GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 94, No. 19, © 2012
friDAY, november 9, 2012
BASKETBALL PREVIEW
Otto Porter and Sugar Rodgers lead a pair of new-look Georgetown squads.
GUIDE GU tutors are on the front lines of efforts to improve D.C. public schools.
MAGAZINE AVAILABLE TODAY IN RED SQUARE
GUIDE, G8
EDITORIAL Don’t let past success overshadow the current men’s basketball team.
AIRPORTS The authority that runs local airports has been accused of corruption.
OPINION, A2
NEWS, A6
Two Students Elected to ANC Tia Baheri
Special to The Hoya
GABRIELLA DOUCAS/THE HOYA
Seven university-owned townhouses are being outfitted with solar panels by December using $250,000 from the Student Activities Fee Endowment reform passed last year.
GU Re-Energized In Green Efforts Madison Ashley Special to The Hoya
After years of wearing gray and bleeding blue, Georgetown is implementing new efforts to think green. Last Thursday, University President John J. DeGioia announced that a $20 million anonymous donation to the Georgetown’s capital campaign will be used to formally launch the Georgetown Environmental Initiative. The initiative, which will facilitate interdisciplinary environmental research by faculty at all three of Georgetown’s campuses and create an administrative center to expand environmental research, comes at a time when several environmentally oriented groups
on campus — led by both students and administrators — are also focusing on making Georgetown more sustainable. The ongoing conversation about the environment at Georgetown is rooted in DeGioia’s 2008 pledge to reduce university greenhouse gas emissions to 50 percent of their 2005 levels by 2020. Since the pledge, Georgetown has already seen improvement; Greenhouse gas emissions dropped by about 17.5 percent during the 2010-2011 school year alone. Unlike many peer institutions, including Johns Hopkins University and The George Washington University, Georgetown has not issued a formal plan that lays out See SUSTAINABILITY, A6
Although Tuesday’s general election was marked by a surge in student voter turnout and two seats secured by students on the Advisory Neighborhood Commission for the first time in 10 years, the remainder of the D.C. political landscape was left mostly unchanged. Peter Prindiville (SFS ’14) and Craig Cassey (COL ’15) will fill two student seats on ANC 2E, which was expanded to include eight commissioners as a result of recent redistricting. Prindiville, who ran unopposed in single-member district 2E08, will represent Nevils, Alumni Square, Copley Hall, Harbin Hall, Village C East and Henle Village, as well as the two blocks between 36th and 37th Streets and between Prospect and O Streets. Cassey, who will represent Village C West, New South Hall, Southwest Quadrangle, Village A and the Jesuit Residence, also ran unopposed and won the seat for district 2E04. Prindiville said he learned of his victory through a friend at about 9:45 p.m. on Tuesday. “I found out that I won from a
ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA
This year’s ANC election drew more Georgetown student voters than any See ELECTIONS, A5 since 2004. Many students took advantage of same-day registration.
Men Navigate Gender Divides Hiromi Oka
Hoya Staff Writer
Amid the excitement of Midnight Madness, Jai DeLoatch (COL ’14) stood out from the thousands of cheering fans. As the only male on the Georgetown cheerleading squad, DeLoatch occupies a unique spot both at basketball games and on campus. Although Georgetown is considered an old boys’ club — historically, the leadership of student groups has been dominated by men — there are niches of campus life where male students are vastly outnumbered. The cheerleading team is an example, but it is not the only one. In Groove Theory, a co-ed hip hop dance group, Jason Thompson (MSB
’14) is one of four male students among a group of 27 dancers. Thompson, the group’s creative director, said that the demographics of the group
“You find out who you are ... and you can be that person without judgment, without issue.” Jai DeLoatch (COL ’14), Georgetown University Cheerleading member
made him initially hesitant to join. “Before I was on the team, I thought, ‘Oh, I want to join, but I don’t want to do something that’s that far out of
my comfort zone and that’s quote unquote girly,’” he said. “And then when I joined the team, it was like, ‘There are a lot of girls, but I don’t have to do girly things.’” DeLoatch also felt this stigma when he decided to join the cheerleading squad. He had cheered for his high school’s junior varsity team and knew he wanted to develop his skills, but he was also wary of how his decision to join the squad would be perceived. “Going out and trying anything that isn’t a traditional male thing tends to compel other guys to make fun of you,” he said. Male students in majority-female campus groups aren’t the only guys See MEN, A6
Corp Plans to Implement Customer Rewards Card
FOUR MORE YEARS
Penny Hung
Hoya Staff Writer
SARI FRANKEL/THE HOYA
College students and Obama supporters from across the District flocked to the White House early Wednesday morning to join in the revelry celebrating the president’s re-election. Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947
Regulars at Corp locations could be earning loyalty points through a new customer rewards card as early as this spring. The program, which will be called “Shareholder Card,” was developed by Students of Georgetown, Inc. Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer Vidur Khatri (MSB ’14). Khatri put the plan in place soon after his term as CFO and treasurer began March 2012. “We turn[ed] 40 in March, and other companies who have been around for 40 years usually give some sort of dividend to their shareholders,” he said. “Since Georgetown students are our shareholders, this is our way of giving back, besides the $75,000 we traditionally give back to the community.” Though the card is still in the early planning stages, Khatri said he expects that plans will solidify within the next two weeks. “I envision this card to be something every student already has or can easily sign up for,” Khatri said. “Every student will be able to have one.” The Corp established an internal committee comprising representatives from its information technology, marketing, finance and business development di-
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LEONEL DE VELEZ/THE HOYA
The rewards card, which could be released as early as next semester, would be usable at all Corp locations. visions to assist in the development of the program. The committee has met approximately 12 times since the fall semester began and is in the process of ironing out details. “We’re trying to decide what kind of card we want to use, what kind of point See CORP, A6
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