The Hoya: September 16, 2014

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 6, © 2014

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014

TAC GROUNDBREAKING

Donors, former stars, current team and recruits honor John Thompson Jr.

COMMENTARY Efforts to pacify noisy students with lollipops at night is misguided.

SPORTS, A10

OPINION, A3

DIS-O SNAG Under-21 seniors were shut out of an event billed as 18-plus.

ELECT HER Women gathered for a conference on seeking campus leadership roles.

NEWS, A4

NEWS, A5

13 Professors Boycott Milzman Pleads Guilty Israeli Universities Suzanne Monyak Hoya Staff Writer

Katherine Richardson Hoya Staff Writer

After receiving 13 professors’ signatures, Georgetown has become the most-represented university involved in the American Studies Association’s boycott of Israeli academic institutions since the petition’s creation last month. Georgetown professors who signed the boycott petition include Center for Contemporary Arab Studies Director Osama Abi-Mershed, Founding Director of the Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Center for MuslimChristian Understanding John Esposito, Yvonne Haddad and Judith Tucker, among other signatories. The boycott is a part of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Movement, which aims to aid Palestinian civil society by increasing economic and political pressure on Israel. The academic petition came as a response to recent turmoil regarding the Israeli military occupation of the Gaza Strip and West Bank. Columbia University, New York University and the University of California at Berkeley follow Georgetown in representation, with 11, nine and nine signatures, respectively. “Israeli academic institutions function as a central part of a system that has denied Palestinians their basic rights. Palestinian students face ongoing discrimination, including the suppression of Palestinian cultural events, and there is sanctioning and ongoing surveillance of Palestinian students and faculty who protest Israeli policies,” ASA’s website states. The petition’s signatories pledge that they will not publish in Israeli academic journals, teach at Israeli institutions, attend conferences at Israeli universities or work on any projects with Israeli academic institutions. Haddad said she signed the petition in order to expand universal academic freedom and push for peace in the region. “I signed it because the war was promoted as Israel defending itself when in fact it was defending the longest occupation and degradation of the Palestinian population. I signed it in the hope that it would bring pressure on Israeli institutions in order to provide space for academ-

COURTESY GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY

SFS professor Yvonne Haddad, who signed the Israel boycott. ic freedom for Israeli and Palestinian academics who are not allowed to deviate from the hasbara [public diplomacy] of the state,” Haddad wrote in an email. “[The petition] aimed to endorse the few Israelis and the growing number of Jewish American voices that have called for a peaceful resolution of the conflict and the respect for the human rights of Palestinians whose academic institutions are raided by the Israeli military and whose classes are suspended at the whim of the occupation authorities.” Esposito said he believed the boycott could help prevent violations of Palestinian rights. “[I hope] to put pressure on and to boycott institutions that violate international law and as a result violate the rights of Palestinians,” Esposito wrote in an email. “There can be no excuse for the cycle of violence that has taken so many lives in Palestine/Israel over the years, and terrorized both Palestinians and Israelis, and most recently in Gaza, the slaughter of so many innocent civilians, especially women and children must be stopped.” Tucker, who has visited the area many times since the 1980s, said she has seen the problems that Palestinian students and professors face firsthand. See BOYCOTT, A5

Former Georgetown student Daniel Milzman, 19, pled guilty to one count of possession of an unregistered toxin in federal court Monday. Appearing before Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, the defense issued a plea agreement, which, pending the court’s approval, would entail one year and a day to two years in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release, in addition to financial penalties. The sentencing hearing has been set for Nov. 10. Milzman has been held in D.C. Jail since he was arrested and charged with possession of a biological toxin March 18, after police discovered ricin in his dorm room on the sixth floor of McCarthy Hall earlier that week. He was found to possess 123 milligrams of ricin, with a toxic concentration of 7.7 micrograms per

milligram. After hearing Milzman’s defense attorney Danny Onorato’s claim that Milzman made the ricin with suicidal intentions, Magistrate Judge John Facciola ruled on March 25 that Milzman would be sent to a

“Milzman put himself and others in danger by cooking up deadly poision.” ronald machen jr. U.S. Attorney

two-week in-patient psychiatric program at Sibley Memorial Hospital and then sent to remain at his parents’ house in Bethesda, Md., where he would be required to be under constant supervision in the house. In a hearing March 31, a U.S. District Court judge overturned Facciola’s

Hoya Staff Writer

The National Cancer Institute renewed the Georgetown Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center’s status as Washington, D.C.’s only comprehensive cancer center — a title the center has held for 20 years — and awarded the center with a five-year $11.25 million

Cancer Center Support Grant on Wednesday. “This grant and prestigious designation validates what we’ve long known — that Georgetown Lombardi conducts excellent and high-impact work,” Executive Vice President for Health Sciences Howard Federoff said via a communications representative. Georgetown is one of 41 NCI-

Kshithij Shrinath Hoya Staff Writer

Additionally, the center must provide patient treatment that offers a variety of clinical trials for unapproved and innovative medicines, as well as training programs for future health care providers and scientists interested in pursuing a specialization in cancer treatment. Finally, a comprehensive cancer center must engage in community outreach to promote education and spread awareness. Lombardi Center Director Louis Weiner said that community outreach is especially important to the Lombardi Center, in light of the District’s high cancer rates. Between 2001 and 2005, D.C. ranked first in the nation for deaths caused by prostate, cervical and breast cancers, third-highest for deaths caused by colorectal cancer, and sixth-highest for deaths caused by cancer in general. “This is a tremendous focus for centers like Georgetown Lombardi because the city we call home is disproportionately impacted by cancer,” Weiner wrote in an email. Weiner said that the grant is meant to fund clinical management and data collection for clinical trials, the early stages during which the treatment is first tested on humans, expensive equipment and personnel expertise that can become necessary during research and infrastructure maintenance. “While this grant is awarded after demonstrating strength and breadth of research capacity, pa-

In a bias-related incident involving sexual orientation, an unknown attacker assaulted an unidentified Georgetown University student on the 3300 block of M Street at 1:31 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 13. The student was taken to a nearby hospital for treatment. “The GU student along with two other students were walking in the area when an unidentified male subject approached from the opposite direction, made a derogatory comment regarding sexual orientation, and subsequently assaulted the GU student before fleeing in an unknown direction,” a public safety alert sent to students from the Georgetown University Police Department read. The email described the Metropolitan Police Department as arriving first on the scene and responding to the victim, after which GUPD officers were contacted. According to the student, whose status was described as “receiving medical treatment,” the suspect was Middle Eastern, male and approximately 30 years old. The incident is currently under investigation by GUPD and MPD. Georgetown Director of Media Relations Rachel Pugh directed questions on the investigation to MPD, who could not be reached for comment. The public safety alert labeled the incident as a “bias-related assault.” GUPD Chief of Police Jay Gruber explained the term as a subcategory of hate crimes. “It is just a more specific way of describing the assault rather than just using the term ‘hate crime,’ which is a broader category encompassing a number of bias-related crimes, while ‘bias-related assault’ is more defining of the particular incident,” Gruber wrote in an email. “The purpose of a public safety alert is to alert the campus community to a potential threat, not to legally categorize the incident.” GU Pride President Thomas Lloyd (SFS ’15) expressed shock and dismay at the assault. “As someone who works to make any person feel safe regardless of their identity or expression or anyone’s possible interpretation of that identity, it’s disappointing, and it’s scary,” Lloyd said. GU Pride will hold an event, titled “Creating a Safer Space,” in response to the assault. During the event, participants will examine documents recently brought to light by the LGBTQ Histories Project and will share and reflect on their own experiences. Lloyd pointed to Georgetown’s history with hate crimes, which includes assaults on the basis of sexual orientation in the fall of 2007, prompting a wide campus response and the establishment of Georgetown’s LGBTQ Resource Center, and in the fall of 2009. He noted

See LOMBARDI, A6

See ASSAULT, A6

DANIEL SMITH/THE HOYA

Students popped paint-filled balloons in Red Square on Monday at the start of Thrive 2014, a week devoted to mental health.

designated comprehensive cancer centers in the United States. In order to earn the designation of comprehensive cancer center, the hospital must both conduct research and treat patients. The center is also required to use a laboratory for basic science research, a clinic for clinical trials and a focus on the center’s surrounding population.

NATASHA THOMSON/THE HOYA

Georgetown’s Lombardi Cancer Center was renewed as the District’s only comprehensive cancer center, also winning a $11.25 million grant for clinical trials, equipment and personnel over five years. Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

See MILZMAN, A6

Student Injured in Hate Crime

AIR YOUR GRIEVANCES

Lombardi Renewed as Top DC Cancer Center Suzanne Monyak

ruling, ordering that he be detained and placed under “rigorous suicide watch.” The possession charge could bring with it up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Milzman’s plea deal, however, would include time already spent in jail, which is approaching six months this week. If the court approves the deal and sentences him to the shorter end of the sentence’s time range, with good behavior he could be released in November or December, according to The Washington Post. Milzman’s attorneys have said that he planned to use the ricin to commit suicide, rather than to harm anyone else, and Milzman has been under suicide watch in D.C. Jail. “Daniel Milzman put himself and others in danger by cooking up deadly poison in his Georgetown dorm room,” U.S. Attorney Ronald

Published Tuesdays and Fridays

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A2

OPINION

THE HOYA

Tuesday, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014

C Founded January 14, 1920

C A Truly Catholic Conference C C EDITORIALS

With the Jesuit LGBTQ conference Ignatian Q headed to Georgetown this March, the university has solidified its role as a facilitator of dialogue regarding the intersection of LGBTQ and religious identities. Movements that seek to effect change are often confronted with opposition — for many years, the Georgetown establishment was one of these obstacles in the fight for LGBTQ rights on campus. However, Georgetown has commendably developed a different approach in recent years, in contrast to many other Catholic campuses,where LGBTQ groups have to swim upstream for even the most basic recognition. As a community, we have proven the judiciousness of enacting change from within a system, rather than chipping at the system from the outside. Ignatian Q is a powerful representation of this fresh angle, organizing a space to discuss the meaning of identifying as a sexual or gender minority, framed within a language that articulates LGBTQ understandings of self within a Jesuit mindset. At once, it is evident that colorful harmony can be achieved, as our community

comes even closer to the ultimate understanding of a Catholic identity by embracing, instead of denying. After all, at its core, “catholic” means to be universally reaching; it means to have wide sympathies, and to be embracing to all. So when this campus challenges the problem of whether an LGBTQ identity can fit within the Catholic sphere, it is important to ponder the two alternatives at hand: Would it be more harmful to Georgetown’s Catholic identity to integrate another modern group of people into our community or to turn our backs on an enduring conflagration of exclusion and violence? To many, the Catholic Church is a static and pristine entity, resisting waves of change through the centuries. But the great achievement of Catholicism has also been how the Catholic mindset continues to integrate modern problems into one comprehensive mode of thinking. By embracing these modern challenges as an allied community, Georgetown sets an example for Jesuit, Catholic and even secular universities.

A Worthy Ranking While some students have, in alarmist fashion, seen the U.S. News and World Report’s downgrade of Georgetown University from the No. 20 national university to No. 21 as calamitous, another ranking from U.S. News is much more deserving of our attention. For 2015, Georgetown earned the top ranking among Best National Universities for Veterans. The veterans that attend Georgetown add a unique and invaluable perspective to a student body that is decidedly diverse in both interest and demographics. While many students may not interact with veterans — or know they are interacting with veterans — on a daily basis, it would be foolish to ignore the contributions they make both inside and outside the classroom. Georgetown can be proud of its concerted effort to make a wide array of resources available to veterans on the Hilltop. For example, maintaining a designated Veterans Office helps the university ad-

THE VERDICT Copley Catastrophe — The Copley Dorm elevator was out of service for several days last week, leaving disabled students unable to safely enter and exit the building. New Theatrical Life — Restoration work on the Georgetown Theater will begin, sparking a revival of that section of Wisconsin Avenue. Cannabis Campaign — The push for legalization of marijuana started campaigning with social-justice oriented messages like, “vote to refocus police priorities” and “legalization ends discrimination.” 24/7 No Longer — HBO announced it will no longer produce the 24/7 series leading up to this year’s Winter Classic, which would have featured this year’s competitors, the Washington Capitals and Chicago Blackhawks.

