The Hoya: Aug. 31, 2012

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 94, No. 2, © 2012

friday, August 31, 2012

UNPAID INTERNSHIPS

COMMENTARY It’s well past time for this country to reconsider its gun laws.

THE GUIDE, G8

OPINION, A3

Students confront the legal and financial costs of working for free.

CLASSES A handful of unusual courses spice up the fall semester catalog. NEWS, A5

Hoya Staff Writer

Washington Harbour’s central water fountain will be retrofitted to feature a 12,000-square-foot ice rink in November as part of a $20 million renovation to the waterfront area that began this spring. The fountain was upgraded to shoot water 60 feet in the air during the non-winter months and is now accompanied by a multicolored light show. According to a press release from MRP Realty, which owns the space, the construction for the rink will begin this fall, after a Sept. 12 opening event for the newly upgraded plaza. The rink will be operative throughout the winter months. Other upgrades to the area include an exterior redesign of the storefronts

on both the upper and lower levels of the facility. The restaurants Tony and Joe’s Seafood Place and Nick’s Riverside Grille will be reopening with revamped interiors as well as new plaza furniture. Nick’s will expand into part of the space that was previously occupied by Cabanas, and an unconfirmed restaurant will move into the remainder of that space. Farmers & Fishers will be reopening as Farmers Fishers Bakers in October. The restaurant is a new concept from the creators of Founding Farmers, featuring a bakery in addition to their farmland-inspired menu. This opportunity for upgrades and renovations came after the plaza incurred millions of dollars in damages in the wake of extensive See WATERFRONT, A7

Meghan Patzer Hoya Staff Writer

COURTESY GENSLER ARCHITECTS

The renovated plaza will include a new fountain, which will be replaced by a skating rink during the winter months.

Students Take an Inside Look at Convention Hiromi Oka

tion to the Democratic National Convention, beginning Sept. 4 in Charlotte, NC. While most students spent the According to SCS Senior Associbeginning of this week fine-tuning ate Dean James Parenti, planning their course schedules and lugging for the trip began six months ago, their storage boxes across campus, when the school was evaluating Chair of the Georgetown Univer- its “Semester in Washington D.C.” sity College Republicans Maggie program, which allows college Cleary (COL ’14) students from and 19 other u n i ve r s i t i e s representatives “They have an outside of D.C. from Georgeto take classes opportunity to have a town joined at Georgetown the nearly truly unique behind-thewhile intern20,000-strong ing in the Discrowd at the scenes experience.” trict. Parenti Republican Narealized that JAMES PARENTI, SCS senior associate dean tional Conventhe SCS was tion in Tampa, missing out Fla. on an opportunity to collaborate “[It] was amazing,” Cleary said. more with Georgetown under“This was a tremendous opportu- graduates, and decided to arrange nity, certainly not one that every- a delegation of Georgetown stuone gets, and we’re lucky to get dents and faculty to attend each of this while we’re at Georgetown.” the conventions. The trip to the convention, “It’s very much in line with which was held from Aug. 28 to what SCS does in all of our proAug. 30, was sponsored by the grams,” Parenti said. “We provide School of Continuing Studies. The SCS will also be sending a delegaSee CONVENTION, A7

Hoya Staff Writer

COURTESY CRAIG CASSEY

Chief among Craig Cassey’s (COL ’15) goals as possible ANC 2E commissioner is to foster a better relationship with GU’s neighbors.

Cassey Discusses ANC Bid, Student Rights Braden McDonald

from an ANC commissioner in these next few years.

Though he did not obtain enough signatures to get his name on the ballot for this November’s ANC election, Craig Cassey (COL ’15) announced his intent to run a write-in campaign for a seat on the commission late last month. The recent redistricting of Advisory Neighborhood Commission 2E’s jurisdictional area allots two seats to single member districts entirely occupied by students. Thus the commission could potentially seat more than one student representative for the first time in 10 years. Cassey is running to represent SMD 2E 04, while Peter Prindiville (SFS ’14) will run for SMD 2E 08. If elected, both students will serve on the commission for two years. The Hoya sat down with Cassey to talk about his goals for the campaign.

What are some of those problems? In the past years we witnessed a lot of friction due to the [2010] Campus Plan debates, and I believe that, going forward, student inclusion in the entire process is essential. Another issue we face is the noise ordinance, which still reads as an unfair ordinance against students and would not have come about if we … had more students and studentfriendly commissioners on the ANC board. We need to increase voter registration across the university, getting students involved in the conversation pertaining to local politics as well as giving them opportunities to get involved so their voices may be heard and something like [the noise ordinance] will never be passed in the future.

Hoya Staff Writer

Why did you decide to run for ANC commissioner? As a freshman, I was involved in College Democrats and [the student advocacy group] D.C. Students Speak, and both of those experiences gave me insight into what … problems … the Georgetown community was facing … and what the Georgetown community needs

SPORTS, A10

Campus IT Gets Upgrade

Waterfront Revamp Moves Forward Kelly Church

ATHLETICS Lee Reed talks about the IAC and GU’s approach to football scholarships.

Building on momentum from the summer, Georgetown’s Chief Information Officer Lisa Davis has set lofty goals for the current semester. Since she became CIO in February, Davis has overseen the university’s inaugural Innovation Summit, the launch of Georgetown’s mobile application, the expansion of oncampus wireless coverage and the integration of Georgetown’s email system onto Google Apps. Over the summer, University Information Services transferred 50,000 students and alumni onto HoyaWorks, an email and calendar system that is merged with Google, increasing the total users from the previous 10,000 original faculty and staff. “Everyone is now on a single integrated platform for email and calendar, allowing greatly increased efficiency and communication among all members of the Georgetown community,” Davis said. HoyaWorks increased the efficiency of communication across campus by enabling the sharing of documents and calendars. According to Chief Innovation Officer Michael Wang (COL’14), the new system reduced past space management problems. “The confusion between students and faculty in regards to booking spaces for events will be drastically reduced by having a single system in place that allows for the sharing of resources such as Google Docs,” Wang said. Now students and faculty can use this feature to reserve lounges and spaces throughout the semester. This summer, Davis was able to cross another goal off her list: expanding wireless coverage on the university’s SaxaNet server to encompass the entire main campus. Nearly 300 old wireless devices were replaced to improve coverage and connect the entire campus to a See TECHNOLOGY, A6

LEO’S GETS NEW LOOK

What are the key tenets of your platform? Fostering community, empowering students and engaging with the student body at large. Having proceeded through the Campus Plan hearings, we are at an opportune moment to build a community that is both cohesive and positive in all their interactions. I want to

Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

CHRIS GRIVAS/THE HOYA

See CASSEY, A7

Changes to O’Donovan Hall, which include new fro-yo machines, have sparked a mixed response from diners. Published Tuesdays and Fridays

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