The Hoya: Feb. 26, 2013

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 94, No. 35, © 2013

TUESday, february 26, 2013

BULLDOG TO BULL

Former Hoya Ian Christianson signed with MLS’ New York Red Bulls on Friday.

COMMENTARY Conclave must select a new pontiff who is fit for the 21st century.

SPORTS, A10

NSSC Draws Big Donation

OPINION, A3

MINIMUM WAGE The D.C. minimum wage would climb if the president’s proposal passes.

HEATING PLANT The long-dormant heating plant on 29th Street continues to attract bids.

NEWS, A4

NEWS, A4

Groups Vie for Funding

PORTER’S HOUSE

Student Center will bear name of Healey family, planning moves forward

Student requests exceed available GUSA budget by $600,000

Andrew Wilson

Caroline Welch

Special to The Hoya

Hoya Staff Writer

With Georgetown’s Feb. 20 announcement that the Healey Family Foundation will make a major donation to the New South Student Center, plans for the center’s construction are under way. The Healey Family Student Center will cost approximately $21 million, $10.7 million of which has already been raised. The amount of the gift from the Healey Family Foundation has not been disclosed, but the building will bear the family’s name. The foundation facilitates the philanthropy of Thomas (C ’64) and Meg Healey, their son Jeremy (COL ’95) and his wife, Megan Healey (COL ’95), and Megan and John Hagerty, daughter and son-in-law of Thomas and Meg. They are of no relation to University President Fr. Patrick Healy, S.J., the namesake of Healy Hall. The center will include a central “great room,” a pub, a terrace and space for study groups and dance studios, along with the Students of Georgetown, Inc.’s proposed salad and smoothie shop. The Corp polled students about this storefront in Sellinger Lounge See HEALEY, A6

COURTESY RYAN MACCAMMON/THE DAILY ORANGE

Sophomore forward Otto Porter Jr. went 12-for-19 from the floor at the Carrier Dome on Saturday in an historic 33-point performance that powered his team’s 57-46 win. No other Hoya scored in double digits in front of the largest crowd in college basketball history, but Porter Jr. and Georgetown’s defense were enough to snap the Orange’s 38-game home winning streak. See story on A10.

Student organizations requested more than $1.57 million at the annual GUSA Budget Summit on Sunday, far exceeding the $970,000 available for allocation by the GUSA Finance and Appropriations Committee. Unlike last year, which saw a marked increase in available funds due to Student Activities Fee and Endowment reform that hiked the student fee from $100 to $150 over two years, this year’s slight increase from $960,000 to $970,000 resulted from inflation. The Georgetown University Student Association considered budget proposals from 26 groups at the summit, including those from a number of advisory boards and the Georgetown Program Board. The Department of Campus Ministry presented a budget proposal for the first time, requesting $23,950 on behalf of eight faith-based student groups. Though a Campus Ministry Advisory Board for student organizations has been proposed, it has not yet been approved. The funding requested from GUSA on Sunday would supplement the existing See BUDGET, A7

Justice andPeace Nears DC Reads Protests School Closures Approval for Major Katherine Seevers Special to The Hoya

Emma Iannini

Gillis confirmed the uncertainty surrounding the major. Hoya Staff Writer “It is up for consideration but has The College Dean’s Office ap- not been approved,” he wrote in an proved a preliminary budget for email. Lance will create a commita Justice and Peace Studies major, marking the first step toward tee composed of faculty from the the establishment of a program program’s steering committee to that has been the focus of stu- write the proposal, which will subdent advocacy in recent months. sequently be submitted to the curThe budget, which Interim JUPS riculum committee. Final approval Director Mark Lance said would would then come from the board of cover salaries for adjunct professors directors. Kyla Mcneeded to teach adClure (COL ditional courses and “We are looking very ’15) and Gibuyouts of profesanna Maita sors’ time currently hopefully in the (COL ’15), who allotted to teaching spearheaded in other depart- direction of a major the JUPS maments, encouraged officially forming in jor effort, said faculty to create a that they were proposal to present the next few years.” excited about to the College ExGIANNA MAITA (COL ’15) the recent ecutive Board. With Advocate for JUPS Major progress. knowledge of the “We are budget that would be allotted for the major, faculty looking very hopefully in the direcand students will be able to draft a tion of a major officially forming in the next few years,” Maita said. “For realistic proposal. “This is the first step,” former that, we are very excited, though JUPS Director and current Director we know there is still a lot of work of the Center for Social Justice An- to be done.” According to McClure, they were dria Wisler wrote in an email. “The proposal for the major will now go inspired by JUPS courses they took through all of the regular proce- as freshmen and originally hoped to pursue a JUPS minor. dures to gain approval.” “We had both been impacted by Lance agreed, stressing that the JUPS major is still in the early devel- our Intro to Justice and Peace Studies courses and saw the value in the opmental phase. “[College Dean Chester Gillis] has field of study,” McClure said. “Forencouraged us to submit a proposal tunately, we found a good network for a major, and the college has pro- already in place by faculty who had vided a budget sufficient to staff already begun to think about makthe courses,” Lance said. “But a new ing JUPS a major.” major proposal has not even been put together.” See JUPS, A6

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

Fifteen D.C. public schools will close next year as part of a plan to reduce expenditure on the District education system through consolidation, prompting concern from Georgetown students involved in the literacy program D.C. Reads. Under the School Consolidation Plan of 2013, authored by District of Columbia Public Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson (SFS ’92, GRD ’07), Kenilworth Elementary School in Northeast D.C., where 42 Georgetown D.C. Reads tutors assist students Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, would close in July. Current Kenilworth students would be relocated to either Thomas Elementary School, which would provide transportation, or to Houston Elementary School, where they would have to walk close to a mile to get to school. Just Education D.C. — an educational reform advocacy group composed of D.C. Reads tutors, Georgetown students and community members — organized the walk from Kenilworth to Houston Elementary to draw attention to the route’s danger from several hazards, including traffic. About 20 Georgetown students participated in the demonstration. “To walk from Kenilworth to Houston is to cross an interstate highway then go through Deanwood Metro, which you can imagine is not necessarily what you really want your 5- to 10-year-olds from your community doing,” said Matt Kerrigan (SFS ’13), a coordinator for the D.C. Reads program. Kenilworth Elementary only has about 170 students and suffers from low enrollment, like many of the schools scheduled to shut down.

Published Tuesdays and Fridays

ERICA WONG/THE HOYA

Members of DC Reads joined a march decrying the planned closure of Kenilworth Elementary School, one of 15 slated to close in D.C. this year. DCPS hopes to save money by closing these small schools and transferring the students to other schools in the system. “We actually want to use the savings from subsidizing small schools to be able to create schools that have the budget to focus on teaching and learning,” Henderson said on the

Kojo Nnamdi Show on WAMV Radio Nov. 14. “It’s going to be reinvested in the classrooms that the students are moving to, to be able to provide them with things like reading interventions, better extracurricular activities, all kinds of things.” See CLOSURES, A6

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