The Hoya: October 4, 2013

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 95, No. 11, © 2013

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2013

FALL FASHION 2013

EDITORIAL An administrative filter on GUSA executive emails raises concern.

Revamp your look this season with rich prints and updated classics. SPECIAL PULLOUT GUIDE

LGBTQIA PROTEST Students criticized a Love Saxa speaker for his antigay views.

MEN’S SOCCER Freshman Josh Yaro scored late in a 1-0 win at American.

NEWS, A4

OPINION, A2

SPORTS, A10

Coaches Accused Of Abuse

Car Chase, Shooting At Capitol Law students and interns safe; flaws in HoyAlert reported

Two women’s basketball coaches on leave while school investigates

NATASHA KHAN

LAURA WAGNER

Hoya Staff Writer

Hoya Staff Writer

See SHOOTING, A6

FILE PHOTO: LEONEL DE VELEZ/THE HOYA

Women’s basketball Head Coach Keith Brown appears at Midnight Madness in October 2012.

Who is Keith Brown? After serving as the assistant coach for five seasons, Keith Brown was named head coach of Georgetown’s women’s basketball team in May 2012. Former head coach Terry WilliamsFlournoy hired Brown in 2007 as top assistant and head of recruiting. When Brown was named to the top coaching position four years later, his wife, SanJuan Brown, vouched for his professionalism to The Washington Times. “He’s very kid-friendly,” she said. “When you’re sending girls away [to college], you want

to be sure that you’re sending them to somebody who’s going to be like their surrogate family, and he’s very good at that.” During his time on the Hilltop, Brown has helped the team to three NCAA tournament appearances, but in his first season as head coach, Brown led the team to a mediocre 15-16 campaign, including a 5-11 showing in Big East play. Prior to coming to Georgetown, Brown coached AAU basketball for 11 years and was a middle school teacher in Prince George’s County. He and his wife have eight children and two grandchildren.

Women’s basketball Head Coach Keith Brown and Assistant Coach Tim Valentine were placed on paid administrative leave Tuesday for alleged misconduct, and the university is investigating accusations of verbal abuse by Brown. Several days before the coaches were placed on leave, a member of the women’s basketball team attempted suicide, local news station WJLA reported, although there is no confirmed connection between the two events. According to sources cited in WJLA’s report, the player is now recovering at home with her family. Brown is accused of using disrespectful language and humiliation tactics toward his players, who said they could no longer tolerate the treatment, according to multiple anonymous sources in the WJLA report. The university denied requests from THE HOYA to interview Athletic Director Lee Reed and current members of the women’s basketball team, and university spokeswoman Stacy Kerr declined to comment on how long See BROWN, A5

CRIME REPORT 2012

See story on A6.

483

365 NUMBER OF VIOLATIONS

A female motorist was fatally shot Monday afternoon by police when she attempted to pass a barricade on Capitol Hill, prompting a chaotic day of uncertainty and fear for the worst in Washington. Miriam Carey, a 34-year-old dental hygienist from Connecticut, knocked down a security barrier at the entrance to the White House at 15th Street and E Street NW before accelerating down Pennsylvania Avenue with police in pursuit around 2:15 p.m. After trying to ram the gate of the Hart Senate Office Building, located at Constitution Avenue and Second Street NE, she was shot and killed. Carey’s 1-year-old daughter was also in the car but emerged unharmed. The story was initially reported as a shooting at the Capitol, although Carey was later found to be unarmed. Police had fired shots at her car as it sped away. Due to the day’s events, the Georgetown University Law Center campus was placed on lockdown, along with the Capitol and several other buildings in the area. The shelter-in-place warning was announced through HoyAlert. “As in any emergency that might affect our community, the Georgetown Law Department of Public Safety followed the events at the Capitol this afternoon closely,” Law Center Director of Media Relations Marisa Kashino wrote in an email. “Overall, operations were affected minimally, since thankfully, the situation was resolved quickly. As always, we will be reviewing our procedures and policies to look for ways to improve our capabilities to respond to future emergency situations.” HoyAlert, the university’s go-to method of announcing emergency protocol, had some concerning hiccups during the crisis. Jordan Grushkin (LAW ’15) was in class when he got his HoyAlert text around 3:03 p.m., nearly an hour after the chase began. By that time,

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NATASHA THOMSON FOR THE HOYA

Roughly a dozen people attended a Planning 201 session in Lohrfink Auditorium on Monday, where housing plans were reviewed. 2010

2011

THEFTS

NO TELEPROMPTER NECESSARY

2012

2010

2011

ALCOHOL VIOLATIONS

2012

Shutdown Ripples Felt On Campus PENNY HUNG

Hoya Staff Writer

KAYLA NOGUCHI/THE HOYA

Jon Favreau, former chief speechwriter for President Obama, addressed Gaston Hall on Monday. See story at thehoya.com.

While Congress struggles to negotiate a deal that will reopen the federal government, members of the Georgetown community are feeling the impact of the government shutdown on everything from academics to athletics. Many students working on theses or other forms of research have found their schedules stalled by the unexpected closure of resources like the Library of Congress, the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health and government databases. “A lot of molecular biology research at Georgetown relies on biology databases See SHUTDOWN, A6 Published Tuesdays and Fridays

InNew Plans,Admins Heed Student Dissent RYAN THOMAS

Special to The Hoya

Following an outpouring of student opposition to an off-campus housing option and a flurry of on-campus construction projects, the university introduced its second stage of master planning in a Planning 201 session Wednesday evening. The forum covered a wide range of planning developments, including on- and off-campus housing options, changes to Georgetown University Transportation Shuttle routes and current and future projects, like the Intercollegiate Athletic Center, Healey Family Student Center and Northeast Triangle Residence Hall. Perhaps most notably, the event was the first chance for community members to respond to the university’s announcement that it has filed a request with the D.C. Zoning Commission to change the

designated use of Ryan, Mulledy and Gervase halls to include “residential, campus life and athletic” along with the current “academic and administrative” designation. The requested change would allow the university to pursue student housing in the building, a featured alternative in the student-initiated “One Georgetown, One Campus” campaign. Although the session included some major announcements, hardly anyone was there to hear them. Roughly a dozen people attended, about half of whom were students. The former Jesuit residences, Ryan and Mulledy, have remained vacant since 2003 due to an asbestos problem, while Gervase currently houses administrative offices. “It’s sitting there deteriorating. Let’s invest in it now and make it a See PLANNING, A6

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