C C

Jazzy Feelings — Next week, the Italian Jazz Series Festival, sponsored by the Italian Embassy and Italian Cultural Institute, will feature five Italian musicians at Blues Alley.

C

Casted, but Not Conquered — Although RGIII will be in a cast, he will not need surgery, and will possibly return to the field in time for the end of the season.

Football Fragments — Washington Redskins quarterback Robert Griffin III dislocated his left ankle in Sunday’s game.

A LITTLE BIRDIE TOLD US ... @Dr_MustafaCeric Sept. 13 The #Dayton Agreement is made on the basis of structural discrimination @thehoya #sacuvajmozemlju #uredimodrzavu @sudoltj Sept. 13 The OIP split into Office of Global Education and Office of Global Services this summer.” Me: MadProps!

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

THI, BKW Deal Not a True Inversion

dress the specific needs of those who have served in the armed forces. From providing bureaucratic assistance with obtaining U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs education benefits, to coordinating designated health and wellness resources, the GU Veterans Office helps make collegiate life accessible and successful for our campus veterans. University President John J. DeGioia was right to say that everyone on the Hilltop should be proud of this ranking — but more importantly, everyone on the Hilltop should be proud that so many veterans have made the decision to come to Georgetown after serving our country. While many veterans shy away from recognition of their service, we should all take a moment to show our appreciation for all that they have done and continue to do for this school, city and nation, and work to ensure Georgetown remains on top of this U.S. News ranking for years to come.

To the Editor: Re: “As HQs Go Overseas, Expect Steep Taxes,” (The Hoya, A10, Sept. 5, 2014) While portrayed as such in the media, and technically an inversion, the Tim Hortons-Burger King Worldwide deal is really not an inversion in the traditional sense of the structure. Internal Revenue Statute 7874 lays out two tests a company must meet to not be treated as a U.S. corporation: first, substantial business activity outside the United States; and second, 80 percent ownership test. People assume, including this author, that BKW actually owns and operates restaurants. They don’t — they franchise restaurants and collect royalty fees. BKW only owns and operates 52 out of 13,667 restaurants worldwide, or 0.3 percent of the total. For comparison’s sake, McDonald’s and Yum Brands (which includes TacoBell, KFC and Pizza Hut) own and operate 19 percent (6,500) and 20 percent (8,000) of their restaurants, respectively.

This week on

Decongesting Prospect Thankfully, most Georgetown students don’t have to worry about rush hour traffic in Georgetown. But, for a few hours each afternoon, rush hour traffic chokes up the intersection leading to the nearby Key Bridge, congesting by extension portions of M Street, 34th Street and — more often than not — the eastbound 3600 and 3500 blocks of Prospect Street with commuters headed to Virginia, Maryland and upper Northwest D.C. While this traffic would ordinarily have little effect on undergraduates, the G2 bus that leaves from the front gates passes along this stretch of Prospect Street, despite that its destination is in the direction of Dupont Circle, and ultimately Howard University, far from the traffic-laden commuter roads leading to Virginia and Maryland. Rerouting the G2 bus simply to avoid that single stretch of Prospect Street — perhaps down N Street instead — would have mutual benefits for the G2 rider-

ship and commuters alike. For those who must ride the G2 around this time of day, it would help shorten an already traffic-prone D.C. commute. For other commuters who typically get stuck in traffic headed toward the Key Bridge or Canal Road, diverting any traffic from those overflowing intersections — especially several buses — would likely reduce the overall congestion. This change would require little of WMATA yet could prove to be a sensible amelioration to the problem that there aren’t enough lanes of road for the number of cars that need to get around the city. Changing the route to traversing the 3500 and 3600 blocks of N Street would require no new resources, would utilize lanes of traffic that are otherwise calm even during rush hour and would actually pass by fewer private residences. Even if only to save a few minutes of sitting in traffic, this change would be well worth the trouble.

Emma Hinchliffe, Editor-in-Chief Mallika Sen, Executive Editor Robert DePaolo, Managing Editor Ian Tice, Online Editor Molly Simio, Campus News Editor Suzanne Monyak, City News Editor Sam Abrams, Sports Editor Jess Kelham-Hohler, Guide Editor David Chardack, Opinion Editor Michelle Xu, Photography Editor Zack Saravay, Copy Chief Emma Holland, Blog Editor

Contributing Editors

Zoe Bertrand, TM Gibbons-Neff, Penny Hung, Nicole Jarvis, Hanaa Khadraoui, Sheena Karkal, Jackie McCadden, Sean Sullivan, Laura Wagner, Emory Wellman

Katherine Richardson Deputy Campus News Editor Deputy City News Editor Kshithij Shrinath Deputy Business News Editor Kim Bussing Deputy Sports Editor Andrew May Sports Blog Editor Max Wheeler Deputy Guide Editor Allison Hillsbery Deputy Guide Edtior Hannah Kaufman Opinion Blog Editor Jinwoo Chong Deputy Opinion Editor Kit Clemente Deputy Opinion Editor Ben Germano Deputy Photography Editor Julia Hennrikus Deputy Photography Editor Daniel Smith Deputy Photography Editor Natasha Thomson Acting Layout Editor Zoe Bertrand Acting Layout Editor Emory Wellman Deputy Copy Editor Gabi Hasson Deputy Copy Editor Katie Haynes Deputy Copy Editor Sharanya Sriram Deputy Blog Editor Emily Min

Be sure to check Chatter, The Hoya’s online opinion section, throughout the week for additional opinion pieces. SEAMUS GUERIN (COL ’16) reflects on his first few weeks in abroad in Barcelona: As deeply connected as we are with our Georgetown experience as we presently know it to be, it is a fleeting time of constant transition, and a substantial component of this journey, and what we will surely experience many times afterwards, is becoming comfortable with being uncomfortable.”

Victor wang (NHS ’15) weighs in on the inadequacies of the modern pharmaceutical industry: Simply put, drug discovery is not an easy process The world is full of millions of compounds ready to test for thousands of diseases and conditions. To be able to narrow that list down to the one that finally makes it through clinical trials and regulator approval for demonstrating efficacy and patient safety is an astounding feat.

Find this and more at

thehoya.com/chatter

Jason Yoffe, Director of Accounting Brenna Muldrow, Director of Corporate Development Nicole Foggan, Director of Marketing Addie Fleron, Director of Personnel Brian Carden, Director of Sales Janet Zhu, Director of Technology Senior Accounts Manager National Accounts Manager Alumni Relations Manager Special Events Manager Institutional Diversity Manager Local Advertisements Manager National Advertisements Manager Systems Manager

Editorial Board

Consultants

David Chardack, Chair

Nick DeLessio, Kevin Tian, Christina Wing

Celeste Chisholm, Kit Clemente, Ben Germano, Johnny Verhovek

Brian Lafranchi MSB ’09​

[ CHATTER ]

Michal Grabias, General Manager

Tessa Bell Laura Tonnessen Tessa Guiv Catherine Huber Christine Cha Gregory Saydah Lena Duffield Matthew Da Silva

BKW had just over $1 billion in revenue in 2013, THI had $3.1 billion. BKW has 2,420 employees, and THI has 2148. THI franchises their restaurants as well, but they own most of the real estate, similar to MCD, but unlike BKW. Post close, the vast majority of sales and assets of the combined company will be in Canada, not the United States. Ultimately this debate comes down to the use of cash, not tax rates. U.S. companies have trillions stashed overseas and they aren’t going to pay 20 percent (they pay only the difference between host country rate and 35 percent when repatriating) to bring cash back to the United States to invest when you can borrow for 3 percent. It’s not rocket science — I bet if you went to Red Square and asked every student who walked by whether they would want to pay 20 percent or 3 percent to use their cash, everyone would say 3 percent. Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative.

Board of Directors

Sheena Karkal, Chair

Michal Grabias, Emma Hinchliffe, Hanaa Khadraoui, Hunter Main, Zach Singer, Laura Wagner Letter to the Editor & Viewpoint Policies The Hoya welcomes letters and viewpoints from our readers and will print as many as possible. To be eligible for publication, letters should specifically address a recent campus issue or Hoya story. Letters should not exceed 300 words. Viewpoints are always welcome from all members of the Georgetown community on any topic, but priority will be given to relevant campus issues. Viewpoint submissions should be between 600-800 words. Send all submissions to: opinion@thehoya.com. Letters and viewpoints are due Sunday at 5 p.m. for Tuesday’s issue and Wednesday at 5 p.m. for Friday’s issue. The Hoya reserves the right to reject letters or viewpoints and edit for length, style, clarity and accuracy. The Hoya further reserves the right to write headlines and select illustrations to accompany letters and viewpoints. Corrections & Clarifications If you have a comment or question about the fairness or accuracy of a story, contact Executive Editor Mallika Sen at (310) 918-6116 or email executive@ thehoya.com. News Tips Campus News Editor Molly Simio: Call (201) 661-1440 or email campus@thehoya.com. City News Editor Suzanne Monyak: Call (404) 641-4923 or email city@thehoya.com. Sports Editor Sam Abrams: Call (816) 582-4949 or email sports@thehoya.com. General Information The Hoya is published twice each week during the academic year with the exception of holiday and exam periods. Address all correspondence to:

The Hoya Georgetown University Box 571065 Washington, D.C. 20057-1065 The writing, articles, pictures, layout and format are the responsibility of The Hoya and do not necessarily represent the views of the administration, faculty or students of Georgetown University. Signed columns and cartoons represent the opinions of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the editorial position of The Hoya. Unsigned essays that appear on the left side of the editorial page are the opinion of the majority of the editorial board. Georgetown University subscribes to the principle of responsible freedom of expression for student editors. The Hoya does not discriminate on the basis of age, gender, sexual orientation, race, disability, color, national or ethnic origin. © 1920-2014. The Hoya, Georgetown University twice weekly. No part of this publication may be used without the permission of The Hoya Board of Editors. All rights reserved. The Hoya is available free of charge, one copy per reader, at distribution sites on and around the Georgetown University campus. Additional copies are $1 each. Editorial: (202) 687-3415 Advertising: (202) 687-3947 Business: (202) 687-3947 Facsimile: (202) 687-2741 Email: editor@thehoya.com Online at www.thehoya.com Circulation: 5,000


