The Hoya: Nov. 30, 2012

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 94, No. 22, © 2012

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 2012

HOME SWEET HOME

Students from the DC Metro Area stay closer to their hometown communities.

COMMENTARY A student veteran reflects on bridging the civilian-military divide.

BURGERS GUGS will celebrate its 10th anniversary on Healy Lawn on Saturday.

BASKETBALL Men’s basketball faces off with Tennessee tonight at Verizon Center.

OPINION, A3

NEWS, A4

SPORTS, A10

GUIDE, G8

Ministry Asks GUSA For Funds

RIG Picks Two Grant Winners

FOR GAY BISHOP, OPTIMISM AMID OBSTACLES

GUSA senator questions qualification of Ministry to head advisory board

PENNY HUNG

Hoya Staff Writer

MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA

ReImagine Georgetown has selected its 2012 grant recipients from among 15 applications, awarding $3,000 to the Georgetown University Murals Initiative and $2,000 to Winter Hoyaland. GUMI, which originally applied as Paint the Wall and changed its name upon winning the award, plans to install murals around campus. For its first project, GUMI will renovate the wall leading up to Yates Field House alongside MultiSport Facility. Winter Hoyaland will provide Christmasthemed decorations in Healy Circle, including a Christmas tree to stand beside the John Carroll statue. “This year’s applicant pool was really strong, and I’m really amazed at how many different and diverse ideas students can come up with,” said Meg Cheney (NHS ’13), RIG secretary and chair of the service and outreach committee for Students of

Bishop Gene Robinson, the first openly gay Episcopalian bishop, spoke about the challenges of his career, including resistance from an archbishop, in McNeir Auditorium on Tuesday. See story on A6.

See GRANT, A6

ANNIE CHEN

Hoya Staff Writer

Campus Ministry is seeking assistance from the GUSA Fund to establish a ministry advisory board for religious student groups, which have been struggling with funding shortages. Religious student groups have traditionally been financed by individual chaplaincies within Campus Ministry that are funded by donors. However, Interreligious Coordinator Lisa Pannucci said that the chaplaincies are struggling to find sufficient funding because of increased student participation in events sponsored by religious student groups and would benefit from additional funding controlled by an advisory board. “With 2,000-plus students on the rolls of these groups, many are outgrowing current levels of support,” Pannucci wrote in an email. Pannucci expressed hope that the Georgetown University Student Association Fund, which allocates funding to student organizations that do not receive enough funding from their advisory boards, could be a possible solution. GUSA Finance and Appropriation Chair Sheila Walsh (SFS ’14) said that the student activities fee endowment, which feeds into the GUSA Fund, should not replace the university’s responsibility to support these groups. “We don’t want student money to make up for what the university no longer funds but should still be funded by the university,” Walsh said. Currently, five student advisory boards — the Student Activities Commission, the Media Board, the Advisory Board for Club Sports, the Center for Social Justice’s Advisory Board for Student Organizations and the Graduate Student Organization — receive funding from the student activities fee. According to a club funding reform bill passed by the GUSA senate in 2009, student advisory boards must meet six requirements to be eligible to receive student See GUSA, A6

Master Planning Team Solicits Input CAROLINE WELCH Special to The Hoya

The university’s master planning team held “Planning 101” sessions Tuesday and Wednesday to solicit feedback for its expansion plans that extend through the year 2037. Students, faculty and staff in attendance asked questions about challenges that the team will face in upcoming months, financial constraints that may affect the plans, the expected timeline of the project and the team’s use of technology. The university’s master plan includes the conversion of the Georgetown University Hotel and Conference Center into an undergraduate dormitory by 2014, the search for about 100 more acres for Georgetown’s core graduate programs and the consolidation of the School of Continuing Studies into a single 91,000-squarefoot campus at the new Georgetown

Downtown in Mount Vernon Square that the university purchased this summer. During the sessions, representatives from the university, developer Forest City Enterprises and design firm Sasaki Associates explained the fundamentals of master planning and spoke of the importance of data collection and collaboration as planning moves forward. “We can begin pretty basically with the global question of ‘What is planning?’ university architect Gina Bleck told the audience. “And it’s very critical that [the process] starts and ends with you. We need to include all the spokes to get to a plan that is informed and will help balance the resources that we have. We encourage you to participate because, without your participation, it won’t be a plan that can succeed.” See PLANNING, A6

OLIVIA HEWITT/THE HOYA

Lauralyn Lee and Gina Bleck look on as architect Ricardo Dumont presented his firm’s ideas for Georgetown’s master plan Tuesday.

Epicurean Owner Pleads Not Guilty Thefts Increase 44% in November EMMA HINCHLIFFE Hoya Staff Writer

KAYLA NOGUCHI/THE HOYA

The proprietor of Epicurean and Co., Chang Wook Chon, will be tried by a jury in February, a judge decided Nov. 19. Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

Chang Wook Chon, the proprietor of Epicurean and Co., pled not guilty to charges of criminal contempt Nov. 19 and will face a jury trial in February. Chon was arraigned in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. He is accused of criminal contempt for violating a court order that was issued during a civil lawsuit that began in 2010. The class action case was filed by four employees of Epicurean and Co. who claim that Chon had violated the Fair Labor Standards Act by failing to fully compensate them for overtime work. One of the four employees received a notice to appear in court and told Chon he would need a day off from work to attend the proceedings. According to the plaintiff, Chon told him to either ignore the notice or lose his job. This violated a 2011 court order that prohibited Chon from discussing the case with the plaintiffs. “The United States attorney charges that on or about Dec. 14, 2011, within the District of Columbia, the defendant, Chang Wook Chon, did willfully See EPICUREAN, A6 Published Tuesdays and Fridays

LILY WESTERGAARD

down from six bike thefts in October and 11 in September. Twenty-nine thefts occurred Crime in November increased in public locations such as the 15 percent from October, primar- Leavey Center. With eight thefts ily due to a 44 percent spike in this month, Leavey was the most theft. commonly targeted venue. The Department of Public There were also six cases of unSafety reported 53 incidents lawful entry, up from four in Octhis month, tober, but there of which 36 were no reports were thefts. In of burglaries 15% Crime October, DPS or robberies, reported 25 which was a Theft 44% thefts and 44 decrease from total crimes. the two and Drug Violations 600% The rate of one reported, thefts has conrespectively, last tinuously inmonth creased since Drug violaSeptember. Electronics were a tions decreased, with only one in popular target item for thieves. November compared to October’s Thirteen incidents reported sto- six violations. len laptops despite efforts from Alcohol violations remained DPS this month to raise aware- stagnant, with three reported in ness about laptop theft, sell lap- each of the last three months. top locks and facilitate the sale of No assaults were reported in LoJack, a laptop tracking device. November, compared with two Only one bicycle was stolen, in October. Hoya Staff Writer

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