The Hoya: Dec. 6, 2011

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 93, No. 24, © 2011

tuesDAY, december 6, 2011

SEE YOU IN THE NEW YEAR

This is our final print issue of 2011, but you can always visit thehoya.com and follow @thehoya on Twitter. We’ll be back on newsstands Jan. 20.

BUCKING BRONCS

No. 19 Georgetown needed a comeback to shake Rider Sunday afternoon. SPORTS, A12

Legacies at Home on The Hilltop

DC Sees Drop in Violence

Adrianna Smith & Hiromi Oka

Violent crime in the Georgetown area declined 34 percent this year

Hoya Staff Writers

Ziad Saqr (NHS ’15) never wanted to go to school here. But when he was applying to colleges last fall, his older brother Eyad (SFS ’13) was a sophomore obsessed with all things Georgetown. “He would tell me about all the basketball games and force me to watch the games on TV,” Ziad said. Still, Ziad didn’t intend to follow in his brother’s footsteps. “I went to high school with my two brothers my entire life,” he said. “I’ve never been to a school where one brother wasn’t there.” But a year later, Ziad found himself on the Hilltop, just as enthusiastic about Georgetown as his older brother. “I’m very happy about coming here,” he said. “Georgetown is my home.” Hoyas From Birth In this year’s freshman class of 1,603 students, 159 have at least one parent who graduated from Georgetown. An additional 112 students have at least one sibling who has attended the university, and 25 are following both at least one parent and one sibling who have gone to school on the Hilltop. For some children of alumni, the introduction to university culture begins at a young age. “My dad, when he was my basketball coach growing up, always called our team the Lady Hoyas,” said Mia Von Gal (COL ’13), whose father, Tim, graduated from the College of Arts and Sciences in See LEGACY, A5

Pavan Rajgopal Hoya Staff Writer

Hoya Staff Writer

The Department of Public Safety and the Metropolitan Police Department reported differing information on a break-in at a student residence at 1418 36th St. Friday night. According to the description of the incident the victim gave to MPD, an unknown male entered

See DYSON, A5

See CRIME, A5

SARI FRANKEL/THE HOYA

Professor Michael Eric Dyson has garnered both national acclaim and criticism this semester for his class, “The Sociology of Hip-Hop: Urban Theodicy of Jay-Z.”

In the Limelight: Professing Jay-Z Margaret Viator Hoya Staff Writer

Positioned across from a CBS news reporter, with cameras, microphones and producers scattered around his office, professor Michael Eric Dyson continues his typical day at work. Dyson’s class, “Sociology of Hip-Hop: Urban Theodicy of JayZ,” has become the focus of a media circus on campus in recent weeks, drawing attention from the Associated Press and Fox News as well as BET and Perez Hilton’s celebrity blog. Just an hour before he sat down at his desk, Dyson was

pacing behind the podium of an Intercultural Center classroom and lecturing more than 140 students in what resembled spoken

“We are doing what we are doing regardless of whether there are reporters there or not.” Michael eric dyson Professor of Sociology

word poetry. Although interest in the class has spiked recently, Dyson has been teaching “Sociology of Hip

DPS, MPD Differ on Break-Ins Sarah Kaplan

Hop” since he arrived at Georgetown in 2007. It was not until this year, however, that he decided to focus the course on Jay-Z. Dyson said the idea to teach a class centered on the seminal rapper had been in the back of his mind for several years. “I was originally supposed to give a series of lectures at Harvard back in 2008 about the influence of Jay-Z. But the night before I was supposed to speak, a certain young, black man became president of the United States, so the lectures ended up being about

While total crime has increased marginally this year, violent crime in the District has dropped 13 percent since 2010, according to preliminary data from the Metropolitan Police Department. Based on statistics comparing reported incidents between Jan. 1 and Dec. 1, the violent crime rate fell considerably from 2010 to 2011, with drops in every category of violent crime. In the 206th Police Service Area, which includes the Georgetown University campus, West Georgetown and Burleith, violent crime declined by more than 34 percent from last year. However, total crime is up by 2 percent, due to a 6 percent spike in property crimes. Property crimes, such as thefts and burglaries, have historically been more common than violent crimes in the area. The data from this past year followed this trend, with 32 armed robberies compared to 534 thefts between Dec. 4, 2010 and Dec. 4, 2011. In light of the prevalence of property

the residence through a back door. When asked what he was doing there, the suspect claimed to be looking for a party and fled through the back door. The incident was the first of two break-ins to occur that night. Less than an hour later, at 10:30 p.m., a student living at 3609 O St. reported that she went into a bedroom to investigate a noise and saw an unknown person. The student screamed

LEONEL DE VELEZ/THE HOYA

In their reports on Friday night’s break-in at a student residence at 1418 36th St., DPS and MPD differed on several key details. Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

and the intruder fled down the stairs and out the back door. Though the DPS and MPD reports agreed on the basics of the first break-in, they contained several differences regarding the time and description of the incident. While DPS reported that the suspect emerged from a closet while the student was sitting in her living room, the MPD report said that he entered the residence through an unlocked back door. DPS described the incident as a burglary, while MPD classified it as an unlawful entry. The time of the incident reported by DPS also differed from the time reported by MPD by 11 minutes. According to DPS, the break-in occurred at 9:56 p.m., while MPD reported that it happened at 9:45 p.m. This is the second time in the past week that DPS reports have differed from other descriptions of a crime. In a public safety alert regarding a theft at Vital Vittles Thursday, DPS reported that $600 in cash was stolen from the store’s back office. However, the actual amount stolen was closer to $300, according to The Corp’s Chief Operating Officer Brooke Heinichen (SFS ’12). “We very specifically gave them the number that was the exact amount that was taken, but $600 was the number they reported and I’m not quite sure why,” Heinichen said. According to Georgetown’s Director of Media Relations Rachel Pugh, the $600 figure was a preliminary estimate. “Initial estimates of the amount of cash stolen from Vital Vittles were broad,” she wrote in an email. Pugh did not respond to questions about the source of the discrepancies between the DPS and MPD reports. Published Tuesdays and Fridays

FRESHMEN SHINE IN WIN, HOYAS Move into Top 25

WEB LESLIE/THE HOYA

Freshman forward Mikael Hopkins scored 12 points in an 84-44 rout of NJIT Saturday, just before the Hoyas moved to No. 18 in Monday’s newest AP poll. Send Story Ideas and Tips to news@thehoya.com


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