OPINION

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014

LEFT BEHIND

THE HOYA

A3

VIEWPOINT • Lowe

Give Us a Voice, Not a Lollipop Hunter Main

Speaking Up On Israel’s Occupation W

ithin the House and the Senate, unwavering support for Israel and its actions is as monolithic a political opinion as they come. Although the United States gives Israel more money than it gives any other country, Senate Resolution 526, “Supporting Israel’s right to defend itself against Hamas,” passed the body unanimously July 29, while House Joint Resolution 76 granting Israel an additional $225 million for its Iron Dome defense system, made it through the House with only eight representatives voting to oppose it. Powerful Democrats, such as Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairman Steve Israel (D-N.Y.), are particularly vocal in their support, going so far as to condemn the United Nations for merely investigating possible Israeli violations of international law. Looking at the congressional response to the conflict in Gaza — the most recent flareup ending with an Aug. 26 ceasefire — it would come as a surprise that nearly half of all Democrats see Israel’s actions in the area as unjustified. A Gallup poll conducted in late June, weeks before the murder-by-missile of four boys playing on a Gaza City beach, showed that 47 percent of Democrats did not support the country’s current military campaign. People with this opinion have essentially no representation in Congress, not even from self-proclaimed democratic socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) and the two cochairs of the Congressional Progressive Caucus. That more members of the Israeli Knesset spoke out against Operation Protective Edge than members of Congress shows there is a fundamental misunderstanding of the conflict by the American government. The countless congressional resolutions that framed the conflict as a war between two equally matched powers took an inaccurate, short-term view of the situation, which is really one between the occupier and the occupied. The people of the Gaza Strip, 1.8 million strong, are caught in one of the planet’s most shameful situations. Ninety percent of the water in their main aquifer has been contaminated from runoff from Israeli sewage, and electricity — even before the Israeli Defense Forces bombed Gaza’s main power plant in late July — was available for only less than half the day. There is no possibility of internal economic improvement, as a strict Israeli blockade had barred the import of construction materials like cement and iron. Agriculture, too, has its dangers; around 35 percent of Gaza’s arable land falls within the “buffer zone” by the Israel border, where IDF guards restrict access, and successful ventures, such as the el-Bader flour mill and the Sawafeary chicken farm, have been targets of military bombing. The result is an area entirely reliant on foreign aid for food, education and other necessities, with a citizenry unable to leave because of borders with Israel and Egypt that are, for all intents and purposes, closed, even after ceasefire terms eased restrictions somewhat. It would be difficult, however, for a U.S. politician to speak up against the occupation using specific language. Hamas is correctly regarded as a terrorist group, and support of the new Palestinian unity government, a step toward the two-state solution supported by Congress, is politically toxic because of the group’s necessary involvement. With Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s insistence that key Palestinian requests — namely right of return for the relatives of those expelled in the 1948 exodus — are permanently off the negotiating table, a major pro-Palestine push by anybody in the Democratic Party will likely fail to pick up any steam. A more fruitful alternative is to shift the focus to condemning Israel’s actions in both Operation Protective Edge and the decadeslong conflict. Rhetoric insisting that the IDF went out of its way to avoid hitting civilians means little when nearly 80 percent of Palestinians killed during the latest conflict were non-combatants. These numbers deserve more than just concern — they require vilification. In addition, the illegal appropriation and settlement of land in the West Bank — most recently with the enormous expansion of the Gush Etzion settlement, announced less than a week after the ceasefire — should be condemned not just as theft, but as antagonistic to the peace process as a whole. Of every representative, only Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) has taken a broader view of the situation, asserting in a Washington Post op-ed that ending Israel’s blockade of Gaza will do wonders for reaching peace in the region. That only one Democrat was willing to look at the conflict in a way that prioritized the end of human suffering over the destruction of Hamas is disappointing, for his is the only approach that treats the suffering of the people of Gaza as a solvable problem instead of an unfortunate reality.

Hunter Main is a senior in the College. LEFT BEHIND appears every other Friday.

L

ast Saturday night, I experienced something that seemed, to me, rather thought-provoking — on the corner of 36th and N streets, members of the off-campus community board were handing out lollipops to passers-by. At first, I was excited to get free candy before returning to my apartment, but when I heard the reason behind the distribution of lollipops, I was surprised. “Please keep quiet in the neighborhood!” the smiling Office of Neighborhood Life employee said. While this gesture seemed wellintentioned, it is incredibly patronizing. How belittling it is to hand out candy to adults in order to pacify them? Some group of people — with students quite likely not playing any conceivable role — must have thought how cute it would be to pass out some lollipops to keep the peace in our historic neighborhood. You cannot doubt the merit behind this campaign; it is an understandably frustrating experience to live so close to a college campus. We students admittedly all can be very loud in the wee hours of the morning. Few things are worse than unwarranted noise at ungodly hours of the night. We empathize. Yet, the administration has not worked with students in regard to recent actions and policies. Everything from the Northeast Triangle to the closure of the townhouses on the 1400 block of 36th Street reflects rather deep divides between the administration and the student body. The increased presence of SNAPS and the clearly different and distinct standards for student conduct on and off campus coupled with the fact that neighbors have access to Yates and borrowing privileges from Lauinger — all of which is financed by our tuition and endowment — calls into question who the university cares for more. Georgetown’s Jesuit education can educate the whole person, but

How belittling is it to hand out candy to adults in order to pacify them? it seems its administration cannot care for the whole of its student body. Many of these policies came from the 2010 Campus Plan agreement – the same one that is forcing Georgetown to, very slowly, destroy one of the last green spaces on campus. The campus plan undeniably gave students the short end of the stick, and some of the policies purported to create a “more vibrant on-campus student life”

have been implemented in confusing and underhanded ways. The administration needs to directly address the students, and just tell us that they care about the neighbors’ comfort more than they care about students’ comfort. The symptoms of an uncaring administration imposing new rules on an unwilling student body will emerge more and more until they achieve the golden 95 percent of students living on campus, when-

CULTURE CLASH

ever that will happen. By the looks of the “construction site” around the Northeast Triangle I doubt it will happen any time soon. In the meantime, feel free to accept the administration’s pacifiers on your way to your soon-extinct off-campus residence. Seeing as the 2010 Campus Plan expires in 2017, the negotiations surrounding the next campus plan are on the horizon. And it is here where the administration can turn itself around and accept student input, before we lose anything more. Students will absolutely need a seat at the table, if not some deciding power in the policymaking. If generations of students’ tuition have paid for the operation of Georgetown and the benefits shared by the neighbors, then shouldn’t we get some say in the future of this institution we pay to support? Next time, the administration must let us negotiate. We are, after all, legally adults (except for some of the youngest freshmen). It would be considerate if we were treated in such a way. The president of this university is not the president of West Georgetown and Burleith. A lollypop will not bridge the gap between the administration, neighbors and students. The series of unfavorable decisions will leave behind a frustrated student body. No matter how sweet a lollipop is, the administration’s surface-level measures to hide institutional issues concerning students ought not to satisfy us until there is a student voice at the table that can actively represent us. Yet, it must be said that the bonds between students, administrators and the neighborhood need not be adversarial relationships. Instead, let us all be partners in the future of Georgetown. All I’m asking for is a seat at the table. Please, do not shut us out — or up — again. CHARLIE LOWE is a junior in the School of Foreign Service.

VIEWPOINT • Mullen

The Shared Cluelessness Finding New Firsts Of Freshmen and Seniors In Our Final Year

F

ar better than the return of profes- men nervous about their prospects of ensional football, the biggest buzz on try into Brown House. campus right now is indisputably We admit that we have gazed at the arrival of a new freshman class. times in jealousy at these freshmen Somewhat dazed and more than who, though painfully awkward, at confused, freshmen find poorly advised least have the bliss of ignorance. And young love at Club Lau and forge new of course, they have an even greater friendships, while female freshmen luxury — four years of fecklessness, blunder out of men’s restrooms, much to blunder and thrill ahead of them. our enjoyment. We thank these all-stars At least some of us seniors may for the entertainment. be beginning to wonder not only (One freshman boy to another, whether the old values — cura persooverheard last Thursday outside Har- nalis, hot cinnamon Burnett’s — no bin: “So, uh, when you were in high longer apply, but whether they really school, did you, uh, do a lot of drugs?”) applied at all. (Both have lost a bit of The seniors, meantheir appeal, but hot while, return to campus cinnamon Burnett’s, of like washed-up athletes, course, is still on sale.) still flashing the ring (and Seniors and freshmen occasionally, the signifishare much in common, cant other) and the memsuch as an equally irratioories of the “glory days” nal appreciation for Sam that were the frosh years. Adams, but what they We recall those simcertainly do not share pler times when the is a common purpose. Tucker Cholvin & field was clearly demarfreshmen are Thomas Christiansen Whereas cated, the referees were entering a four-year funeasily identifiable (they filled with words The irony of senior house were the ones who like “aesthetic” and “phegave the grades) and year is that we must nomenological,” seniors the cheerleaders were trying to fit their liberface confusion deeper are without boys. al arts-bolstered souls into Not long ago, our than Welcome Week. a production function, roommates were the star even if it means they have running backs, our classmates forced to ignore their utility function. fumble after fumble and we threw more The irony of senior year in the end, touchdowns than legends like Manning then, is that having made it through or Brady. We killed the game. three years and mastering the things But now, with summer internships that matter at Georgetown (bathrooms, behind us, job recipients among us and or the Prisoner’s Dilemma), seniors have recruitment before us, the rules have to face a quandary and a confusion much changed fundamentally. deeper than anything they ever had to Although they have grown some- contend with during Welcome Week. what more adept at noticing the This is, in short, not what we were exsubtle differences between men’s and pecting. And we’d hate to spoil the excitewomen’s bathrooms, the members of ment for the underclassmen and let them the senior class are not that different in on the secret that despite the boozy from their Class of 2018 counterparts. Tombs adventures (there is a post-Burnett’s Sure, 2015 is closely approaching life, after all) it doesn’t all come with roses. while 2018 still belongs firmly to the So: It’s only September and we’re alrealm of “Star Trek” years, but seniors ready feeling cagey about the end comthese days are beginning to walk ing up. What are we to do? around in the same dazed confusion Well, for one, take heart. After all, the that plagues the freshmen looking for last time we felt hopeless, clueless and the fabled Father O’Donovan’s Din- helpless, we were freshmen too — and by ing Hall. Seniors, by and large though, faking it until we made it, well, we got aren’t looking for Leo’s. They’re looking here. Hopefully, we somehow managed for a clue, especially one that will draw a to have a good time along the way as paycheck sometime after May 2015. well. The best we can hope for as seniors, Meanwhile, the university that they then, is that as we rocket off into the void learned, sometimes painfully, to navi- after graduation, the same rules apply. gate (the tunnels do not lead to Fr. Kevin We certainly hope they do. O’Brien’s office) has become a hauntAnd so, like all good sports fans ating ground of memories rather than a tending the annual Awkward Bowl, the land of promise. Unlike the freshmen seniors will find their favorite bench, at the front gates, greeted by John Car- purchase three (or 17) pitchers, kick back roll’s bronzed, welcoming lap, the se- with their buddies — and watch. niors share more in common with the bleached residents of the Jesuit cemetery. Tucker Cholvin and Thomas ChrisWhere are the old comforts? Rum and tiansen are seniors in the School of Cokes on a Friday night do not provide Foreign Service. CULTURE CLASH apthe same salve they once offered to fresh- pears every other Tuesday.

‘I

t’s so weird. I keep looking around, and there are so many people I don’t recognize here!” I must have heard that statement at least five times at the Dis-Orientation toga party in Leo’s last Friday night. Georgetown’s student body is medium in size, so by senior year, many of us have the perception that we know nearly all our classmates. But I think we forget that we all live in our own mini-Georgetowns, our own worlds within this campus that do not actually include all 1,800 seniors. We might think that we interact with a lot of different people because we exchange multiple hellos walking across Copley lawn, because we see so many familiar faces on Lau 2, or because we recognize so many acquaintances on a Saturday night at Tombs. But it’s easy to overlook the fact that it’s probably many of the same people we see in these spaces. And we all have places we frequent most – whatever they may be – that make us assume we encounter every student on campus while we’re there, even though that’s not the case. Routine implies some degree of monotony, and by senior year, it’s easy to become complacent. We’ve established friend groups. We’ve settled into clubs, activities and courses of study, and in the process, we’ve limited ourselves. Day to day, we interact with the same groups of people who are likely (though not definitely) very similar to us. And this isn’t always bad, or wrong — it’s just incomplete. Hopefully, you weren’t discouraged if you looked around and noticed just how many people you didn’t know at the first Dis-Orientation event on Friday night. Instead, I hope you saw an opportunity in that realization. An opportunity for new friends and new experiences at a time when you may have thought that your Georgetown world was complete. The Class of 2015 has eight months left as undergraduates

on the Hilltop. I hope that we can all spend that time stepping out of our established corners of Georgetown, putting ourselves in the position to meet seniors we wouldn’t have otherwise encountered. Whether we’re in the performing arts community, play a club sport, take part in a religious organization, work for The Corp, lead ESCAPE trips, serve on an academic council, are part of a cultural group on campus, give tours for Blue & Gray or take part in one of countless activities that I haven’t listed here, we can — and should — spend the rest of this year trying to create new experiences that bring us outside of our established groups and closer together. I know that breaking from routine can seem daunting. As chair of the Senior Class Committee, I want our organization to plan events that encourage seniors to step outside of their miniGeorgetowns. More importantly, though, I hope that we can collaborate with different student groups on campus to make this happen. While we plan a lot of our own events on the Senior Class Committee, there are so many great programs that already take place on the Hilltop that few students know about. I consider it part of our responsibility as a committee to highlight various events to all seniors so that smaller groups might reach new audiences. This is something I know the Senior Class Committee can continue to work toward as an organization, but it is also something we can all practice as individuals. So let’s say yes when we hear about a new music performance, religious service, club sports event, cultural dinner or offbeat lecture. Let’s step up and step outside of our established comfortable spaces on campus, seniors. We’ll all be better for it.

