The Hoya: September 6, 2019

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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 101, No. 1, © 2019

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2019

The Art of Studying

Discover the study habit that has given students a way to be productive and creative at the same time.

EDITORIAL Georgetown must increase transparency in its search for a Title IX investigator.

MONO DINER THEFT Former Mono Diner employees allege their employer stole up to $7,000 in wages.

OPINION, A2

NEWS, A5

Messages in Red Square Fuel Hoya RealTalk Featured Campus Hong Kong Debate Improper Content, OAs Say RILEY ROGERSON

RACHEL FRIEDMAN

Anonymous chalk messages supporting ongoing Hong Kong protests were left in Red Square late last week, leading to a series of back-and-forth notes debating Hong Kong’s relationship with China. A chalk message stating: “Stop police brutality stop political arrests” appeared in Red Square Friday morning leading someone to respond below: “HK belongs to China!!!” In the ensuing week, more messages in Chinese and English joined the conversation, including “Real Chinese support Hong Kong.” Later, posters with the heading “Hong Kong is a part of China” were left in Red Square and defaced, then disappeared. Though many of the messages remain anonymous, one known author, Jeffrey Ngo, a Hong Kong native and second-year candidate for a doctoral degree in history, contributed to the pro-Hong Kong chalkings and graffitied the posters. Ngo is the only author who has been identified. The messages created a discourse and engaged the Georgetown University community in the international protests, according to Ngo. “They might start to read about it. They might start to talk about it and I think that this would help Hong Kong

This article discusses sexual assault on campus. Please refer to the end of the article for on- and off-campus resources.

Hoya Staff Writer

Hoya Staff Writer

SUBUL MALIK/THE HOYA

Chalk messages in Red Square supporting ongoing Hong Kong protests initiated discourse about the region’s relationship with China. in terms of generating international exposure,” Ngo said. “Obviously, again, I don’t want any injuries or anything like that but the fact that what is happening in Hong Kong and what’s happening in China, when we see that playing out at an American university it opens a dialogue.” Months after protests broke out opposing a bill to allow criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China, tensions and violence in Hong

Kong have risen. Hong Kong returned to Chinese rule in 1997 after over 150 years of British colonial rule, and currently exists under a “one country, two systems” policy that allows the region a significant level of autonomy. Two of Ngo’s friends, student activist leaders Joshua Wong and Agnes Chow, were arrested during demonstrations last week. See HONG KONG, A6

After student complaints about inadequate preparation and inappropriate messaging in this year’s Hoya RealTalk play during New Student Orientation, Health Education Services held a feedback session and the Center for Student Engagement proposed structural changes to the weekend. The Hoya RealTalk play, an annual interactive performance about alcohol, stress culture, sexual assault awareness and some identity-based concerns, is typically shown to orientation advisors and NSO captains ahead of the new student viewing. However, this year’s full OA cohort did not see the show in advance, were unaware of content surrounding sexual misconduct and felt inadequately trained to lead breakout discussions with new students following the skit, according to Captain Emily Jonsson (COL ’20). Jonsson and four other captains in their third year leading NSO — who have completed Bringing in the Bystander trainings, SAPE trainings, I Am Ready facilitations and viewed past Hoya RealTalk performances — received an advance

viewing of the play after they were asked to participate in the show and felt disturbed by the content, according Jonsson. They found that the final scenes of the play downplayed the severity of sexual assault, shifted blame away from the perpetrator and failed to include an explicit sexual assault content warning beforehand. “Several of us left with tears

“Maybe this is the message that Georgetown wants to be sending to its newest students if you are accused of sexual assault, it’s okay! You belong here.” EMILY JONSSON (COL ’20) NSO Captain

in our eyes,” Jonsson wrote in an email to The Hoya. “While there were several problematic aspects of the play, the most significant, and the one that we had specifically asked to be removed 24 hours in advance of new students viewing this play, was the final three scenes of the play.” Those three scenes depicted a sexual assault and its aftermath. After a drunken party

scene that implied a sexual assault occured, a resident assistant casually talks to the victim and suggests on-campus resources she can utilize, according to Jonsson. In the final scene, the perpetrator admits he’s an alcoholic at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting. The play ends with everyone hugging the perpetrator. Behind them, a message appears on a screen: “You Belong.” Jonsson and the four other captains emailed NSO leadership to request the three scenes be removed ahead of the showing for the entire first-year class, new transfer students and OAs. The captains were told their feedback would be passed along to Health Education Services, but no changes were made to the program’s content, according to Jonsson. Though in past years OAs viewed and provided feedback on Hoya RealTalk before NSO, time constraints limited collaboration this year, according to Carol Day, the director of Health Education Services. However, this year’s play was reviewed by student health and well-being experts, she said. “This year due to a new creative team, a new script, and shorter planning and implementation process time we had limited opportunities for more extensive feedback,” she See HOYA REALTALK, A6

GU Seeks Slavery Study Finds Abnormal Lead Levels Collections Archivist Lead counts in four campus buildings slightly exceed EPA standards DUSTIN HARTUV Hoya Staff Writer

