The Hoya: November 18, 2014

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 23, © 2014

tuesDAY, november 18, 2014

MEN’S BASKETBALL

COMMENTARY After being mugged at gunpoint, reflecting on the crime’s motivations.

Freshman forward L.J. Peak led the Hoyas with 23 points in an 83-62 win. SPORTS, A10

TEDx The fourth edition of the conference explored untrodden themes.

HECKLER A woman interrupted the first Friday Muslim service at the National Cathedral.

NEWS, A4

OPINION, A3

NEWS, A5

Access to Benefits Extended

Unrecognized groups get benefits through GUSA apparatus MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA

Amid debate over RA rights, a poster advertises the position to students.

RA Rights Await Clarification Suzanne Monyak & Katherine Richardson Hoya Staff Writers

Following widespread student concerns about the treatment of resident assistants and enforcement of the confidentiality policies all RAs must sign governing their interactions with residents, the university has yet to offer clarification or propose changes, prompting the Georgetown University Student Association to unanimously pass a bill Sunday calling for the administration to investigate all claims of RA mistreatment. A viewpoint by RA Thomas Lloyd (SFS ’15) published in The Hoya (“Reflecting on the Ordeal of a Mishandled Ricin Case,” Nov. 11, 2014, A3) last week that detailed the university’s failure to provide him with support following his involvement with former student Daniel Milzman’s ricin case last year — by limiting the options for counseling available to him as an RA subject to confidentiality policy, among other actions — prompted other RAs to share their concerns regarding haphazard approaches to classifying RAs as university employees and limits on RAs’ ability to seek counseling and report instances of sexual assault involving residents. Vice President for Student Affairs Todd Olson did not provide details on the confidentiality agreement that all RAs sign. Amid confusion surrounding the confidentiality policies signed by RAs, Vice President for Student Affairs Todd Olson was not able to give any details on the definitions and boundaries of confidenSee RAs, A6

Molly Simio

FILE PHOTO: MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA

Hoya Staff Writer

Unrecognized student groups will now have some access to previously restricted benefits, such as co-hosting events with recognized groups and reserving campus space, after the creation of a GUSA apparatus to provide benefits announced yesterday. Groups like H*yas for Choice, which have not been able to access the benefits available to recognized clubs because of lack of university recognition, will now be able to access benefits through a GUSA partnership. Unrecognized groups will be able to use storage space, reserve classrooms and use printing services through the GUSA executive, rather than through direct connection to university services and offices, like recognized student groups. These groups will still lack university funding and will not be able to use the university logo, both of which are benefits delegated to recognized stu-

An annual protest for immigrant rights, pictured from 2013, starts on campus, before making its way to the Capitol. The university released updated guidelines for on-campus demonstrations on Monday.

Campus Protest Guidelines Clarified Molly Simio

Hoya Staff Writer

FILE PHOTO: CHARLIE LOWE/THE HOYA

Removals of H*yas for Choice See BENEFITS, A7 tabling have sparked backlash.

The university released guidelines for campus protests and tabling in an update to the Speech and Expression Policy sent in a campus-wide email yesterday. The new guidelines for campus protests specify areas of campus in which groups should protest, depending on where an event is held. Students are instructed to protest in the southwest corner of Copley Lawn when events are held

in Gaston Hall and in Red Square when events are held in Copley Formal Lounge or the Intercultural Center Auditorium. These updates were released about two-and-a-half weeks after Hoyas United for Free Speech, a coalition of students advocating for free speech reform on campus, delivered a petition to Vice President for Student Affairs Todd Olson. The petition garnered about 460 signatures and called for the exSee PROTEST, A6

DC Aids Homeless Veterans

VELVET’S SILVER ANNIVERSARY

Margaret Heftler Hoya Staff Writer

VALERIA BALZA/THE HOYA

25 years after the Velvet Revolution saw the peaceful overthrow of the communist regime, the Czech Embassy marked the anniversary Monday at the Davis Center for Performing Arts.

To Live in JesRes, Embody ‘Georgetown Spirit’ Xinlan Hu

than only a portion of the residence. The community will be the only LLC to encompass an entire The entire dorm replacing the dorm, and will be the largest LLC. old Jesuit residence in Ryan and The Spirit of Georgetown ResiMulledy Halls will be a Living dential Academy will join LLCs Learning Community dedicated to in living well, Jewish life, French the “spirit of Georgetown,” requir- language and culture, culture and ing applications from all 148 resi- performance, justice and diversity dents. in action, global living and Muslim Set to open interest. in fall 2015, the Applications LLC, which has are due in the bebeen named the ginning of DecemSpirit of Georgeber, and Director town Residential of Residential EduAcademy, will cation Ed Gilhool house 148 stusaid he expects a dents selected large pool. by the Office of The nine tenets MARY PATRONE (COL ’15) Planning Committee Representative Residential Livon which the LLC ing. The students will focus on will will be required to participate in include Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam monthly conversations with other (For the Greater Glory of God), Conresidents, host community-wide templatives in Action, Academic events and complete an ePortfolio Excellence, Educating the Whole detailing their contributions to the Person, Cura Personalis, Faith & university. Justice, Women & Men for Others, Because of the buildings’ ties to Interreligious Understanding, and the Jesuit community and its cen- Community in Diversity. tral campus location opening onto “Given the rich history and locaDahlgren Quad, administrators tion of the buildings, the planning and others involved in the plan- team knew they wanted to offer ning process decided to dedicate See RESIDENCE, A6 the whole dorm to an LLC, rather

Hoya Staff Writer

“The vision is for it to be one cohesive community.”

FILE PHOTO: ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA

The renovation of the Old Jesuit Residence will yield a dorm dedicated as a Living Learning Community for the “spirit of Georgetown.” Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

Published Tuesdays and Fridays

A day before the Veterans Day Concert of Valor held on the National Mall honored those who served, the District of Columbia, behind Mayor Vincent Gray, broke ground on D.C.’s first permanent supportive housing to address veteran homelessness in D.C. Located at 1005 North Capitol St. NE, the John and Jill Ker Conway Residence is set to be completed by December 2015. Gray released the Service Members, Veterans and Their Families Action Plan last week to advance progress toward the goal. There are currently 499 homeless veterans on the streets of D.C., according to the Veterans Affairs Medical Center. This new initiative incorporates the development of a new mixed income housing apartment building, which will include supportive housing for homeless veterans. The action plan will promote a new system that prioritizes the most vulnerable veterans, using a housing placement system in coordination with veterans’ outreach initiatives to place these veterans in housing services. VA Medical Center Homeless Coordinator Kevin Morton explained that the organizations involved developed a vulnerability index to assess the relative need of individual veterans. “We develop tools to assess everyone in the community and we have one resource list that all the partners in the community pull from to help house veterans … We are able to identify veterans who are most vulnerable and have been homeless the longest and we use that tool to house the correct people,” Morton said. “We use vouchers that we get from the [Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing] program to house veterans that are currently homeless, who are most vulnerable.” The District has recently seen a drop in veteran homelessness. According to data collected by the D.C. Department of Housing and Urban Development in January 2014, veteran homelessness rates have seen a 33-point drop, or a decrease by 24,837 people, since 2010. With the recent decrease in veteran homelessness in the District, Pathways to Housing D.C. Executive Director See VETERANS, A6

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