Let’s say yes when we hear about a new performance, religious service, cultural dinner or offbeat lecture.

Bridget Mullen is a senior in the College. She is chair of the 2015 Senior Class Committee.


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NEWS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014

INSIDE THIS ISSUE The Elect Her conference aimed to encourage young women to enter leadership positions on campus. See story on A5.

Your news — from every corner of The Hoya.

IN FOCUS

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MOO SHU & MULAN

Entrepreneurship is a way to build community, and for me entrepreneurship is a lot about economics.” Victoria Schramm (COL ’12), director of events for UP Global, on the importance of entrepreneurship. See story on A5.

from

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CALLING ALL BULLDOGS Do you have what it takes to suit up as the next mascot for the Hoyas? JULIA HENNRIKUS/THE HOYA

Seniors gathered on Copley Lawn on Monday night for Chinese food and a screening of the movie “Mulan,” provided by the Senior Class Committee. The event is part of Senior Dis-Orientation, which is running through Sunday.

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Senate Holds Hearing On DC Statehood KSHITHIJ SHRINATH Hoya Staff Writer

A renewed push for statehood for the District of Columbia culminated with a U.S. Senate committee hearing Monday. Although a symbolic gesture, this hearing was the first on D.C. Statehood since 1993, offering prominent government officials the opportunity to argue for full representation and control for D.C. citizens. The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee deliberated the New Columbia Admission Act involving two all-Democrat panels, including Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes-Norton (D-D.C.), who serves as the non-voting delegate from the District to the House of Representatives, Mayor Vincent Gray, and D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson. It has received 104 co-sponsors in the House and 17 in the Senate, the highest level of support this bill has ever seen. The act proposes limiting the federal district to the small areas around the White House and the Capitol, while admitting the rest of the District of Columbia, as the 51st state, giving the state a voting representative in the House and two members in the Senate. Holmes-Norton opened the testimony by calling for equal representation for the citizens of the District. “As the District’s elected representative to Congress … I feel it when the bell rings for votes on bills, and I cannot cast a vote for the 650,000 American citizens who live in the District, despite the $12,000 per resident they pay in federal taxes, more per capita than any other Americans,” she said at the hearing. Mendelson also testified in support of D.C. statehood at the hearing, focusing on the thriving economy and government of the District. “For 17 consecutive years, the District has ended its fiscal year with a budgetary surplus,” Mendelson said in his testimony. “Our city is growing, our tax base is growing, our financial reserves are healthy.” While Holmes-Norton focused on the lack of representation for District citizens in Congress, Mendelson decried the District’s current inability to control its own affairs. “We cannot spend without congressional appropriation, and we cannot enact local laws without congressional review,” he said. “The District government is fully capable of managing our affairs just like any state.” Holmes-Norton noted in her testimony that she did not expect the bill to pass but with the record number of co-sponsorships, including from Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), and support from President Barack Obama, saw the hearing as an opportunity to draw even more attention to her cause. “My hope is that I will be able to stir up even more activism in Congress for equal

rights for D.C. residents,” she said in a Sept. 11 press release on September. Obama voiced his support for D.C. statehood at a town hall-style event at a public school in northwest Washington in July. “I’m in D.C., so I’m for it,” he said. However, Obama did not send a representative to the hearing. Mark Rom, director of Georgetown’s masters program in American government, said that statehood was, for all intents and purposes, impossible. “In the current political environment and for the foreseeable future, although none of us can really foresee the future, there’s no way Congress would approve it. It’s so Democratic. It’s two Democratic votes in the Senate,” Rom said. “Control is so closely divided. It’s important for [Republicans] not to give up additional seats, and the Democrats would do the same thing if the positions were reversed.” However, Rom pointed out that as the statehood movement aims for control for citizens in the District, total home rule could allow D.C. to achieve those goals equally well. “If Congress gave them complete authority over their jurisdiction in all ways that other states have authority over their jurisdiction, they could set their own budget, they could establish their own policies, they could do whatever programs they want,” Rom said. On the representation side, he pointed to the 2007 District of Columbia Voting Rights Act, which proposed to expand the House of Representatives by one seat in the District and one seat in Utah, which would grant representation without unbalancing the political parties in Congress or giving the city too much power. Political commentator Mark Plotkin, a supporter for statehood, was not optimistic about D.C.’s chances at statehood in the near future. “If we want to be honest with ourselves, nothing has changed, not in my lifetime, not in 50 years,” Plotkin told The Washington Post. Only two senators attended the hearing, Sen. Thomas Carper (D-Del.), who introduced the bill and Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.). Nineteen Senate Democrats have signed Carper’s bill, not nearly enough to pass a bill through the Senate. “I’m not sure [statehood] should ever happen. D.C.’s weird. It’s not a state; it’s a large city, but there are plenty of other cities that are larger that don’t have representation in Congress, not the kind D.C. would have,” Rom said. Independent mayoral candidate David Catania states in his platform that he will bolster support for D.C. statehood and congressional representation. Mayoral candidate Democrat Muriel Bowser has also expressed her strong support for D.C. statehood, budget autonomy, and complete voting rights.

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Bouncers did not allow underage seniors to enter the Mason Inn during much of a Dis-O event on Saturday night, although the bar’s management agreed that it could be an 18-and-up event.

Dis-O Hits Under-21 Snag MOLLY SIMIO

Hoya Staff Writer

Although Saturday night’s Senior Dis-Orientation event at the Mason Inn was advertised as an 18 and up event, a communication error prevented the entry of under-21 members of the Class of 2015 for much of the event. According to Senior Class Committee Events Chair Helen Li (MSB ’15), the SCC coordinated the event with the Mason Inn’s management, who agreed that underage students could attend the event as long as they wore wristbands indicating that they were not able to drink. “I think [Mason Inn’s] main concern was that they would have to make sure that under-21 kids don’t get drinks from other students, which we completely understood. There’s a huge liability issue with that. But at the same time, they agreed and they ultimately fulfilled their promise. It was just frustrating,” Li said. Li said that on Saturday night, it did not seem that the management had informed bouncers of this agreement. “The most frustrating part for us as a board is that it seems like we didn’t adequately communicate with management, which is not true. There was just a lack of communication between management and the bouncers,” Li said. After the bouncers refused entrance to underage students, Li called the Mason Inn’s owner, Fritz Brogan (COL ’07, LAW ’10), who came to the bar and made

sure that the remaining 25 to 30 underage students associated with the Dis-Orientation event were allowed to enter. The underage students got into the bar between 11:30 p.m. and midnight, according to Li. Brogan, however, said there was not a problem for underage students on Saturday night. “There was a line to get in because a lot of people were there. Saturday is a busy night and we had a lot of people coming for the Georgetown party, so I think that people had to wait in line for five to 10 minutes, but there was no problem with people getting in that I know of,” Brogan said. This is the first year that underage students have been invited to attend Dis-Orientation events at bars. “In the past, there have been tons of bar events and the under-21 students have not been included. We thought that was unfair,” Li said. “A lot of students just want to go to bars to be with their friends, not necessarily to get a drink at the bar.” Events at Bandelero and Rí Rá this week will also be open to students under the age of 21, but Li said that the SCC will take measures to ensure that the students are permitted to enter the bars. “We’ve learned a lot, so we are making sure that the owners give us in writing exactly what their plan is and that they will let under-21 students in and that there will be no

problems,” Li said. “They might have to stay in a certain area away from the bar … but they will be let in and they’ll be able to be with their friends at the event.” Approximately 20 percent of the students who are registered for Dis-Orientation are under the age of 21. Victoria Moroney (SFS ’15), 20, arrived at Mason Inn around 10:30 p.m. on Saturday evening, and was told by bouncers that they were only allowing three people under the age of 21 in the bar at a time. “It was made pretty clear by one of the managers who came to speak with us that it was too much of a liability for them to accept anyone else even though they had agreed prior to this to let people under 21 in,” Moroney said. Moroney said that she was disappointed that she was not able to participate in this event, which was widely advertised as accessible to underage students. “There were a lot of people who had very clear expectations for what the event was … and that everyone would be able to participate at a really cool thing for people who are still under 21,” Moroney said. “I think it was a huge disappointment for all of us and I think we really felt like it was incredibly unfair and very manipulative of the Mason Inn to portray it as an event that was 18 and up when that clearly was not the case.”


NEWS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014

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Entrepreneurship Series Elect Her Broadens Focus Fosters Startup Culture MADDY MOORE Hoya Staff Writer

CHRIS BALTHAZARD Hoya Staff Writer

This weekend, the Georgetown Entrepreneurship Initiative will hold Georgetown Startup Weekend, Entrepreneurship Day and TechBuzz, a series of events in the Rafik B. Hariri building that reflect the growing commitment to encouraging startups on campus and in the Washington, D.C. area. The events will feature a keynote address from Washington Capitals and Wizards majority owner Ted Leonsis (CAS ’77), various breakout sessions and competitions judged by Priceline co-founder Scott Case, and a number of resources designed to facilitate building businesses. Sweetgreen co-founder Nicolas Jammet (MSB ’07) said that he has been amazed by the recent success and growth of the startup culture at Georgetown. “The only word I can use to describe it is growing, and what I’ve seen grow over the past seven years since I graduated, it’s really incredible to see the campus and the university and everyone invest in this idea,” Jammet said. “I think there’s always a kind of underground movement, or some excitement about it, but now it seems like that whole entrepreneurship movement at Georgetown is gaining incredible momentum.” The weekend’s main event, Startup Weekend, aims to engage participants in a competition to create a startup. At the beginning of the 54-hour event, students, alumni and faculty members can pitch ideas and develop entrepreneurial pitches. “Startup Weekend is a global movement, in that on any given weekend there are about 14 events going on. It’s in over 700 cities across the globe,” Victoria Schramm (COL ’12), director of events of UP Global, a nonprofit organization that supports entrepreneurship, said. “It’s our job as the organizers to bring in top-notch mentors, really great judges and all the resources that you need to really give it a go.” Schramm, who majored in art history at Georgetown and also serves as a board member of the alumni group Georgetown Entrepreneurship Alliance, saw the inherent value in entrepreneurship upon leaving Georgetown and decided to commit herself to promoting it. “Entrepreneurship is a way to build community, and for me entrepreneurship is a lot about economics,” Schramm said. “People who start companies are not only building things that the world needs and solving problems, but they’re also creating jobs. … I also think it’s important for people to do what they love. One of the things I saw as a Georgetown graduate was that many of my classmates were leaving and graduating and going to jobs that they weren’t super excited about.” Georgetown Entrepreneurship Day will feature mini-keynotes from alumni, students and entrepreneurs followed by breakout sessions and the closing keynote from Leonsis. Jeff Reid, who founded the Georgetown En-

