The Hoya: October 3, 2014

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 11, © 2014

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2014

FALL FASHION ISSUE

COMMENTARY Fr. Kevin O’Brien reflects on how grief and hope are related.

Students model this fall’s trends in The Hoya’s annual fashion magazine. SPECIAL PULLOUT GUIDE

STUDENTS PROTEST IMF LECTURE

H*YAS FOR CHOICE Alumni submitted a petition supporting the pro-choice group. NEWS, A7

OPINION, A3

FOOTBALL Harvard will face Georgetown in the schools’ firstever meeting Saturday. SPORTS, A10

Speech Policy Tested Katherine Richardson Hoya Staff Writer

EMMA HINCHLIFFE/THE HOYA

Students protested a lecture by IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde with a live-action board game in Healy Circle.

Lagarde Discusses Economy Toby Hung

Special to The Hoya

International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde’s lecture in Gaston Hall on Thursday morning prompted a student protest of her invitation to campus and of the IMF. In her lecture, Lagarde evaluated the future of the global economy and discussed ideas for resolving international economic problems. About 10 students, unaffiliated See LAGARDE, A6

NATE MOULTON FOR THE HOYA

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde in Gaston Hall.

DC Voting, Statehood Debated

A student protest in Healy Circle went uninterrupted by the Georgetown University Police Department on Thursday morning, although H*yas for Choice was not allowed to table in the same spot last year. The protest targeted the university’s invitation to Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, to speak in Gaston Hall on Thursday. Protesters played a live-action game dubbed “International Monopoly Fund,” satirizing the IMF’s approach to working with developing nations and the global economy. According GUPD Chief Jay Gruber, the difference between GUPD’s reaction to the two groups is that yesterday’s protest did not involve setting up a table. “The whole campus is considered a free speech zone so as long as students aren’t tabling, they can protest anywhere on campus as long as they meet the parameters of the Speech and Expression Policy,” Gruber said. “Students can pretty much stand wherever they want as long as they’re not in violation of the Speech and Expression Policy and under university policies.” The university’s Speech and Expression Policy states that certain “public squares” are open for student tabling, such as Red Square, Regents Lawn and the lobby of the Leavey Center, See SPEECH, A6

CONSTRUCTION DELAYED

Tom Garzillo

Special to The Hoya

Amid talk of D.C. statehood, outgoing Attorney General Eric Holder brought increased attention to the District’s lack of voting representation in Congress in a speech to the Congressional Black Caucus on Sept. 26. Holder, a D.C. resident, gave the speech a day after announcing his plans to resign and focused on ensuring voting rights in states across the country. “It is long past time for every citizen to be afforded his or her full responsibilities and full rights, including the more than 600,000 taxpayers who, like me, live in the District of Columbia and still have no voting representation in Congress,” Holder said. According to CNN, Holder said that he would remain Attorney General until his successor is confirmed. Currently, the District of Columbia has one non-voting delegate in the House and no representatives in the Senate. The District has three electoral votes in presidential elections, but Congress has overriding jurisdiction over the city’s affairs. Additionally, Eleanor Holmes-Norton (D-D.C.) and Mayor Vincent Gray testified in favor of statehood before a Senate committee Sept. 15, the first hearing on the issue in over 20 years. The struggle for D.C. voting rights has been caught up in politics. In 2010, Democrats abandoned a bill that would have granted the District a voting seat in the House of Representatives when it became clear that part of the bill would repeal many of the city’s gun control laws. Since the passage of the 23rd Amendment in 1961 granted D.C. residents the right to vote in presidential elections, the city has never voted for a Republican candidate. Georgetown University See DC, A6

MICHELLE LUBERTO FOR THE HOYA

Despite plans announced to close the sidewalk for Northeast Triangle construction this week, the Reiss pathway remains open.

TOBY HUNG FOR THE HOYA

Protesters supporting Hong Kong demonstrators rallied outside the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office on Wednesday.