Georgetown University has begun searching for candidates to work as the librarian for collections on slavery, memory and reconciliation, a position established to support the university’s engagement with its historical role in the institution of slavery. The librarian will work with individuals and organizations at Georgetown and other institutions to address contemporary issues about the effects of slavery, according to the online job posting. The job position comes several months after 66.1% of students voted “yes” to the GU272 referendum, which called for Georgetown administrators to add a $27.20 semesterly fee to students’ tuition and had a 57.9% turnout. The fee would benefit the descendants of the GU272, the 272 enslaved people sold by the Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus in 1838 to provide financial support for the university. The early August job posting represents just the beginning of the university’s search for candidates for the position, according to Meg Oakley (LAW ’87), acting associate Georgetown University librarian for scholarly resources and services. “The idea for this position was formed several years ago as the Library was exploring how we could

FEATURED

best support the initiatives identified in the Report of the Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation,” Oakley wrote in an email to The Hoya. “The search is in the early stages, so we are still collecting resumes.” The Working Group on Slavery, Memory, and Reconciliation was formed in fall 2015 by the university to facilitate dialogue in the Georgetown community about the legacies of slavery and to outline recommendations for future university efforts, according to the group’s website. In summer 2016, the working group submitted its report and list of recommendations, including strengthening Georgetown’s library and special collections on genealogical work and racial justice, according to University President John J. DeGioia (CAS ’79, GRD ’95). The university has fulfilled some of the recommendations presented in the report, including issuing a formal apology to the descendants of the GU272, renaming Freedom Hall to Isaac Hawkins Hall and Remembrance Hall to Anne Marie Becraft Hall on campus, and beginning an effort to find an archivist focusing on the Maryland Province of Jesuits. However, the university has not executed other recommendations from the report, such as See LIBRARIAN, A6

JAIME MOORE-CARILLO Hoya Staff Writer

Multiple water sources throughout the university’s main campus tested slightly above Environmental Protection Agency-designated action levels of lead concentrations, according to a study by graduate students at Georgetown University. The study identified several tap and fountain water sources in academic and facilities buildings as having concentrations of lead that neared or exceeded the EPA’s action level of 15 parts per billion. Second-year masters students Julie Oh, Tianze Pan and Misti Persaud in the university’s environmental metrology and policy program, which focuses on measurements science of environmental toxic chemicals resulting policymaking, conducted the study. If more than 10% of tap water samples exceed the lead action level, water systems are required to take additional action, according to the EPA’s Lead and Copper Rule. About 75% of the water sources tested, including the tests performed in a residential building, yielded lead concentrations below 1ppb, well below the EPA’s alert level, according to the study. However, several water sources consistently produced lead counts above the action level. Counts in four buildings on

KIKI SCHMALFUSS/THE HOYA

A recent study uncovered that various water sources across campus contained lead concentrations above EPA recommendations. campus reached levels above EPA standards. Taps on the fourth floor of the Reiss Science Building yielded a lead concentration of 6.86ppb. The kitchen sink in the Office of Planning and Facilities Management, which is housed on the lower level of New South Hall, yielded a lead concentration of 13.67ppb, and a sink on the fifth floor of WhiteGravenor Hall yielded a lead concentration of 18.02ppb for sample one and 12.72ppb for sample two. Drinking water with more than 15ppb of lead can cause delays in physical or mental

development, kidney problems and high blood pressure, according to the EPA. Children are especially vulnerable to lead, and even a low exposure level may result in damage to the nervous system and learning disabilities, according to the EPA. The researchers informed facilities workers in New South of the contamination and recommended they avoid drinking water from those sources. While the results are not entirely conclusive, the researchers believe informing the Georgetown community about the contaminants is their responsibility, according to Persaud.

“As scientists, it is our job to investigate the information given to us from the data,” Persaud wrote in an email to The Hoya. “However, as humans we feel obligated to let the student population know that this is a problem and to take steps to avoid possible lead contamination.” The researchers collected two samples of tap and fountain water from 11 buildings on campus: White-Gravenor, Lauinger Library, O’Donovan Hall, the New South facilities office, Reiss, the Intercultural Center, Copley Hall, the Car Barn and Regents Hall. The second set of samples for the study was collected two weeks after the first. Persaud recommended the university replace lead piping on campus and inform students and faculty about possible water contamination. She also encouraged students to use water filters and to get water from other sources. Lead contamination can occur when lead pipes are corroded by the water flowing through them, according to the EPA. Lead pipes were commonly used in homes and buildings built before 1986. Georgetown has not publicly provided information about the composition of pipes in many of its older buildings or in offcampus buildings, including See LEAD, A6

NEWS

OPINION

SPORTS

Law Students Stop Deportation Georgetown University Law Center students restored permanent residence status for their client facing deportation. A4

Condemn Abusers The university continues to fail survivors by refusing to denounce perpetrators of clerical abuse. A3

High-Powered Hoyas Men’s soccer captures two wins with two goals in each against strong opponents in Syracuse and Temple. A12

NEWS

OPINION The Liberal Bible

SPORTS

Georgetown Masjid A new Muslim prayer space opened in a new Village C location for its first Jum’ah prayer service Aug. 30. A5 Published Fridays

Progressives should correct mischaracterizations of the Bible by the political right and treat the text as an ally. A3

Clean Sheet Women’s soccer shuts out Bucknell after two first-half goals. A12 Send story ideas and tips to news@thehoya.com


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