Adichie, José Andrés to Speak University Yield Rate Falls Below 50% for Class of 2023 At Commencement Events RILEY ROGERSON Hoya Staff Writer
Ten speakers are set to address students and families at the 2019 Georgetown University commencement ceremonies this week, including best-selling author Chimamanda Adichie, former Chief of Staff to First Lady Michelle Obama Tina Tchen and celebrity chef José Andrés. The university announced the speakers in a May 3 statement. Commencement ceremonies for the nine main campus undergraduate and graduate schools are set to take place over four days, start-
ing with the senior convocation May 16 and concluding with the Georgetown University Law Center commencement May 19. Andrés will address the McCourt School of Public Policy on May 16, Tchen will address the School of Continuing Studies on May 17 and Adichie will address Georgetown College graduates May 18. The McCourt School is excited to welcome Andrés as commencement speaker following his recent efforts to alleviate hunger around the world, according to Maria Cancian, the school’s dean. “Mr. Andrés and World Central
Kitchen have had an important impact on how we think about and provide disaster relief,” Cancian wrote in an email to The Hoya. “Learning about his journey from chef to humanitarian will be an inspirational capstone for our students as they finish their studies here at Georgetown and move forward with their own careers as change-makers.” Among the speakers for the other main undergraduate schools is Joseph Baratta (GSB ’93), global head of private equity at the asset management company BlackSee SPEAKERS, A6
@GEORGETOWNUNIVERSITY/INSTAGRAM
During the 2019 commencement ceremonies, graduating students will hear from speakers, including Chimamanda Adichie for Georgetown College and José Andrés for the McCourt School of Public Policy.
AMBER GILLETTE Hoya Staff Writer
Georgetown University’s admissions yield rate for the Class of 2023 decreased slightly to 49.4% from last year’s 51% after the school’s admissions rate fell to the lowest in university history this year. The admissions yield rate refers to the proportion of individuals who have paid their May 1 enrollment deposit to confirm their enrollment at Georgetown. Of the 3,206 admitted students, 1,585 students have committed to Georgetown as of the May 1 deadline, according to Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Charles Deacon (CAS ’64, GRD ’69). The university plans to increase the number of enrolled students in the Class of 2023 to 1,650 by admitting students from the waitlist between now and September, Deacon said in an interview with The Hoya. “We’re in contact with probably 50 people right now, hopefully of whom maybe 30 or 40 will end up committing,” Deacon said. “Then we’ll put a third group, maybe 100 people or 75, on an extended list, from which we’ll take the remaining people as we need them.” While the College is expected to admit between 40 and 50 students from the waitlist, the School of Foreign Service, the McDonough School of Business and the School of Nursing and Health Studies are each planning to admit five to 10 students from the waitlist in the
DCPS Investigates Verbal Threat
SAMUEL NELSON/THE HOYA
upcoming months, according to Deacon. The expected waitlist admissions mark a change from last year when the College, SFS and MSB all exceeded their target enrollment numbers after the university received a record number of applications. As a result of this overcommitment, students on the waitlist had a lower chance of admission. It is better to keep the number of admitted students conservative in
the first round and admit students from the waitlist to fill in the gap, rather than admit more students than the university has space for and decrease the number of transfer students admitted to remove the discrepancy, according to Deacon. The university cannot exceed its admissions cap because of a 20year agreement between the See YIELD RATE, A6
GU-Q GRADUATES 64 SENIORS
Georgetown professor speaks out after harassment of grandson RILEY ROGERSON Hoya Staff Writer
D.C. Public Schools is currently investigating an incident of verbal harassment directed at the 6-year-old grandson of social activist and Georgetown University professor Michael Eric Dyson, who was verbally threatened at his elementary school, which led the professor to initiate a larger discussion on race relations in the United States. A first grade student initiated a verbal altercation and used racial slurs against Dyson’s grandson, Maxem Dyson, at Horace Mann Elementary School, according to Dyson. The student threatened to acquire a gun from home and shoot Maxem and another classmate, according to a Metropolitan Police Department incident report. “A young white student called my grandson a b---h and then he called him n-----r and then after delivering such vicious epithets, he threatened to go to his home, retrieve his father’s gun and come back to the school and shoot him,” Dyson said in an interview with The Hoya.
FEATURED
Dyson’s son and Maxem’s father, Mwata Dyson, notified professor Dyson about the altercation at approximately 2 p.m after hearing about the incident. Dyson and his wife decided to meet their son at the school to address the incident with Horace Mann Principal Elizabeth Whisnant later that afternoon, according to Dyson.
“The fact that this young man hasn’t been, you know, at least extracted from school and seen by an officer of the law is a reflection of some kind of white privilege.” MICHAEL ERIC DYSON Georgetown University Professor
Whisnant told MPD Officer Cody Coleman that the altercation came after one of the three students involved cut the lunch line, according to the incident report. Dyson is a sociology and affiliate African American stud-
ies professor at Georgetown. Dyson has written 17 books, including multiple publications about racial politics in the United States such as “What Truth Sounds Like: Robert F. Kennedy, James Baldwin, and Our Unfinished Conversation About Race in America.” He is also a contributing opinion writer for The New York Times, has appeared on television shows like the “Today” show and “Real Time With Bill Maher” and serves as a political analyst for MSNBC. In the meeting with Whisnant, Dyson expressed concerns that white privilege influenced the handling of the altercation by school officials, according to Dyson. “I said, ‘The fact that this young man hasn’t been, you know, at least extracted from school and seen by an officer of the law is a reflection of some kind of white privilege, because if it had been a black kid, threatening to go home and get a gun to kill and to return to kill his classmates, I don’t think he’d be in school right now,” Dyson said. During the 2017-18 school year, 66% of the Horace Mann student body was white and
6% of the student body was economically disadvantaged, according to the DCPS website. Dyson also communicated to Whisnant in an email that racial slurs were used in threats against his grandson, according to the professor. Whisnant, however, said the incident did not include any racial or ethnic slurs, in an April 30 email to the Horace Mann community. “It is true that harmful language was used today in school,” Whisnant wrote in an email obtained by The Hoya. “The incident did not include any language about race or ethnicity.” While Whisnant did not respond to multiple requests for comment, a representative from DCPS confirmed she had received emails from The Hoya and directed us to DCPS for comment. Dyson sent an email with the subject line: “unfortunate email” to Whisnant later that night disputing Wishant’s original message to the university, according to the email obtained by The Hoya. “We even said today in your See DYSON, A6
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY QATAR COMMUNICATIONS
Her Excellency Ambassador Sheikha Alya bint Ahmed bin Saif Al-Thani gave the keynote address to GU-Q graduates May 9. Story on A7.
NEWS
OPINION
SPORTS
Solar Initiative Backlash Community members criticized the university’s solar panel initiative at a May 13 hearing held by Maryland officials. A8
Finding Sources of Strength Hannan Ahmed (SFS ’19) explains how the African studies program and her roommate supported her through Georgetown. A3
Defeated by Rival After capturing the Big East championship, women’s lacrosse fell to Syracuse in the second round of the NCAA championship. A12
NEWS
OPINION
SPORTS
Equity Office Established The university announced a new office and its leadership to better support firstgeneration and miniority students May 9. A7
Breaking Boundaries As we explore new opportunities on the Hilltop, we should empower others to do the same, says Tala Alrajjal (COL ’19). A4
NCAA Disappointment Men’s lacrosse lost to Yale in the opening round of the NCAA tournament after winning the Big East championship. A12
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