Rally Supports Hong Kong Protests Students abroad advised to steer clear of demonstrations Toby Hung

Special to The Hoya

Around 200 protesters, including several Georgetown students, gathered at the Hong Kong Economic and Trade Office and marched to the White House on Wednesday night to demonstrate support for the Occupy Central protest currently occurring in Hong Kong, where 14 Georgetown students are currently studying abroad. The rally was organized by Global Solidarity with Hong Kong, a political awareness group advocating for universal suffrage in Hong Kong. On Wednesday, Oct. 1, the National Day of China, the group held similar events supporting pro-democracy protests in 64 cities worldwide. In Hong Kong, an estimated 150,000 protestors, including university students, have participated in sit-ins across the city’s main districts since Sunday, calling for the Chief Executive C.Y. Leung’s resignation and for democratic electoral reform. The protesters blame Leung, who was appointed to his position two years ago, for the current political stalemate, but Leung has refused to step down. The movement gained international media attention when riot police used tear gas and pepper spray to subdue the nonviolent protesters. “Right now, the current situation [in Hong Kong] can be described as

a war of attrition. It is a battle for the hearts and minds of the people in Hong Kong,” said Roger Li (SFS ’15), a Hong Kong native who participated in the D.C. rally. “I wanted to do as much as I could to show the world how polite and peaceful the protesters are in Hong Kong.” Fourteen students in the Hong Kong Special Administration Region are studying with programs through the Office of Global Education, according to the office’s director, Craig Rinker. According to Katy Berk (COL ’16), a former opinion editor for The Hoya currently studying abroad in Hong Kong, study-abroad advisers have advised Georgetown students not to participate in the protests and that it would be a violation of rules and could result in a loss of credits. “Between that rule and the potential for violence, I’ve chosen not to attend the protests, though they’ve been quite peaceful and orderly since Sunday evening,” she wrote in an email. “The entire highway is flooded with people, the protesters are remarkably polite — serving each other free water, crackers, cool towels, hand sanitizers, even trays of McDonald’s — and there is a lively upbeat atmosphere.” Michael Woo Cho (MSB ’16), another student studying abroad, said the protest he attended on Sept. 28 was the most violent. “Tear gas came from everywhere and rubber bullets on the day after the protest, apparently. But people were helping each other out. Students, foreign and domestic, helped the wounded to the back See PROTESTS, A6

Art Lovers Say Goodbye to Corcoran Gallery Charlotte Allen Special to The Hoya

The Corcoran Gallery of Art officially closed for renovations Sept. 28 after changing ownership to the National Gallery of Art and George Washington University. The National Gallery of Art will take ownership of all artwork in the museum, which is located on 500 17th St NW; the museum, which will house contemporary and modern art, will be renamed the Corcoran Contemporary, National Gallery of Art. George Washington University will operate the Corcoran College of Art and Design, though it remains undecided how exactly it will be integrated into the university and what tuition former Corcoran students will pay. The classes at the Corcoran will continue to take place in the Corcoran building, and the tuition will stay the same at least for this school year. About 50 board members, staff

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members, former students, artists and other supporters gathered Sept. 27 for a “funeral” for the formerly privately owned gallery, complete with speeches, tours of the gallery and the ceremonial laying of a wreath on the Corcoran family mausoleum. “We are left with a gorgeous building, but it is no longer the Corcoran, but a cenotaph, a memorial to something that is not there, an empty tomb,” former director Michael Botwinick said in a statement read at the funeral by former public relations chief Carolyn Campbell. The D.C. Superior Court approved the takeover of both the gallery and the college by the National Gallery and GWU last month, after months of deliberation and delay since the announcement of the takeover in February. Curators from both the National Gallery and the original Corcoran staff will review the piecSee CORCORAN, A6 Published Tuesdays and Fridays

FILE PHOTO: ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA

The Corcoran Gallery of Art closed for renovations Sept. 28, after the finalization of its merger with the National Gallery and GWU. Send Story Ideas and Tips to news@thehoya.com


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