The Hoya: April 15, 2016

Page 1

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 97, No. 44, © 2016

FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 2016

CELEBRATING THE STAGE

This season’s Georgetown productions highlight this campus’ theatrical talent.

COMMENTARY A student on her reality beyond the Planned Parenthood debate.

SPOTLIGHT ON JOURNALISM Lecture Fund hosted a panel of experts on the child abuse scandal.

OPINION, A3

NEWS, A4

GUIDE, B1

CAPS Covers Expenses Free counseling offered to survivors of sexual assault LISA BURGOA Hoya Staff Writer

Georgetown University Counseling and Psychiatric Services will permanently offer free semester-long services for sexual assault survivors and accused perpetrators, which has been in effect since April 4. Developed by Georgetown University Student Association and university administrators, the policy — which will be formally announced next week — will allow students to use CAPS as a resource on sexual violence with financial coverage even if they notify the service late in a semester; students will still receive a semester’s worth of treatment regardless of when they begin. GUSA Deputy Chief of Staff Olivia Hinerfeld (SFS ’17), who specializes in mental health and sexual assault sustainability, said the policy was implemented to combat the lesser-known economic strain associated with sexual assault. “There are a lot of costs you can incur from medical costs, to tutoring to catch up to classes you may have missed, to seeking counseling, and it can really become expensive,” Hinerfeld said. “Under Title IX, you are guaranteed equal access to education, so if these extra costs that you are facing because of this violence is denying you access to education, we want to continue to make it less expensive for you to get the care you need.” Georgetown’s Title IX Coordinator Laura Cutway, who was

GABRIELLA MAS/THE HOYA

Whistleblower Edward Snowden discussed his leak of NSA documents in a virtual interview from Russia, where he has asylum.

Snowden Speaks On Privacy Issues JACK LYNCH

Hoya Staff Writer

FILE PHOTO: DANIEL SMITH/THE HOYA

Counseling and Psychiatric Services offers students who have survived sexual assault free semester-long counseling. hired in January in consultation with GUSA, said the new service has significant healing potential. “I am very excited that Georgetown University’s Office of Counseling and Psychiatric Services will be offering a free semester of services for both survivors and respondents of sexual assault,” Cutway wrote in an email to THE HOYA. “This

Bowser Defends Shelters MATTHEW LARSON Hoya Staff Writer

Mayor Muriel Bowser’s (D) plan to replace the D.C. General Family Shelter with eight smaller sites in each ward of Washington, D.C., has come under fire throughout March due to concerns over transparency, cost and proposed shelter locations. Bowser announced Feb. 9 that the city would fund new shelters to enable homeless citizens to move out of the D.C. General shelter, where around 280 families currently reside. The council is expected to vote on legislation approving closing the shelter on April 19.

type of support is important for the healing process of both parties.” GUSA Secretary of Safety and Sexual Assault Maddy Moore (SFS ’17) said the free services will be offered to students regardless of whether they choose to utilize university or police reporting processes. See CAPS, A6

American whistleblower Edward Snowden, wanted in the United States for leaking classified National Security Agency information in 2013, emphasized the importance of privacy and downplayed the national security risks of his document leak in a virtual interview from his asylum in Moscow, Russia in Lohrfink Auditorium on Thursday. During the interview, which was sponsored by the Georgetown University Lecture Fund and lasted approximately 75 minutes, Snowden fielded questions from moderator on the circumstances of his asylum, the FBI-Apple controversy surrounding iPhone encryption, his thoughts on accusations that he endangered national security and the long-term

GUFF Rallies for Reform TARA SUBRAMANIAM Hoya Staff Writer

Approximately 30 Georgetown University Fossil Free members and supporters gathered to demand socially responsible investments and more transparency from the board of directors’ Socially Responsible Investments Committee — including restricting investments in gun manufacturing and fossil fuel companies — at a rally hosted by GUFF in Red Square on Wednesday. The rally, which was titled “Follow the Money” and previewed by an event page and introductory video on Facebook, was cosponsored by 10 student organizations, including

Georgetown Against Gun Violence, Georgetown University Amnesty International, H*yas for Choice, Georgetown Israel Alliance, Georgetown Refugee Action, Georgetown Secular Student Alliance, Georgetown Solidarity Committee and Georgetown Students for Justice in Palestine. Members of GUFF, accompanied by a group of protestors, met after the protest with Chief of Staff of the Office of the President Joe Ferrara and Vice President for Public Affairs Erik Smulson to deliver a list of written demands. The protestors’ requests primarily included the creation and develop-

ment of a university-wide socially responsible investment policy, which would include a public list of companies and industries the university should refrain from investing in based on its core Jesuit values. After action by GUFF, the university voted to cease direct investment in coal companies in June 2015, and currently does not provide a public list of energy companies in its endowment. Additionally, GUFF requested that the university reconstruct the Committee on Investments and Social Responsibility and institute an additional

considerations about personal privacy and consumer protection. Snowden, a former CIA agent who released classified NSA documents to journalists Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras and Ewan MacAskill, was charged with two counts of violating the Espionage Act and one count of theft of government property by the U.S. Department of Justice. He was granted asylum in Russia in summer 2013, and he has lived in an undisclosed location in Russia since. Professor Alvaro Bedoya of the Georgetown University Law Center conducted the interview, which was attended by approximately 400 students. The start of the interview was delayed by 45 minutes due to See SNOWDEN, A6

FEATURED

SPORTS Club Boxing The club boxing team won five national titles at the USIBA championships last weekend. B10

See GUFF, A6

NEWS

“Because make no mistake, if we fail to act, we will fail.”

IPPS Ends Inaugural Year In its first year, the Georgetown Insitute of Politics and Public Service has hosted several key speakers and debates. A5

MURIEL BOWSER Mayor, D.C.

NEWS

D.C. General came under public scrutiny after the disappearance of 8-year-old Relisha Rudd, who police say was kidnapped from the shelter by a janitor in March 2014. The Metropolitan Police Department recently renewed the search for Rudd based on information investigators received, focusing on the U.S. National Arboretum in a two-day effort beginning April 6 that met no success. In addition to safety concerns, the shelter has been criticized for staff misconduct, unsanitary living conditions and a lack of high-quality facilities.

NENA BEECHAM/THE HOYA

See BOWSER, A6

GU Fossil Free led a protest with several other student clubs in Red Square calling for the university to be more socially responsible with its investments.

On “Throwaway Culture” Immigration and anti-abortion activists discussed the need to protect the vulnerable in Lohrfink Auditorium on Tuesday. A8

OPINION

Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Address the ARC Flaws The report on the state of the ARC reveals concerning shortcomings in its staffing and funding. A2

Send story ideas and tips to news@thehoya.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.