trepreneurship Initiative in 2009, said that the program of events grow every year and that students have begun to take more action each year. “Every year we have some students that take the leap and start a company,” Reid said. “Companies like Encore, Ride and Lulu’s are pretty cool recent examples. One of the keynote speakers at TechBuzz, on Sept. 19, is an MBA grad named Dan Berger. And his company, Social Tables, is one of the fastest-growing startups in D.C. Those are just a few examples; every year we have more.” Reid also made sure to welcome students and faculty from every corner of Georgetown to all entrepreneurship events, including TechBuzz, which will take place from 1 p.m. to 7 p.m. Friday before Startup Weekend begins. “One of our biggest challenges is helping people that are not business majors realize that they’re 100 percent welcome for these kind of events,” Reid said. “So many times at Georgetown people assume because an event is in the Hariri building that if you’re not a business student, you’re not welcome. For the entrepreneurship program, everyone is welcome.” Computer science professor Mahendran Velauthapillai has seen the practical benefits of working for a startup instead of a larger corporation. “When you’re starting off, when you’re young, it’s good to go to a place where you get your hands dirty in everything,” Velauthapillai said. “So if you go to Google, what happens is you’ll be put in one specific thing. And you’ll be only specializing in that specific thing. And some people like that. … But when you go to these small startups, then you have to do everything.” He did note, however, that because of the small size of the computer science department, encouraging risky startups has not historically been one of its priorities. “It’s been kind of at the periphery,” Velauthapillai said. “But as a faculty member, I always tell you to think, think, think, and don’t be afraid to try something new.” Georgetown students have encountered varying degrees of success with their startups, since a very large percentage of startups fail. Jammet, along with classmates Nathaniel Ru (MSB ’07) and Jonathan Neman (MSB ’07), are an obvious success story, with the local D.C. salad restaurant startup now spanning over 25 locations across the Northeast. Jammet said that students interested in creating a startup should take the risk. “Do it. I think that at certain times you just have to take that leap, and when you’re in school, surrounded with resources and professors and people who care about you, that’s the best time to take that leap,” Jammet said. “I see a lot of my friends that always wanted to do it, but then ended up going down the more traditional investment banking or consulting route. And once you go a year or two down that road, it’s really hard to leave. You end up staying for a while. … So take that leap early on.”

The Georgetown University Student Association and the American Association of University Women hosted Georgetown’s third annual Elect Her Women’s Leadership Conference on Saturday morning in the Healey Family Student Center. Elect Her is a program that encourages young women to run for student government and other leadership positions on college campuses. “Women in leadership is a winwin, and that is something that has been proven time and time again. When more women are in politics or any other leadership position, there are so many benefits that have been proven,” AAUW Manager of College and University Relationships Christine Hernandez said. “Women tend to be able to reach across the aisle to each other better, and they compromise.” Research shows that women who run for elected positions earlier in their careers are more likely to run years later. Today, 54 percent of women in Congress once held leadership roles in their own colleges’ student governments. Since only 18 percent of United States Congressional representatives are women, the U.S. ranks 77th internationally in women’s representation in the federal government. “It’s kind of a vicious cycle when women don’t see female representatives, so [women] don’t think they can run for office either,” attendee Jordan Hughes (NHS ’18) said. The conference invited female leaders on Georgetown’s campus to participate in a panel. The panel included GUSA Vice President Omika Jikaria (SFS ’15), GUSA Undersecretary of Sustainability Mandy Lee (SFS ’17), Georgetown College Academic Council President Parnia Zahedi (COL ’15) and GUSA Senior Adviser Chandini Jha (COL ’16), who is also the chairwoman of GU College Democrats. The panelists explained why they decided to run for office and how they focused on specific issues during their campaigns. “I noticed a lot of things that made me feel surprised about Georgetown. ... I really wanted to do something about the lack of sustainability efforts on campus,” Lee said. “I worked with the Office of Sustainability, which is a uni-

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The third installment of the Elect Her women’s leadership conference featured keynote speaker Penelope A. Gross. versity office, but then I realized I wanted to help mobilize students behind important issues. Change would not just come from the administration, but from pressure of students as well.” The panel also addressed how they handled criticism as female leaders while running for elected positions. “I realized that it’s not like you’re doing it for your own selfaggrandizement. You have ideas and things you want to change around campus,” Jha said. “Something that helped me while I was running [for GUSA] was not letting myself talk me down. Taking the time to keep telling yourself that you are a capable person who has ideas and wants to help people. You shouldn’t devalue yourself because the world will perceive you in the way that you see yourself.” Following the panel, the conference leaders asked attendees to brainstorm an issue about which they were passionate and write a brief elevator pitch, or a short speech to give while introducing oneself to voters. After creating their elevator pitches, participants delivered them in a campaign simulation, meant to help them practice presenting to potential voters. “It focused on empowerment as opposed to the issues in society with women not holding leadership positions. We were focused on solving the problems and getting down to business,” Hughes said. After two rounds of the campaign simulation, three attendees were selected to participate in a final round. Each candidate delivered her brief elevator speech, and

then all of the attendees voted on a winner. The conference also included keynote speaker Penelope A. Gross. Gross represents the Mason District on the Fairfax County, Va. Board of Supervisors. Her speech outlined her path to office, the support and mentorship she had along the way and suggestions for how to successfully run for office. “Campaigning is fun. It’s government that’s hard,” Gross said. “You must balance opinions, and if that decision is up to you, then make it.” After several experiences working on campaigns and for elected officials, Gross successfully ran for office. “You must have confidence in yourself since girls are often being told you can’t do something. Fortunately, I think that’s happening less for today’s women, but I still think it’s one of the biggest hurdles for female candidates,” Gross said. “Most importantly, you have to like people, listen, have confidence, find mentors, build trust, understand the time commitment and have fun.” Elect Her member Sarah Rabon (COL ’16) said that this year’s conference evolved to include a broader leadership focus. “I think there was less of a focus on GUSA this year and more of a focus on general leadership skills,” Rabon said. “We had a different set of panelists and a different keynote speaker who brought in a different point of view, which is good. This year we had males participate in the training, which we haven’t in past years.”

RESIDENT GENIUS

CLAIRE SOISSON/THE HOYA

MacArthur Genius playwright Tarell Alvin McCraney spoke at an open forum Sunday. His “In the Red and Brown Water” opens Georgetown’s theater season in October.

Boycott Attracts GU Support ISRAEL, from A1 “I’ve seen the situation on the ground, particularly from the vantage point of colleagues, Palestinian academics, who really have suffered enormously over the years,” Tucker said. “They can’t get books, their students can’t get to campus. These have been ongoing endemic conditions under which they live. Of course, it sometimes becomes much more critical than that when there is an active period of bombing or attacks.” Tucker, a history professor who specializes in the Middle East, said that she believes that pledging her signature is one of the best ways she can contribute to a cause in which she believes. “The idea is that after this long period of time, there’s been virtually no movement on getting any closer to a resolution of this conflict. How can people abroad like myself make some kind of contribution to the cause of getting a just resolution? It’s not going to come about, it would seem, through negotiations on the ground, which have stalled for many, many years,” Tucker said. Tucker, Haddad and Esposito said that their involvement in the boycott will in no way affect

their roles as professors at the university. “Signing the petition was a personal choice and has nothing to do with my professional activity at the university,” wrote Haddad, who teaches the history of Islam and Christian-Muslim relations. “I did not speak for the university, its faculty or its administration. I will continue to teach both the Palestinian and Israeli positions. Being censored and forced to teach exclusively the Israeli position as the only truth would shortchange our students, who are being trained to be the future leaders of America.” “They’re very separate,” Tucker said about her personal views and her professional life. “I’ve been teaching Middle East history at Georgetown for many years, and my personal views have absolutely no purchase in the classroom. For me, it’s a non-issue. I would never feel that my students should think like I do or take positions like I do on any issue.” Georgetown professors signed similar boycott petitions in December 2013 and in 2007. University President John J. DeGioia commented on both previous boycotts, but has yet to comment on this boycott. In 2013, DeGioia expressed oppo-

sition to the boycott, but support for academic freedom of speech. “The recent resolution of the American Studies Association endorsing a boycott of Israeli universities undermines the academic freedom that is essential to the mission of the Academy. … I recognize these are matters on which colleagues can disagree,” DeGioia wrote in a statement last year. “While the position of our university remains opposed to any boycott, we will certainly defend the rights of those who disagree.” Nitzan Gabai (SFS ’16), Israeli student and former Georgetown Israel Alliance president, said that he agreed with DeGioia’s statement and now worries about a lack of academic freedom and discussion between opposing sides. “I am very concerned by what would happen with the void that would be left after pushing out Israeli scholars and universities from the conversation,” Gabai said. “Without someone on the other side to ever give counterarguments or to ever check and balance the accusations that are made on one side or the other, there’s just so much room to go with extreme opinions and go with actions that lose every proportion possible.”


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THE HOYA

tuesDAY, September 16, 2014

Milzman Pleads Guilty to Possession of Toxin MILZMAN, from A1 Machen Jr. said in a press statement. “Today Mr. Milzman owned up to his reckless behavior and acknowledged his crime before a federal judge. He is very lucky that none of his fellow students were hurt when he decided to manufacture this lethal substance.” “The FBI, along with D.C. Fire and EMS, acted swiftly to respond to this dangerous situation, to investigate the origin of the ricin, which Mr. Milzman has

admitted to possessing, and to access any remaining potential risks to students on campus,” Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office Andrew McCabe said in a press release. “Possessing lethal biological toxins such as ricin is illegal, and those who choose to engage in this risky activity will be prosecuted by our partners at the U.S. Attorney’s Office with the full resources of the FBI.” Abbe Smith, the director of the criminal defense and prisoner advocacy clinic at the Georgetown

University Law Center, brought up that the defense could have originally sought sentencing under the Youth Rehabilitation Act, which gives youths under the age of 22 the opportunity to have their records sealed after serving the sentence. That is no longer an option as Milzman was sentenced in federal court, where the law does not apply. “In my opinion, the best resolution of the case for Mr. Milzman would have been the case being transferred to the D.C. Superior Court from the federal court that

whatever he pled to, or was prosecuted if it went to trial, could be resolved through something called the Youth Rehabilitation Act,” Smith said. “I’m sure that was the goal of the defense lawyers. It seems obvious that the government wasn’t willing to do that, that the government insisted on prosecuting him in federal court, where there is no such act for young people.” According to Georgetown Director of Media Relations Rachel Pugh, Milzman is not currently enrolled at Georgetown, but she

declined to comment on the procedure behind or time of his disenrollment because all procedures are confidential. Milzman, a Bethesda, Md. native whose father works as research director of the Department of Emergency Medicine at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital, was a member of the Class of 2016 and studied physics and mathematics on a pre-med track in the College. Milzman’s lawyer, Danny Onorato, could not be reached for comment.

Lombardi Awarded Grant

EUROPEAN JUDAISM UNDER SIEGE

LOMBARDI, from A1

KRISTEN SKILLMAN/THE HOYA

Stacy Bernard Davis from the U.S. Department of State, Sarah Fainberg from ISNN/Tel Aviv University, Georgetown CSS professor Dieter Dettke and director of European affairs from the Anti-Defamation League Andrew Srulevitch discussed European anti-Semitism Monday.

