The Hoya: January 16, 2015

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thehoya.com

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 27, © 2015

FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 2015

MEMORY LANE

EDITORIAL In accordance with Jesuit values, Georgetown must divest from fossil fuels.

The Hoya marks its anniversary with a look at the top content from the past. SPECIAL PULLOUT TABLOID

GUSA TREATY A new treaty seeks to nullify the residency clause for students. NEWS, A4

OPINION, A2

NY 1,904 APPS PA 927 APPS

MA 900 APPS NJ 1,510 APPS MD 1,040 APPS

IL 652 APPS

CA 2,449 APPS

VA 963 APPS

TX 793 APPS FL 993 APPS DANIEL SMITH/THE HOYA AND SHANNON HOU/THE HOYA

States in dark green sent significantly more applications than last year, while those in light green registered a slight increase. States in red sent significantly fewer applications than last year, indicative of a larger trend of decreased applications from the Northeast.

Applications Hold Steady for 2019 KSHITHIJ SHRINATH Hoya Staff Writer

Application totals for the Class of 2019 remained nearly identical to the previous year, despite changing national trends regarding demographics and high school graduation rates. Regular decision applications were due Saturday, Jan. 10, but were accepted until Monday, the first business day after the due date. As of Jan. 13, the number of regular decision applications across Georgetown’s four undergraduate schools totaled 19,427, nine fewer than the 19,436 applications that were received at the same point last year.

“The theme is the applicant pool remains steady in the face of declining high school graduate pool. That’s basically the environment,” Dean of Undergraduate Admissions Charles Deacon said. “Being even was good. We wanted to hold the pool between 19,000 and 20,000.” Georgetown College received 11,510 applications compared to 11,551 for the Class of 2018; the McDonough School of Business saw 3,322 applications, similar to its total of 3,305 last year; the School of Foreign Service collected 3,513 applications, up from 3,439; and the School of Nursing and Health Studies received 1,041 applications, a decrease from the

1,141 applicants in 2014. Deacon explained these changes as natural variation, particularly with the specialized nature of the NHS.

“Being even was good. We wanted to hold the pool between 19,000 and 20,000.” CHARLES DEACON Dean of Undergraduate Admissions

Continuing a 10-year trend, women composed nearly 60 percent of the applicant pool, with 11,463 applicants, while 7,963

DOGFIGHT After falling to Butler in the Battle 4 Atlantis, GU searches for redemption.

men applied to the university. Black applicants declined from 1,875 to 1,848, Hispanic applicants remained stable from 2,341 to 2,345 and Asian-American applicants increased slightly from 3,332 to 3,382.The university also received more applications from international students, with 2,248 this year compared to 2,188 last year. At least nine applications were received from each of the 50 states. North Dakota was the only state not to have a student admitted during the early action period.

SPORTS, A12

CISR to Vote on Divestment Group issues decision on recommendation today TOBY HUNG

Hoya Staff Writer

As the Committee on Investments and Social Responsibility votes on fossil fuel divestment today, GU Fossil Free will continue its campaign in preparation for its meeting with the university’s board of directors in February. The divestment proposal by GU Fossil Free calls for the university to divest its holdings from the 200 largest fossil fuel companies. The 12 voting members of CISR will vote to determine whether they will recommend the proposal to the board of directors. CISR, which is made up of four students, three professors and five university administrators, votes on written proposals from Georgetown community members and makes recommendations on socially responsible investment to the university’s board of directors. GU Fossil Free will be holding a rally today at Red Square at 9:15 a.m. to demonstrate student support for divestment before the committee votes between 10 a.m. and 12 p.m . GU Fossil Free member Chloe Lazarus (COL ’16) said that she hopes the rally will convince CISR members to recognize divestment as a course of See CISR, A9

See ADMISSIONS, A9

Congress Reviews Initiative 71 KSHITHIJ SHRINATH Hoya Staff Writer

FILE PHOTO: ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA

The university cancelled courses with fewer than eight students enrolled.

D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D) sent Initiative 71, the ballot initiative to legalize the possession and cultivation of marijuana approved by voters in November, to the United States Congress on Tuesday, beginning a 30-day congressional review period. Congress, according to the District of Columbia Home Rule Act of 1973, reviews all pieces of legislation enacted by the D.C. Council and can

block the legislation with a disapproval motion that passes through both the House and the Senate. If Congress does not act on the legislation, the bill will officially become law in the District. Initiative 71, which passed with 69.4 percent of the vote, permits adults over the age of 21 to possess up to two ounces of marijuana, grow up to six marijuana plants and freely give one ounce of the substance to other adults. Mendelson’s decision comes in response to the omnibus spending bill, which included

a clause that prevented the usage of federal funds to “enact” marijuana legalization, authorized by Congress in December. Congressman Andy Harris (R-Md.), who introduced the so-called policy rider, claimed that this would dismantle D.C.’s legislation. Proponents of the bill and D.C. home rule, including Delegate Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-D.C.), however, disagreed, opining that the initiative was enacted when voters passed the legislation in See MARIJUANA, A9

FILE PHOTOS: NATASHA THOMSON/THE HOYA, MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA

GU Fossil Free will hold a rally at 9:15 a.m.

Registrar Global Futures Program Fosters Collaboration Cuts Almost 20 Courses KATHERINE RICHARDSON Hoya Staff Writer

University President John J. DeGioia announced the creation of Global Futures, a two-year-long initiative formed from a university-

JACK BENNETT Hoya Staff Writer

The university registrar removed almost 20 courses that failed to meet an eight-student enrollment minimum prior to the add-drop period, in accordance with recent policy from the Office of the College Dean. According to University Registrar John Q. Pierce, the courses were cut because of low enrollment. Jeff Connor-Linton, the associate dean of faculty and strategic planning, said that the cancellation process had minimal impact on students, because it occurred before the beginning of the adddrop period. “Spring 2015 course enrollments were evaluated in November, after preregistration closed for students but See REGISTRAR, A9

wide collaboration that will engage the community in four global themes: development, governance, security and environment, on Jan. 15. The initiative, led by Vice President for Global Engagement Thom-

COURTESY SARAH RUTHERFORD

Vice President for Global Engagement Thomas Banchoff will spearhead the two-year Global Futures initiative, announced Jan. 15.

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as Banchoff, was developed over a six-month period by multiple university departments, including the Office of the President, the Office of the Provost and a variety of campus graduate and undergraduate programs. “In the time since I took the role [of VP for Global Engagement], I’ve been working with colleagues to explore how we can build on Georgetown’s strengths around global questions and take advantage of our D.C. location to build a platform to explore those issues,” Banchoff said. “That’s what led to the initiative.” According to Global Engagement Communications Manager Sarah Rutherford, the initiative is part of the university’s efforts to engage in global issues. “Georgetown is developing the model of an engaged global university,” Rutherford said. “This initiative is one of our first opportunities to advance as an engaged global university in terms of our teaching, research and outreach activities.”

Global Futures activities will revolve around one major theme each semester, beginning with development in spring 2015. The four semesters will be unified by four smaller, cross-cutting themes: religion and ethics, migration and cities, gender and diversity, and health and family. “The idea was to choose four themes that are critical in today’s world. In other words, they’re topics that are on everyone’s mind and will shape the global future,” Banchoff said. “We wanted to choose topics that would be of interest to faculty and students, but we also wanted to have a chance to explore the intersections between those themes over two years, which is the initiative extends more than one semester.” To engage the Georgetown community in each theme, the initiative will bring a variety of world leaders to speak. For spring 2015, the university has partnered with See INITIATIVE, A9

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