GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 93, No. 18, © 2011
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2011
FALLING INTO FASHION
In this week’s Guide, style-savvy students sport vintage autumn wares from a local boutique. THE GUIDE, G5
basketballpreviewN
Basketball season tips off next weekend. Get up to speed on both the men’s and women’s teams with our magazine, available today in print and online.
Shooting Triggers Anxiety
UNDER THE MICROSCOPE: REGENTS HALL ON PACE FOR JULY 2012 COMPLETION
Halloween crime dominates the discussion at the latest ANC 2E meeting BRADEN MCDONALD Hoya Staff Writer
Monday’s Halloween shooting and crime spike in Georgetown drew the attention of attendees at the Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E’s monthly meeting Tuesday. Several city officials tried to assuage community worries about the surge of crime on Monday, as Metropolitan Police Department Captain Jeffrey Herold provided members of the Georgetown and Burleith communities with further information regarding the incidents. According to Herold, the 17-yearold male victim, who was shot in the head on the 2800 block of M Street late on Oct. 31, is in critical condition at The George Washington University Hospital. Commenting that MPD made arrests promptly, Herold said that his homicide unit hopes to close the case within the next few days. Following a surge in lesser crimes LEONEL DE VELEZ FOR THE HOYA
Regents Hall, the official name of the new science center, is slated to house office space, teaching labs, a cafe and study space. See photo essay on A5.
See ANC, A6
Tests Stolen From MSB Mailroom Campaign On Track To Reach Goal in 2016 KELLY CHURCH Hoya Staff Writer
Students were forced to retake exams after their tests were stolen from the McDonough School of
Business mailroom last week. Some time between Oct. 25 and 26, an unknown person took documents from the MSB mailroom. The theft primarily affected MSB adjunct lecturer James Dalkin’s ac-
LEONEL DE VELEZ FOR THE HOYA
The McDonough School of Business is considering implementing new security measures after three tests were taken from its mailroom last week.
counting class, requiring the three students whose tests were stolen to retake the exam. “I regret any inconvenience this has caused, but it relates to circumstances beyond my control,” Dalkin wrote in an email sent to affected students. One of the students affected, Anthony Mastroianni (COL ’12), a cartoonist for THE HOYA, said that the accounting exam was administered electronically, but Dalkin asked his students to print and submit a hard copy of their answers. Three students had experienced technical issues that precluded their electronic responses from being recorded and had submitted their own hard copies. With those hard copies stolen, no record of their test answers remained. The trio retook the test earlier this week during a regular lecture. Dalkin was unsure about whether or not anything else was taken,
GLENN RUSSO Hoya Staff Writer
Following last weekend’s public launch of Georgetown’s $1.5 billion capital campaign, the initiative remains on track to reach its goal by 2016 after reaching the $799 million mark Tuesday. Raking in a number of verbal and written commitments, the Office of Advancement recorded a haul of $21 million over the weekend’s events. Vice President for Advancement R. Bartley Moore indicated that the
campaign, which is expected to last 10 years, will meet its objectives. “We are confident we will reach our goal in that timeframe,” Moore said. To continue the push, the university is planning smaller-scale launch events in 10 major cities with strong alumni presence over the next 18 months and a student campaign drive slated for the spring semester. Moore added that given an improvement in the economy, the goal See CAMPAIGN, A5
OBAMA STUMPS FOR JOBS BILL NEAR KEY BRIDGE
See MSB, A6
A Legacy: Feeding the Applicant Pool ADRIANNA SMITH Special to The Hoya
When Emily Bertsche (SFS ’12) arrived on campus three-and-a-half years ago, she may have been across the country in a brand-new environment, but she was surrounded by some familiar faces. As one of 10 graduates of St. Ignatius College Prep, a Jesuit school in Chicago, Ill., to matriculate into Georgetown from her grade, Bertsche could tackle college with a built-in community. “The best part of going to Georgetown [with so many people from high school] is that you have a guaranteed support network from the get-go,” she said. “It’s great because we have a shared past and present.” St. Ignatius is among several of
Georgetown’s “feeder schools” — high schools that regularly send large numbers of applications to the university. The close relationship these schools have with
“I love that we have a common history, and we can talk about ‘that kid’ from high school.’” HANNAH KLUSENDORF (COL ’12) Alumna of Chicago’s Loyola Academy
Georgetown can be a boon to prospective students both during the application process and after they have found their way to the Hilltop.
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TALLYING THE NUMBERS During the Early Action segment of the admissions cycle for the class of 2015, the university saw upwards of 50 applications from seven high schools across the country that admissions counselors target. Four of the Northeast’s elite boarding schools — Phillips Academy in Massachusetts, Choate Rosemary Hall in Connecticut, Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire and the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey — topped the list, sending 69, 66, 65 and 62 applications respectively. The next six schools on the list include Regis High School in New York with 55 applicants, Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts
CHRIS BIEN/THE HOYA
See FEEDER, A7
With the Key Bridge as a backdrop, the president urged Congress to pass the jobs bill in Georgetown Waterfront Park Wednesday. See photo gallery online.
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