GU Student Assaulted on M Street ASSAULT, from A1 the progress he has seen in campus culture since then. “The sort of trigger an LGBTQ person has with hate crimes on this campus is to think about what happened five or six years ago, where they were closer to campus, and one or two incidents were done by other students. I found a lot of solace in the reac-

tion of campus, which was really unified outrage,” Lloyd said. “This is a question of perceived identity, so [campus] is full of allies and supporters for anyone who expressed and presents any which way.” Despite this progress, Lloyd said there was significant opportunity for improvement on campus to ensure a safe space where students feel more comfortable

reporting these types of incidents. “Last spring, there was an incident where a few students were verbally assaulted at The Tombs after GenderFunk [Georgetown’s annual drag ball held during Pride Week], so on one hand, while I say it’s constantly improving, on the other, there are a lot of experiences that don’t get reported,” Lloyd said. “So the event is to look at the history, see how

we’ve gotten better, and also to share stories on where we still have to go.” Lloyd urged anyone who needed counseling help to reach out to the LGBTQ Resource Center in Leavey 325. Anyone with further knowledge of the incident should contact MPD’s Second District Station at (202) 715-7300, or the Department of Public Safety at (202) 687-4343.

tient treatment, training and community outreach, the grant is intended to support the behind-the-scenes activities that make these programs successful,” he wrote. “This is one of the only grants available to support these critical needs.” According to Weiner, although Lombardi has received larger grants, this grant is unique because it is not directly intended for research alone. “This grant funds what other grants don’t,” Weiner wrote. The NCI also acknowledged the collaborative effort between Lombardi and MedStar Health in the creation of the MedStar Georgetown Cancer Network, a network of four Washington-region hospitals. “We’re pleased the grant reviewers recognized our work with MedStar Health and its hospitals throughout the region to export our treatment expertise so that we can reduce the burden of cancer,” Federoff said. Sarah Waye (COL ’15), who won the Goldwater Scholarship last summer for her research at Lombardi on medulloblastoma and for her proposed future research on stem cell treatments for spinal injuries, lauded Lombardi as a high-quality cancer research institution. “I think that being called a comprehensive cancer center is actually entirely deserved by Lombardi because the amount of research and the quality of research that’s coming out of there is astounding,” Waye said.


tuesday, september 16, 2014

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SPORTS

THE HOYA

tuesDAY, september 16, 2014

men’s soccer

the sporting life

Elite Teams Stumble Early L

ast season’s NFL title chase ultimately played out as many predicted. The Denver Broncos, galvanized by a massive quarterback upgrade, tore through the AFC on their way to the Super Bowl. Over in the NFC, the Seahawks and 49ers saw off all other challengers as they battled it out for the conference crown. But there were still several surprises in store. The Kansas City Chiefs had a miraculous turnaround from the previous season, finishing the regular season 12-4 and locking up a playoff bid despite being in the same division as the Broncos. In spite of the logjam at the top of the NFC West, the Arizona Cardinals came out of nowhere, ending the Seahawks’ record home winning streak and missing the playoffs by the slimmest of margins. This season, the Broncos and Seahawks remain the odds-on favorites to win their respective conferences, while the 49ers have seen a drop in optimism after injuries and off-field issues. But through two weeks, fans are already seeing the signs of division rivals rising to challenge the favorites. Despite building big leads in the first two games of the year, the Broncos have looked vulnerable in the second half. Although the Broncos won their Week 2 matchup, their opponent, the Chiefs, controlled the ball and time of possession for much of the game. But the team the Broncos really should be mindful of is the San Diego Chargers. The Chargers gave the Broncos plenty of fight in the playoffs last year, and year two under Mike McCoy is looking even more promising. An 18-17 loss last Monday night to the Cardinals was frustrating given some of the points the Chargers left on the field, but all such disappointment was erased by what the team did Sunday coming off of a short week. Quarterback Philip Rivers played well, the offensive playcalling was flawless and the Chargers hung 30

points on the Seattle Seahawks and their vaunted “Legion of Boom” secondary. Taking advantage of mismatches at tight end and in the slot, Rivers routinely punished the Seahawks with Antonio Gates and Eddie Royal. He also took time to beat Richard Sherman a few times — something Aaron Rodgers did not even attempt in Week 1. If Rivers continues to blossom under McCoy’s tutelage, the Broncos will have an opponent with the talent and experience to challenge them as equals in the AFC West. The future looks even more uncertain in the NFC West, where the winner’s perch seems to be in a pro-

Darius Majd

The Broncos and Seahwaks face competition to defend divisions. longed state of flux. The 49ers went from a 6-10 record to 13-3. In 2011, they were two botched punts away from the Super Bowl in 2011, and a dynasty looked imminent under new coach Jim Harbaugh. Then the 7-9 Seahawks hired Pete Carroll, and underwent the same overnight rise from sub-par to playoff bound. It took the team two years to usurp the 49ers, but when it did, Super Bowl glory, rather than the pain of finishing second, awaited it. Now, the Arizona Cardinals look poised to make the same jump. It started, once again, with the introduction of a new coach. After impressing in an interim role with the Indianapolis Colts, Bruce Arians made the jump to full-time head

coach with the Cardinals last year. Coming off a 5-11 finish in 2012, and stuck playing the 49ers and Seahawks twice a year, expectations were low. But by midseason, Arians had the defense humming and the offense doing just enough to scrape by, and the team turned a 3-4 start into a 10-6 finish. A last-second loss to the 49ers was all that separated the two teams from an identical record. With the Seahawks bested in San Diego, and the 49ers overrun by the Bears in the second half last night, the Cardinals are the early leaders in the NFL’s toughest division. Arizona beat San Diego when Seattle could not, and the Cardinals were able to run away from the Giants in Week 2, even after the last-minute scratch of quarterback Carson Palmer from the lineup. Early signs seem encouraging, but is it too soon to wonder if the Cardinals could actually displace the Seahawks? Maybe, but the implications of recent rule changes certainly will benefit the Cardinals going forward. The Seahawks offense has clicked thus far, which is encouraging, but Pete Carroll and his staff have to be worried about the new emphasis from referees on flagging defensive holding. Many around the league have pointed to the physical brand of football played by the Seahawks’ fabled secondary as the impetus for the meteoric increase in defensive holding calls so far this season. Whether the nature of the rule change is implicitly linked to the Seahawks or not, there are legitimate concerns that the play of Richard Sherman, Earl Thomas and the rest of the reigning champions’ secondary will be impacted by the rise of defensive holding calls. Their ability to adapt will determine whether they defend their title or get usurped prematurely like the 49ers before them. Darius Majd is a senior in the College. THE SPORTING LIFE appears every Tuesday.

COURTESY ANDREW MINKOVITZ

Legendary Hoyas basketball coach John Thompson spoke at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Thompson Athletic Center. Former players, the current team and a pair of recruits were in attendance.

Thompson Honors GU Tradition Groundbreaking, from A10 tendance included Roy Hibbert (COL ’08), Jeff Green (COL ’12), Greg Monroe and Otto Porter, all formerly coached by Thompson III. The current men’s basketball team sat close by, as did two highly touted Class of 2015 recruits, Dwayne Bacon and Bryant Crawford, both of whom were making their official visits on Friday. The representation of Georgetown basketball’s past, present and future was a defining aspect of the ceremony. “The former players … have always been an integral part of the program,” Thompson III said. “They have always been around in some way, shape or form. And so for our current team to see so many guys here today, I think they kind of understand how special Georgetown and Georgetown basketball is.” Hibbert and Green each donated $1 million to the construction of the Center, and Ewing added another $3.3 million in a joint donation with longtime sports agent David Falk and his wife, Rhonda. These recent gifts bring the university closer to raising the $62 million required to complete the construction of the Thompson Athletic Center.

Athletic Director Lee Reed says that having these and other major contributors at the ceremony proved that the influence and dedication of the wider Georgetown community is capable of accomplishing remarkable feats. “I think it’s reflected in the attendance here today that the university community really was ready for this project,” Reed said. “I think it was the right project for this campaign. I don’t want to say it was easy to rally people in support, but people were very generous with their time and their resources, and it couldn’t have been done without our entire community coming together. People don’t realize that we’re just a small school on a hilltop, but it takes our entire community to come together to make anything happen.” The blueprints for the four-story, 144,000-square foot Thompson Athletic Center, slated to open in 2016, boasts a state of the art facility that will include practice courts and locker rooms for the men’s and women’s basketball teams, locker rooms for four additional varsity teams, weight training and sports medicine rooms, a new venue for the Georgetown Athletics Hall of Fame and a student-athlete academic center.

In addition to relieving scheduling conflicts and the current overcrowding at McDonough Arena and Yates Fieldhouse, the center will create a more competitive athletic atmosphere on campus and will rival the resources of much larger universities. “At the end of the day, it’s when you’re recruiting against some of the best universities in the country, you do need some of the resources to assist [recruits] in their decision -making process,” Reed said. “I think this sort of levels the playing field for our coaches.” Reed also affirmed that the center will serve to enhance the most essential elements that Georgetown Athletics has to offer. “We’ve never been a place that’s about buildings, structures — we’ve always been a people-centric place. We’re never going to try to outresource people, but we always do a great job out-peopling people, in a way,” Reed said. “That will never change, and that’s going to be important for us. The building really does help, but it’s truly the people that are in the building and what they believe in and their desire to be at Georgetown and represent this great university. That is always going to be the most important thing for us.”

CHRIS GRIVAS/THE HOYA

Junior forward Brandon Allen scored Georgetown’s lone goal in a 1-1 draw against the No. 9 UC Irvine Anteaters at Shaw Field on Sunday.

Clash of Top-10 Teams Ends in Overtime Draw Andrew May Hoya Staff Writer

The No. 6 Georgetown men’s soccer team (2-1-3) played its fourth overtime game this season Sunday at home, ending its match with No. 9 UC Irvine (4-0-1) in a 1-1 tie. The game followed a similar pattern to Thursday’s loss to the Virginia Commonwealth University Rams. Junior forward Brandon Allen put his team ahead early, but Georgetown allowed a late equalizer that sent the match into overtime. Instead of succumbing to an overtime loss after conceding in the waning moments of regular time like they did against VCU, the Hoyas played evenly with the Anteaters until the draw was confirmed. “The games actually had a pretty similar feeling in a lot of ways,” Head Coach Brian Wiese said. “If you look at it as a weekend, it is a pretty frustrating weekend. We feel we could have been 2-0 … and you end up with a loss and a tie.” Georgetown deviated from its Starting 11 for the first time this season. Freshman midfielder Christopher Lema made the first start of his college career, playing instead of senior midfielder Tom Skelly. Lema featured prominently in Georgetown’s lone goal, as he started the play by sliding in for an impressive tackle to win the ball from a UC Irvine player. Sophomore midfielder Bakie Goodman then collected the ball and found Allen at the top of the 18-yard box. Allen turned and found the back of the net, shooting the ball to the right of Anteaters redshirt sophomore goalkeeper Michael Breslin, whose dive felt short. The goal was Allen’s fourth of the young season, and he currently leads the team in points. “I think I have been playing well. I think I have been getting in good spots to score goals,” Allen said. “Credit to my teammates, they have been there for me the whole way. Hopefully this continues.” Georgetown jumped out to early leads against Harvard and VCU, but in both games struggled to play as well in the second half as it did in the first. Sunday’s game, on the other hand, felt much more like the Hoyas’ win over Wisconsin, with Georgetown controlling the pace of play in the second half and having the best chances to score the game’s second goal. Lema had a

shot saved in the 48th minute by Breslin, and Allen missed an opportunity in the 80th minute after a pass by senior midfielder Austin Martz put the forward in behind the defense. This run of play made UC Irvine’s goal in the 73rd minute all the more surprising. The Anteaters successfully defended a corner kick and quickly started the counter-attack. The play saw several Georgetown defenders, including junior captain Keegan Rosenberry and sophomore Joshua Yaro, out of position. As both sides raced toward the Georgetown goal, a pass into the 18-yard box ricocheted between players before being redirected over senior goalkeeper and captain Tomas Gomez by junior midfielder Mats Bjurman. Yaro tried to clear the ball off of the line but could not reach it in time. “We handled the counter-attack off of the corner kick really poorly. They [UC Irvine] make you pay for it. … It was not a personnel issue; we had the right people back there. We just didn’t handle it, and suddenly, it is 1-1,” Wiese said. The match, which had seen methodical, possession-based play by both sides, opened up in overtime. The Hoyas forced two saves in each of the two overtime periods, including a close-range effort by sophomore forward Alex Muyl after a great cross by Rosenberry. The missed chances by Muyl and Allen mirrored two chances on an open net missed in the loss to VCU. “Everyone knows there is soccer karma. We are hoping the soccer karma starts falling our way and that some of these things start going in,” Wiese said. The Anteaters also created chances that very nearly won the game. Yaro jumped in front of a shot in the 95th minute to save the game, and a free kick taken by redshirt senior midfielder Gor Kirakosyan hit the outside of the post in the 105th. Despite the opportunities from both sides, the game ended in Georgetown’s third draw of the season. The game was the second in a row that the Hoyas could not protect an early lead or regain that lead after it had been lost. “What we have to do is just be a championship team. When we score a goal [we need to] just keep it together and fight to the end.” Allen said. “We haven’t been holding it together.” The Hoyas will play Princeton away at 7 p.m. on Wednesday. The game will be televised on ESPNU.

