GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 93, No. 17, © 2011
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2011
SHOOTING AT 28TH AND M
A teenager suffered serious injuries amid the Halloween festivities on M Street and Pennslyvania Avenue.
RIVALRY INTENSIFIES
Tempers flared in the Hoyas’ 3-1 conference quarterfinal victory over rival Syracuse.
THEHOYA.COM
BRINGING THE ARITHMETIC BACK TO WASHINGTON
SPORTS, A10
Campaign Debuts to Fanfare Public launch brings capital campaign total past $800 million mark JAKE GREEN & ANDY MILLER Special to The Hoya
MEAGAN KELLY/THE HOYA
Former President Bill Clinton (SFS ’68) addressed his fiscal record in Gaston Hall Friday during a symposium examing his adminstration’s performance. See story on A7.
Flanked by the likes of basketball legend Alonzo Mourning (COL ’92) and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Mike Meaney (SFS ’12) raised his glass to Georgetown’s future on Friday, ringing in the largest fundraising drive in university history. “We know that, all too soon, our generation’s time on this Hilltop will come to a close, and it will be time for a new generation to arrive,” Meaney, the Georgetown University Student Association president, said shortly after 7 p.m. on the steps of an illuminated Healy Hall. “But we look forward to the future and to the challenges ahead.” The kickoff toast for the $1.5 billion “For Generations to Come” campaign took place next to a high-class tent on Healy lawn — complete with a gourmet buffet, trendy music and wait staff clad in formal wear — which was open to the public. But the launch wasn’t just a showpiece; over the weekend, the university raked in over $20 million in donations, surging past the $800 million mark thanks in large part to four hefty gifts from donors. A $5 million donation from Chair of the Georgetown University Board of Directors and former
LEONEL DE VELEZ FOR THE HOYA
Students fill their plates with an assortment of culinary treats at Friday’s launch party, held inside a decked-out tent on Healy lawn. NFL Commisioner Paul Tagliabue (CAS ’62) will be divided equally among need-based undergraduate scholarships, scholarships for student-athletes, the LGBTQ Resource Center and funding for strategic initiatives, according to the university website. Campaign Chair William J. Doyle (CAS ’72), who also serves on the board, gave $10 million over the weekend to permanently endow a project he created in 2009 named The Doyle Initiative, which
aims to deepen the university’s own commitment to tolerance and diversity and tackle the challenges and opportunities of a globalizing world. The Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs also took in $5 million from its original backer William Berkley, also a member of the board. Combined with an anonymous $5.5 million contribution earlier last week, the campaign entered See CAMPAIGN, A5
SAC Approves New ReImagining GU, One Grant at a Time Funding Guidelines MARIAH BYRNE & MARGARET VIATOR Hoya Staff Writer & Special to The Hoya
MATTHEW STRAUSS
Fiscal year loans, designed for general club activities use, are due at the end of the spring seThe Student Activities Com- mester, whereas non-fiscal year mission voted unanimously to loans span multiple academic adopt a comprehensive budget years — a maximum of four sesystem Saturday, marking the mesters — and are designed for end of a push for student activity T-shirt sales and other long-term funding reform that has lasted fundraisers. Shuo Yan Tan (SFS ’12), former more than a year. “With the formal adoption treasurer of the International of our new system of budget- Relations Club and current chair ing and event approval, we have of the Georgetown University achieved the goal we set for our- Student Association Student Life selves at the beginning of the se- Report Committee, was a vocal mester,” SAC Chair Andy Koenig participant at the first-draft pre(COL ’12) wrote in an email. “To sentation. “SAC should overhaul the current pro- “We have achieved the be applauded for incorporatcess of student ing the input of o r ga n i z a t i o n goal we set for ourstudent leaders budgeting and event approval selves at the beginning and addressing the flaws of the in the span of of the semester.” past two fundtwo months systems,” reflects the ANDY KOENIG (COL ’12) ing Student Activities Commission Chair Tan wrote in dedication and an email after commitment to success not only of SAC com- viewing the approved funding missioners, but of the student guidelines. “The comprehensive organizations that have been in- budget system addresses many of the issues that have been raised volved in the process.” The new system was unveiled before, and I am particularly apat a roundtable presentation preciative of the travel fund and on Oct. 19 attended by student ad hoc fund, two improvements group leaders, and the final plan that recognize the nature and was approved Saturday with dynamics of student group proonly small modifications to the gramming.” Tan was not as optimistic first draft. The group decided upon a about the removal of many adsliding scale that will fund 100 ministrative checks in the newly percent of costs under $5 per adopted system, however. “The system as it was proposed person, 75 percent of costs between $5 and $7, 25 percent of seems to have insufficient checks costs between $7 and $15 and 0 and balances against abuse. Movpercent of costs above $15 per ing forward, I encourage student person. Among the additions leaders to work with SAC to enwas food expense funding for sure that money is spent prudently,” he wrote. student groups. With the new system officially SAC also approved a new loan policy, offering student organizaSee SAC, A7 tions two different loan options. Hoya Staff Writer
Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-8350
Though the majority of projects sponsored by the annual ReImagine Georgetown grant have cemented themselves in student life, the grant is only the first step to becoming a campus fixture. The grant was an initiative formed in 2003 as a collaborative effort among The Corp, the Georgetown University Alumni and Student Federal Credit Union and The Hoya as a way to reshape the undergraduate experience. Since then, representatives from the organizations have convened once a year to provide the seed money that will help innovative students get their projects
off the ground. “With the ReImagine Georgetown grant, we are really looking for ideas that are sustainable, and ideas that
“It really is easy to make it happen once you approach the right people.” MELISSA GADSDEN (NHS ’12) Co-founder, GU Farmers’ Market
will really help to improve what it’s like to be a Georgetown student,” Ariana Klener (MSB ’12) said, one of the GUASFCU representatives on the
committee.
A PUSH FORWARD The application, which was due Friday, asks participants to reflect on the way their proposal can affect the student experience on the Hilltop and evaluate the feasibility of their plans, according to Carolina Delgado (SFS ’12), a Corp representative on the grant selection committee. The committee that selects the annual recipients is composed of six members — two representatives each from The Corp, The Hoya and GUASFCU. The prize money offered to the winners can range anywhere from See REIMAGINE, A5
TRICK-OR-TREATING WITH A CHANCE OF SNOW: WEEKEND FLURRIES DUST CAMPUS
CHRIS BIEN/THE HOYA
An unseasonable storm Saturday afternoon sprinkled the John Carroll statue and the campus with a light snow. Published Tuesdays and Fridays
Send Story Ideas and Tips to news@thehoya.com