GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 93, No. 30, © 2012
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2012
JUICE ’EM
The storied rivalry continues Wednesday at the Carrier Dome.
LAKHANPAL A columnist argues that we need a new dialogue on the Middle East.
CURRY Fr. Richard Curry, S.J., is in the ICU due to complications from pneumonia.
GUSA The senate authorized an investigation into GU’s ban on student businesses.
SPORTS, A12
OPINION, A3
NEWS, A4
NEWS, A4
Chaplain Leaves Position
SFS-Q: A Cultural Crossroads GU aims to promote diverse perpectives at Doha campus
New South chaplain implicated in family disturbance
RITA PEARSON
SARAH KAPLAN
Hoya Staff Writer
Hoya Staff Writer
More than 6,000 miles from the District, 30 professors and 203 students are working to bring a slice of Georgetown to Doha, Qatar. The Qatar campus, a 6-year-old offshoot of the School of Foreign Service, promotes itself as providing the classic Georgetown education to students in the Middle East. SFS-Q students take “Map of the Modern World” and “Problem of God.” They host a Model United Nations conference every year. But the school also aspires to imbue students with something more abstract. “[We] want to live by the Georgetown values more broadly, from cura personalis to being the best one can for others and to do this in a See QATAR, A6
LEONEL DE VELEZ/THE HOYA
GUSA President Mike Meaney (SFS ’12), far left, discussed the recommendations of the report Sunday.
Student Life Report Previewed SAM RODMAN Hoya Staff Writer
The Student Life Report Committee presented recommendations for improving campus engagement at a press conference Sunday. “Over the last five months we’ve
sought out what we like to think of as the limitless upside of student happiness on campus,” Report Committee Chair Shuo Yan Tan (SFS ’12) said. According to the report’s Editorin-Chief Matt Hoyt (COL ’12), the Student Life Report investigates
aspects of student organization advisory boards as well as intellectual and student life from a qualitative and quantitative perspective. The document, which is still in draft form, is slated to be finished See REPORT, A6
For Children-in-Residence, Campus Is a Playground HEATHER FLYNN Hoya Staff Writer
For most children, college is at most a vague, unfamiliar concept. But for the children of the faculty- and chaplains-inresidence at Georgetown, this college campus is a warm home. About 13 children live in student housing on campus as part of the faculty-inresidence and chaplain-in-residence programs. For them, the university is not an institution of higher learning, but a place where they can explore, play and learn. COURTESY ANDREW STARON
Henle Village chaplain-in-residence Andrew Staron enjoys an afternoon on campus with his 2-year-old son, A.J.
WORK HARD, PLAY HARD Tad Howard, associate dean of Georgetown College, moved on campus with his wife, Susan, in 2007. Their son, Grady, now
Journalism Minor Now Accepting Applications KELLY CHURCH Hoya Staff Writer
Georgetown College’s new minor in journalism, which was approved by the Executive Curriculum Committee in January, is now accepting applications for its first crop of students. The minor will require six classes, including “Introduction to Journalism,” “Digital News,” “Media Techniques,” a Journalism Capstone and two electives. Although the minor is hot off the press, classes focusing on journalism have been offered through the English department for years. Barbara Feinman Todd, current director of the university’s journalism program, is leading the new minor. “I think it’s important because there’s a huge interest in journalism and a desire by the students to have a formal program,” she said. According to Feinman Todd, the journalism minor is long overdue. “I wanted this to happen for a long time,” she said. “Georgetown is the perfect place for journalism.” Chester Gillis, dean of Georgetown College, said the absence of a journalism mi-
nor may have kept students from choosing to attend Georgetown in the past. “It fits well with what we do,” he said. “I’ve had students who were accepted at multiple universities … but wanted this piece of the curriculum. And now that we have it, they’ll come.” The application deadline for the minor is March 15, and acceptance results will be released before preregistration for the fall semester. Some students interested in the minor were surprised to learn that such a program had not been previously implemented. “Considering that [Georgetown has] majors like medieval studies, and minors like Russian literature and culture, the idea that Georgetown neglected training in such an essential facet of human culture and society — the art of communication — was mind-blowing,” Lindsey Turner (COL ’14) wrote in an email. According to Feinman Todd, although the program targets sophomores, some juniors who have taken the requisite courses will also be eligible to apply. She will hold an information session about the new program Feb. 24.
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almost 3, was born at the Georgetown University Hospital and has known no other home than Kennedy Hall. ”I try to get in his imagination, and I think he believes that the whole campus is his yard. So we open up the front door and he’s looking at the football field, and there are people playing sports on his yard,” Howard said. Students often see Howard and his son frequenting Grady’s favorite places, such as the fishpond next to the White-Gravenor or the fountain in the Dahlgren Quadrangle. For Maya Roth, the director of theater and performance studies, the greatest benefit of living on campus is the See CHILDREN, A5
Emmanuel Kornyo, former chaplain-in-residence for the third floor of New South Hall, will not return to his position or live on campus after his alleged involvement in an incident of family disturbance Wednesday night. “These matters are sensitive and appropriate steps are being taken,” Director of Media Relations Rachel Pugh wrote in an email. Kornyo and his wife, Rebecca, had a verbal dispute at around 10:50 p.m. Wednesday. According to a report from the Department of Public Safety, a student called DPS after hearing the couple fighting. The initial DPS report classified the incident as domestic violence and said that one of the parties was transported to the Georgetown University Hospital for minor injuries. The Metropolitan Police Department reported, however, that there was no physical evidence of an assault and no charges were pressed against either party. James Lorello, hall director for New South, sent an email to residents of the third floor Thursday afternoon to inform them that their chaplain would be absent from the floor for the time being. “The situation has been taken care of and everything is fine,” he wrote. “I apologize that I cannot give more details about this incident, but you can trust that everything has been dealt with.” Lorello told THE HOYA that the incident Wednesday was not deemed to have endangered or negatively impacted students in any way. In his email to students he urged residents to contact Assistant Director of Residence Life Katie Heather or Laura Kovach, director of the Women’s Center, if they still have concerns.
BUST A MOVE: STUDENT WORKSHOPS AT GEORGETOWN DEBUTS
CHRIS GRIVAS FOR THE HOYA
Students from the dance group Dynami showed off their skills at a SWAG kickoff event Friday. See story on A7. Published Tuesdays and Fridays
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