THE WATER COOLER

Royals Finally Within Reach of Postseason IPPOLITO, from A10 However, this is old-school baseball because the Royals are doing what every Little League coach tells his players to do: Put the ball in play, run the bases well and play good defense. The Royals offense may be mediocre, but their efficiency is astounding. The Royals lead the AL in stolen bases by over a 30-base margin, so when they do manage to get on base, they make it count. Their defense — the baseball equivalent of the 1985 Chicago Bears — is probably their greatest reason for success. FanGraphs.com’s advanced statistics have the Royals’ defense as the best in baseball for the second straight year and calculates that their defense saves an additional 64 runs than the average defense. The bullpen — the Achilles’ heel of so many teams — has also been one of the strongest features of this surprise playoff-caliber team. Again, FanGraphs’s advance statistics have the Royals as the second-best bullpen

in the AL, and they are fourth in the majors at nearly five wins above replacement. Kansas City’s bullpen has converted 83 percent of its save opportunities, which is tied for the leaguebest with San Diego, and the Royals have the second-most saves in the AL. Simply put, when the Royals have leads late in games, they usually don’t lose. Currently, ESPN advanced statistics estimate that the Royals have over a 71 percent chance of making the postseason, and the Royals have a half-game lead in the American League Wild Card race over Seattle. Obviously, anything could happen. Royals fans, especially those under 29-years-old who have never seen a Royals playoff game, should add a dose of caution to their optimism. But for once, the reason to see a September baseball game in Kansas City extends beyond the pregame ribs. Mike Ippolito is a sophomore in the College. THE WATER COOLER appears every Tuesday.


SPORTS

tuesday, september 16, 2014

cross-country

THE HOYA

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COMMENTARY • Barton

Teams Finish in Mueller Investigation’s Impact Top 3 in Openers T maddie AUERBACH Hoya Staff Writer

The Georgetown cross-country program split squads on Saturday to compete in a pair of seasonopening matches. The No. 5 women’s squad clinched an easy firstplace victory in a six-team field at the James Madison University Invitational in New Market, Va. The No. 29 men’s team fell to a thirdplace finish in a 10-team field at the Harry Groves Spiked Shoe Invitational in State College, Pa. In preparation for its meet in New Market, the women’s squad emphasized the importance of establishing a race template that it could utilize in future races. According to Head Coach Michael Smith, the team did indeed get a solid grasp of its race routine. “The objectives of the first race, being the first race in a long season, were achieved, and there’s just no shortcut for that,” Smith said. Led by senior All-American Katrina Coogan, the women’s team raced well and captured five of the top six spots at the JMU meet. Coogan blew away the competition and covered the 5,200-meter distance in 17:46:00, beating the previous course record set in 2009. A veteran group of Hoya runners rounded out the remaining top-four finishers: senior AllAmerican Andrea Keklak finished second overall with the third-fastest time in course history. Junior Haley Pierce, senior Annamarie Maag and senior Kelsey Smith finished fourth, fifth and sixth, respectively. “I was impressed with how certain people worked through their discomfort,” Smith said. “The only place you can practice that is in racing, so because it’s the first race, we haven’t practiced that. I was happy to see that the natural response was a lot of toughness out there. For the most part, I think we did a really good job with it.” Strong performances all around earned Georgetown an impressive final score of 17 in a sport where a better race means a lower score. James Madison University finished second with 57 points. George Mason University, the Virginia Military Institute, Longwood University and Concord University rounded out the remaining pool of teams. Led by sophomore Scott Carpenter and junior Darren Fahy, the men’s team started out strong in the 5.2-mile race at the Spiked Shoe Invitational. Unfortunately, rainy weather created muddy course conditions that prohibited

the team from achieving higher than a third-place spot in a field of 10. Around the 4-mile marker, both sophomore Jonathan Green and junior Ahmed Bile fell mid-race. “We got a little unlucky that two of our best guys fell at such a crucial point, but I don’t think that that was necessarily a huge factor,” Assistant Coach Brandon Bonsey said. Carpenter finished fifth overall for the Hoyas, and Fahy came in two seconds after Carpenter to notch seventh place. Bile, Green and senior John Murray finished 11th, 12th and 13th, respectively. Absent from the field were veteran runners senior Collin Leibold and graduate student Brian King. “We basically just took the philosophy that anyone that we weren’t 100 percent sure was ready to race, we weren’t going to race them. Both those guys are fine but weren’t at 100 percent, ” Bonsey said. “They’re training great, and they’ve won high-level cross-country in the past, so I know when we have them in we’re going to be a lot better. Obviously, I think the outcome of Saturday would have been much different had Brian and Collin been in the race.” Finishing first overall was host school Pennsylvania State University, who had 41 points, followed by Syracuse University at 47 and Georgetown at 48. Saint Joseph’s University and the University of Pittsburgh rounded out the top five squads. “For Penn State, it was their home meet, and they were pretty pumped up and they did a great job over the last mile,” Bonsey said. “I think they were in a better position than us with a mile to go, and they competed a little bit harder than us in that last mile. I think the win was there for the taking, and I think we just missed an opportunity to beat two really good programs.” Although Bonsey emphasized that the race was not intended to be overwhelmingly results-oriented, the final standing for the Hoyas was still disappointing. “I didn’t want this meet to be too results-oriented. I more wanted our guys to be following our race plan and taking what results we got, but I think the guys were too tentative early on in the race, and because of that it cost us the opportunity to beat two really good programs. I saw some pretty good things, but at the end of the day, I wasn’t very happy with the result,” he said. Both cross-country teams’ next meets will be in two weeks at Boston’s Coast-to-Coast Battle in Beantown.

Sudoku

his past week’s Thursday night football game featured one of the greatest rivalries in sports: the Baltimore Ravens versus the Pittsburgh Steelers. However, this time the media’s focus was less on the game and more on the release of the elevator video showing former Ravens running back Ray Rice punching his now-wife, Janay Palmer. Initially, Rice received just a twogame suspension from NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell. After the full video of Rice’s assault on his thenfiance in an Atlantic City, N.J. casino surfaced, the Ravens cut Rice from their roster, and the NFL suspended him indefinitely. Goodell’s tenure as NFL commissioner began in 2006, succeeding Georgetown graduate Paul Tagliabue (CAS ’62). Throughout his eight years at the helm of the most profitable sports league in the world, Goodell has dealt with many major issues, such as Spygate, the bounty scandal and the increase in suspensions due to steroids and amphetamines. Critics — such as ESPN anchor Keith Olbermann, who called Goodell an “enabler of men who beat women” on air after Rice’s two-game suspension was announced — have long rebuked the commissioner for giving longer suspensions to players who perform illegal in-game hits or use recreational drugs than those who are convicted of some form of domestic violence. Rice is not the only blight on the

NFL this year, as the league has seen several other players indicted on domestic violence charges. Carolina Panthers defensive end Greg Hardy was held out of Sunday’s game by Coach Ron Rivera following his summer indictment on domestic violence charges after playing in Week 1. Just this week, Minnesota Vikings All-Pro running back Adrian Peterson was suspended by the NFL after he was indicted on charges of reckless or negligent injury to a child after beating his 4-year-old son as a disciplinary measure. The list of violent acts is slowly adding to Goodell’s perceived lack of appropriate action, and the Ray Rice situation has necessitated a private investigation of the commissioner. Leading the investigation is Robert Mueller, who worked as Georgetown’s Executive-in-Residence from September 2013 until summer 2014. Mueller, who previously worked as director of the FBI for 12 years, provided “faculty, students and university leaders with insights and perspectives based on his lengthy career in public service,” according to the official Georgetown website. Mueller was unavailable for comment. All these player issues have distracted fans from the main NFL scandal this offseason: The continued use of the Redskins’ moniker for the Washington football team. Many Native Americans and non-Native Americans are still in protest of Owner Dan Snyder’s insensitive team name. ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” program

put on an hour-long show to discuss the issues and possible solutions of the naming issue. Goodell, who as a child cheered for the Baltimore Colts (now in Indianapolis) and the Washington Redskins, stands by the name of the team. Georgetown undergraduate alumni represent one of the largest contingents of professional sports owners with four current owners across the NFL, NBA and NHL. As it is the responsibility of the owners to elect the commissioners of the leagues, Roger Goodell’s mistakes will serve as a teaching moment for whoever takes the reins next. Mueller’s investigation is important to the thousands of children tearing down their Adrian Peterson posters and exchanging their Ray Rice jerseys. It is important for women everywhere, if the punishments for those guilty of domestic violence are fair and severe. Finally, the investigation will have a deep impact on those involved in, but not playing, football. The NFL’s media, management and ownership sectors will now have a different code of conduct by which to address these issues. Arguably the worst week in NFL history finally came to a close, but ultimately, Robert Mueller and his investigative team will play a huge role in preventing this from ever happening again, and in reshaping the NFL’s punishment policy for years to come. Nick Barton is a sophomore in the McDonough School of Business.

football

2nd-Half Rally Seals 1st Victory FOOTBALL, from A10 with protection in the pass game as well as opening up holes in the run game,” Nolan said. “In the first half we need to execute a little better. We got down to the red zone a couple times and converted field goals, but we have got to get the ball in the end zone. In the second half we had the lead and we were just trying to run down the clock as much as possible. The offensive line did a great job letting [junior running back] Jo’el Kimpela just run the ball as well as [senior running back] Daniel Wright.” Georgetown took a commanding lead on Novacki’s pick-six early in the fourth quarter. After a sack by senior captain defensive end Alec May set up second-and-long, Novacki intercepted the pass by the Marist quarterback and returned it 48 yards to give Georgetown a commanding 20-0 lead. “We made more plays. In critical situations we came up big and our defense played incredible the entire night,” Coach Sgarlata said, explaining the team’s success. “Phil Novacki broke the game open with a pick for a touchdown. We had three interceptions on the night. [Junior defensive back] Ettian Scott, Nick Alfieri and Phil Novacki all had interceptions at critical times, and every time the defense was asked to

step up they did. I think that combined with the fact we had two 10-plus play drives on offense for touchdowns was definitely the difference in the game.” The second offensive touchdown came after the Red Foxes returned a punt 91 yards for a touchdown while trying to mount a late comeback. Instead of wilting under pressure, Kyle Nolan led the offense on a 10-play, fiveminute drive that ended with him running into the end zone from 10 yards out to give Georgetown a 27-7 lead, effectively ending the game. “It was a read option, reading the defensive end. We ran the play a couple times in the game,” Nolan said. “We knew the defensive end was crashing pretty hard in previous plays so coach made a great call on that play. Coming off the edge, [sophomore tight end] Matthew Buckman did a great job getting around the corner to block the last guy inside.” The running game showed major improvement in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., as the team rushed for 118 yards behind balanced efforts from Kimpela and Wright. Georgetown had run for just 95 yards in the previous two games combined. For coach Rob Sgarlata, getting his first win as Georgetown’s coach was a big moment, but he was happier for

FILE PHOTO: CLAIRE SOISSON/THE HOYA

Junior quarterback Kyle Nolan scored two touchdowns Saturday. his players more for himself. “[The win] felt great. The kids did a great job and battled the entire night,“ Sgarlata said. “It really felt great for this group to see them go through a whole game, face some adversity, fight through it and win at the end.”

