The Hoya: April 23, 2013

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 94, No. 47, © 2013

TUESDAY, april 23, 2013

BACK ON TRACK

Women’s lacrosse won two straight games to follow up an April 14 loss.

COMMENTARY The NRA’s control over the Senate allowed money to block gun reform.

SPORTS, A10

OPINION, A3

PROFESSIONALISM Despite a national trend, GU professors still see students as professional.

BIBS FOR BOSTON Students sold marathon bibs to raise $2,780 for Boston victims.

NEWS, A4

NEWS, A4

DC Mayor Makes Case For Budget

Relocation For HFSC Stirs Groups Some wary of storage, practice plans for New South construction

Gray joined at Ward 2 event by possible 2014 challenger Jack Evans

Madison Ashley & Caroline Welch

Mallika Sen

Hoya Staff Writers

Hoya Staff Writer

With less than six weeks until construction begins on the Healey Family Student Center, student groups currently housed in the New South space received a memorandum from the Center for Student Programs notifying them of space available in other areas on campus to supplement storage and recreational space. Although the memo provided longterm solutions for storage, it offered only short-term options for practice space for organizations and rehearsal space for performing groups. The fencing team, club triathlon, dance groups and other organizations that use equipment would be housed in the LXR Multipurpose Room and would follow a schedule similar to that of Riverside Lounge in New South. However, these groups would have to schedule practices in compliance with the dormitory’s nighttime quiet hours. Mary Lim (SFS ’13), a dancer with Flip Dis Funk Dat, said that LXR would not be an adequate alternative to Riverside See RELOCATION, A6

gram Coordinator for Sustainability Audrey Stewart. Morey said that this structure has provided insufficient resources for these programs. The creation of the Office of Sustainability was first recommended in March 2012 by the Visions for a Sustainable Georgetown Initiative, a project led by small focus groups of undergraduate students and administrators that brainstormed ways the university could become more sustainable in both the immediate and long-term future. The study reported that an Office of Sustainability could provide advice on administrative and studentrun sustainability projects, keep the

D.C. Mayor Vincent Gray touted Washington’s economic rebound while presenting his budget proposal for fiscal year 2014 to residents of Ward 2 at the Charles Sumner School on Saturday. According to Gray, the $10.1 billion budget proposal is indicative of the District’s renewed fiscal health because D.C. has accumulated a $1.5 billion surplus after two years of net revenue following three years of decline during the recession. The unemployment rate has also improved, with 30,000 new private sector jobs compensating for a net loss of 1,100 government jobs in the city. The mayor explained how his proposed budget compares to that in other major cities. “We are a state, a county, a city and a school district all rolled into one,” Gray said, encouraging residents to vote in today’s budget autonomy resolution that would give the District more control over its tax dollars from the federal government. Gray was joined at the town hall meeting by Councilman Jack Evans (D-Ward 2), who said in a February interview with The Hoya that he plans on challenging Gray for the mayor’s office in November 2014. Neither Gray nor Evans has officially filed paperwork for the next mayoral election and neither discussed the upcoming race at the meeting. Gray’s budget supports his One City Action Plan, which aims to grow and diversify D.C.’s economy, improving quality of life for D.C. residents. During the town hall, Evans introduced new budget proposals that would directly benefit Ward 2. For example, Stead Park by Dupont Circle will be renovated with $1.6 million by fiscal year 2015, and the Georgetown Department of Motor Vehicles in Georgetown Park mall’s reopening, slated for October 2013, will be fully funded at $2.7 million. In addition, the budget dedicated $400 million to the D.C. Streetcar project, which will have a line from Minnesota Avenue to the Georgetown waterfront. The university and the Georgetown Business Improvement District have both voiced a desire to have the line expanded closer to the university.

See SUSTAINABILITY, A6

See MAYOR, A7

MALLIKA SEN/THE HOYA

FUTURE RIVALS?

Councilmember Jack Evans explains proposals in the D.C. budget to a Ward 2 audience Saturday. Evans has said he intends to challenge Mayor Vincent Gray, left, for the mayor’s office in 2014.

New Accreditation Office of Sustainability Standards for MSB To Debut in July Madison Ashley Hoya Staff Writer

After finishing its five-year maintenance report in 2014, the McDonough School of Business will tweak its mission statement and practices to meet new accreditation standards, which emphasize global commerce as a component of business education. The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business International, which accredits MSB every five years, implemented the changes April 8 after over two years of research, having last updated its standards in 2012. “What we’re really asking business schools to do is to expand their mission statements to better differentiate a business school from other schools and focus on their distinctive abilities and programs,” said Robert Reid, executive vice president and chief accreditation officer of AASCB. The MSB was given the opportunity to either implement the changes immediately or delay them after the five-year report was complete. School adminis-

ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA

trators chose the latter option to ensure continuity in the report and will wait to evaluate any changes to the MSB until after its completion. “We will begin working with the new standards after the 2014 review process,” MSB Deputy Dean Pietra Rivoli wrote in an email. The accreditation changes are primarily directed at international business schools and include broadening a school’s mission statement to focus on academic impact, increasing engagement among faculty, students and business professionals and ensuring that intellectual contributions consist of business management theory and teaching. “In this context of constant change, the new accreditation standards will not only validate quality management education and impactful research, but also help business schools provide the leadership, skills and knowledge necessary to the communities they serve,” AACSB Blue Ribbon Committee on Accreditation Quality Chair Richard Sorensen wrote in a press release April 9. According to Sorensen, the new guidelines will provide business schools increased flexibility in defining their own mission statements and in meeting the unique needs of their students and faculty. “The new environment calls for schools to focus on their distinctive mission and value proposition,” Sorensen wrote. “Students, employers and society as a whole expect a great deal from business schools — especially See ACCREDITATION, A7

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

Annie Chen

Hoya Staff Writer

Georgetown is set to launch a comprehensive Office of Sustainability on July 1 that will centralize student and administration’s sustainability initiatives, Vice President for Planning and Facilities Management Robin Morey announced at yesterday’s Hoya Roundtable. “We want to establish sustainability as a way of life here and meet President [John J.] DeGioia’s sustainability commitments to the city,” Morey said at the event. “We want to reduce our carbon footprint by 50 percent by the year 2020.” All university sustainability initiatives are currently overseen by Pro-

SCS Prepares to Move Downtown Alexandra Douglas Special to The Hoya

The School of Continuing Studies will move to its new location in Chinatown in downtown Washington, D.C., this fall, over a year after signing a 15-year lease in July 2012. According to Lauralyn Lee, associate vice president of community engagement and strategic initiatives, the move from M Street to a 91,000 square-foot campus at 640 Massachusetts Ave. NW was chosen for convenience, as it has parking close by, is located near the Circulator bus route and is accessible by all Metro lines. SCS administrators declined to comment on the price of the lease. The search for a new location began about four years ago due to higher enrollment than expected in its master’s programs, See SCS, A5 Published Tuesdays and Fridays

EUGENE ANG/THE HOYA

The new Chinatown campus for the School of Continuing Studies was leased for 15 years last July. Administrators say the move will begin this coming fall. Send Story Ideas and Tips to news@thehoya.com


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