8 3

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5 9 Answers to last issue’s puzzle:

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6 1 3 5 2 8 1 9

3 2 5 4 8 9 7 1 6 5 4 3

JULIA HENNRIKUS/THE HOYA

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Senior forward Vanessa Skrumbis scored in the 24th minute of the match against the West Virginia Mountaineers in Friday’s 1-1 draw. Skrumbis and the Hoyas then handed George Washington a 1-0 overtime loss Sunday.

GU Defense Strong Over Weekend WOMEN, from A10 taining an impressive show of speed throughout the game; senior forward Audra Ayotte had the assist. “We got the ball toward the middle of the field,” Thomas said. “Somebody played Audra a high ball, and she just flicked it on to me. It was a perfect flick, I just ran on to it. And the goalie and the girl and I just kind of fell together, and then I kicked the ball in.” Although the Hoyas had the majority of the chances and the overall better quality, the Colonials fought hard to create opportunities, forcing junior midfielder Marina Paul into three crucial last-ditch tackles over the course of the game. “I thought [freshman defender]

Drew Topor did a very good job,” Nolan said. “They had a couple of kids up front that are a handful, [that] have got some pace, so you always have to be wary of them. I thought our two centerbacks, Marina and Drew, did very well. We’re a little bit banged up right now, missing a couple of defenders, and I think that hurt us with the shape of what we were trying to do.” Ayotte shined as well, menacing Colonial defenders up and down the left side and showing her strength on the ball in addition to notching the game-winning assist. “It’s been hard for Audra,” Nolan said. “When you have the seasonending injury she had last November, that’s an injury that maybe physically you can recover from in six to

eight months, but to get your game sharpness back — the last 5 percent of explosiveness — is what takes the longest to get. So each game, she’s getting a little bit sharper.” After a weekend of fighting for two solid results, the Hoyas have until Sunday’s 1 p.m. home game against Duquesne University to rest their legs. “I thought the team did really well, especially after playing double overtime on Friday night,” Ayotte said. “I thought everyone came out and gave a great effort. So, definitely to get a win today was big for us, especially in overtime when everyone’s legs were tired. And to see the goal go in the back of the net was such a relief. I was like, ‘Thank God, I can get some water now.’”


SPORTS

MEN’S SOCCER Georgetown (2-1-3) at Princeton (1-1-1) Wednesday, 7 p.m. Princeton, N.J. Watch on ESPNU

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2014

CROSS-COUNTRY Georgetown women finish first in Virginia while the men finish third at Penn State. See A9

TALKING POINTS

Everyone was flying around to the ball ... the defense is starting to gel and mesh together.”

NUMBERS GAME

20 ”

The margin of victory for the Hoya football team in its win over Marist.

Senior linebacker Nick Alfieri

WOMEN’S SOCCER

Hoyas Defeat District Rivals in Overtime CHRIS BALTHAZARD Hoya Staff Writer

The Georgetown women’s soccer team (4-2-2) ground out two results this weekend, drawing 1-1 at No. 22 West Virginia on Friday night and beating George Washington 1-0 in overtime on Sunday. These two gritty performances came on the heels of the Hoyas’ first two losses of the season, and the team is rebounding at a good time: just one match away from the beginning of the Big East conference schedule. Senior forward Vanessa Skrumbis scored from outside the box in the 24th minute of the West Virginia match, but the Mountaineers equalized within three minutes, ending the game at 1-1. Despite losing senior forward Jessica Clinton and junior defender Neela Mohan to injury, Head Coach Dave

JULIA HENNRIKUS/THE HOYA

Senior goalkeeper Emma Newins earned a clean sheet versus GWU.

Nolan was happy with the way the team played in a tough Morgantown environment. “It was a great performance. I thought the girls really gritted out a tough performance. If you were to look at the stats, you’d be under the impression that they battered us,” Nolan said. “But I think on chances created, they created six chances. [Senior goalkeeper Emma Newins] made three outstanding saves for us, and we created four chances. Their goalkeeper made two great saves for them, especially one in overtime, where we should have won it. But I think it would have been a little bit unfair to West Virginia, for the amount of pressure they had on us, if they had lost it.” Newins’ saves were enough to earn her Big East Defensive Player of the Week honors. It is the first time that she has won the award, although the conference has recognized her with other honors previously. After a tough opening stretch to the season that featured many difficult away games, the Hoyas came home to Shaw Field on Sunday to beat a strong GWU team in the District derby. “We knew it was going to be a tough game. George Washington is a good team, and they’re a very well-coached team,” Nolan said. “And those kids are super motivated to play us. We’re the big game on their schedule every year, and the last three years we’ve played them, every year they’ve gotten better… . And today, it was tough for us to break them down. And I told the kids it was either going to take a moment of good fortune or a moment of genius, and I think we got a little bit of both for the winning goal.” During a scramble in front of the goal, junior forward Crystal Thomas tallied the winning goal after mainSee WOMEN, A9

COURTESY ANDREW MINKOVITZ

(From left to right): Sports agent and donor David Falk joined Hoya basketball legends Roy Hibbert, Jeff Green and Otto Porter Jr. at the groundbreaking ceremony for the Thompson Athletic Center on Friday.

Groundbreaking Draws Stars ELIZABETH CAVACOS Hoya Staff Writer

On Friday, coaches, donors, administrators and past and present Georgetown athletes gathered to celebrate the groundbreaking of the John R. Thompson Jr. Intercollegiate Athletic Center. After opening remarks from several distinguished guests, including major donor Irene Shaw, board of directors chair and former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue (CAS ’62) and Director of Athletics Emeritus Frank Rienzo, University President John DeGioia introduced the guest of honor. Thompson approached the podium, good-naturedly waved away his standing ovation and began his speech. Thompson’s tenure as head coach of the men’s basketball team from 1972 to 1999 was undoubted-

ly legendary, and he acknowledged during his remarks that Georgetown basketball overcame many obstacles during his time at the helm of the program. He recalled walking through McDonough Arena shortly after being hired and being told that Georgetown was not ready for a black coach. Twenty-seven years later, Thompson’s career is distinguished by 596 wins, 24 consecutive postseason appearances, a 97 percent graduation rate among his players and the program’s only national championship victory, in 1984. Several of Thompson’s former players, including Patrick Ewing (CAS ’85), Alonzo Mourning (COL ’92), Dikembe Mutombo (CAS ’91) and Allen Iverson, sat in the audience, listening as he recounted their accomplishments and laugh-

FOOTBALL

ing as he poked fun at Iverson. Thompson’s son, current Head Coach John Thompson III, said the day was special for his father’s former players. “It’s human nature to focus on wins and losses,” Thompson III said. “But you see how special he is to them and what he’s meant in some small part to all of their lives. These guys aren’t all local; they’re from all over the country. The guys have come back just to be a part of today, so it just shows how he’s touched their lives, and they’ve touched his.” Thompson himself also expressed how meaningful their presence was. “I have a lot of sons here right now,” Thompson said. Other high-profile Hoyas in atSee GROUNDBREAKING, A8

THE WATER COOLER

Hoyas Nab 1st Win at Marist Small-Market Royals Defy Odds, History

NADAV SENENSIEB Hoya Staff Writer

The Georgetown football team won its first game of the season on Saturday, defeating Marist University on the road by the score of 277. The win was the first under new Head Coach Rob Sgarlata. Defense was the key for the Hoyas (1-2), as they forced three interceptions from the Red Foxes (03). One was returned for a 48-yard touchdown in the fourth quarter by sophomore defensive lineman Phil Novacki. Novacki added on a sack and three tackles to complete a successful game. “[Defensive Coordinator Luke] Thompson called a play where I knew I’d be in a good position to make a play,” Novacki said. “The [defensive] line got a good push to force the quarterback to throw it early, and I made the play. I think the real reason I scored was because [junior linebacker] Hunter Kiselick made a great block for me and he really opened things up.” Senior captain linebacker Nick Alfieri also lead the way on the defensive side of the ball, collecting a team-high 14 tackles and intercepting a pass that lead to a Georgetown field goal. The Hoya defense, which has forced at least one turnover in every game, dominated the first half while Georgetown’s offense, on the other hand, struggled to get going. “Everyone was flying around to the ball. We had worked all week on correcting little things, and there’s more attention to detail,” Alfieri, who was named the Patriot League Defensive Player of the Week, said. [There was] some great play calling on [defensive coordinator] Coach [Luke] Thompson’s part. The defense is starting to gel and mesh together, and a big thing we talked about was trusting the guys you are playing with. So you

T

FILE PHOTO: CLAIRE SOISSON/THE HOYA

Senior linebacker Nick Alfieri recorded 14 tackles in Saturday’s 27-7 win over Marist. The Hoya defense created three turnovers in the win. can trust the guys you are playing with to know that if you go maybe make a mistake, somebody’s going to have your back. That was a real big factor in the game on Saturday, and I think it showed.” After a defensive first-half battle ended with the score 6-0 in favor of Georgetown, the Hoya offense was able to move the ball more effectively after halftime. The Hoyas broke the game open in their first drive of the third quarter, scoring a touchdown to take a 13-0 lead. Ju-

nior quarterback Kyle Nolan completed a third-down pass to senior wide receiver Michael Cimilluca for an 11-yard score with just over nine minutes to go in the quarter. It was his second passing touchdown of the season. Nolan praised the work of his teammates, while admitting that their first touchdown of the game should have come sooner. “The offensive line did a great job See FOOTBALL, A9

First, it is vital to understand that he pregame atmosphere at the Harry S. Truman Sports Com- this is not a miracle season. This was plex in Kansas City, Mo., one the season for the Royals because they of the best tailgating venues in the have been building for something like country, reaches its apex in Septem- this for nearly a decade. Following 13 ber. With its fall foliage and the scent years of futility and the loss of promisof arguably the nation’s best barbecue ing young outfielders Carlos Beltran, wafting in the air on football Sun- Jermaine Dye and Johnny Damon, the days, Kansas City is a great place to be franchise brought in Dayton Moore this time of year. as general manager in 2006. Moore, Any other year, this article would then the assistant general manager be about the Kansas City Chiefs — not of the Atlanta Braves, began to model this year. Instead, this is about the the Royals after the Braves, who had surprise of Major League Baseball: the won 14 straight division titles from Royals. 1991 to 2005 and Although Kanhad a World Series sas City might not trophy to boot. inspire a great deal The strategy of postcode envy Moore and the Royamong baseball als took was simplayers, the smallple: draft well and market, homeplan to win from grown Royals are within. No highMike Ippolito in a prime position priced free agents to make their first were necessary. postseason appearThe franchise also ance since the mid- After 29 years without a had a long-term years of the Reagan playoff appearance, KC focus and was Administration willing to tolerate is ready for a winner. losing in the short— 1985, to be precise. They are also term. Fortunately, the latest team to defy the traditional the team has not lost 100 games since spend-to-win logic in MLB’s laissez- 2006, and the club is on pace for its faire economic world. second consecutive winning season. Unlike the other three major In many ways, the success of the American professional sports, base- Royals defies traditional baseball ball lacks a salary cap, so teams can logic. They rank last in the American spend as much money as they wish League with only 91 home runs, and on players’ salaries. Over the past five they average a paltry 3.68 runs per seasons, the Royals have averaged the game. Their on-base percentage is tied 22nd-highest payroll in the 30-team for second-worst in the AL, and they’re league at just over $68 million per also last in the AL in walks. Intuitiveyear. ly, this should seem puzzling because While small-market teams have successful teams are either high onbeaten the odds against teams like the base teams (think the 2002 Oakland Los Angeles Dodgers, who are spend- A’s of “Moneyball” fame) or they rely ing nearly $239 million this year on big hits. This team is neither. alone, the question remains: Why is 2014 the year of the Royals? See IPPOLITO, A8

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