The Hoya: December 6, 2013

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 95, No. 25, © 2013

FRIday, DECEMBER 6, 2013

AROUND THE WORLD

EDITORIAL Prescription drugs ought to be considered a form of academic dishonesty.

Georgetown students reflect on their semesters abroad. SPECIAL PULLOUT GUIDE

OPINION, A2

GRAY 2014 Mayor Gray announced his bid for re-election Wednesday. NEWS, A4

SOCCER OUSTED Michigan State defeats Georgetown in the NCAA tournament’s third round. SPORTS, A12

Georgetown Falls Short In Fellowship Awards

WINTER HOYALAND

Jennifer Ding Hoya Staff Writer

DANIEL SMITH/THE HOYA

Olivia Reyes (COL ’17), Alexa Colangelo (COL ’17) and Alex Smith (COL ’17) decorate a Christmas tree on Healy Lawn for Winter Hoyaland’s second year of promoting holiday spirit.

No Georgetown students won Rhodes, Marshall or Mitchell fellowships during this year’s application cycle, the results of which were announced throughout the past two weeks. Between 2001 and 2010, four Georgetown students have won Rhodes scholarships, seven have won Marshall scholarships and nine have been awarded Mitchell scholarships, according to the Georgetown Office of Fellowships, Awards and Research. The last Rhodes fellowship won by a Georgetown student was awarded to Stephanie Bryson, a former SFS grad student in 2011. Shea Houlihan (SFS ’13) and Benjamin Buchanan (COL ’11, GRAD ’13) won Marshall scholarships and Wardah Athar (COL ’13) won a Mitchell fellowship last year. In total, 23 Georgetown students have won the Rhodes scholarship between 1903 and 2013, according to the program’s website. Georgetown has had a total of 21 students win the Marshall Scholarship for two years of post-graduate study in the United Kingdom and 14 win the Mitchell Scholarship for postgraduate study in Ireland. GOFAR administrators, however, do not

view this year’s results as an impediment to future students’ ambitions. “This is certainly not a setback given the rarity of these fellowships,” GOFAR Director John Glavin wrote in an email. “Fellowship winners are the academic equivalent of Olympic medalists.” Six Harvard University students won Rhodes scholarships this year, more than at any other institution. It was followed by Yale and Stanford, which each had three Rhodes scholars. Director of Fellowships Lauren Tuckley suggested that the rarity of fellowships awarded could be affected by the low number of Georgetown students who apply. “It helps to understand when one sees that significantly smaller than 1 percent of a class is interested in applying,” she said in an email. “Georgetown will only grow its chances of winning fellowships when more students are interested in competing.” This year, the committee of faculty administrators and former fellowship winners that recommends students to fellowship committees endorsed nine of the 16 alumni and seniors that applied. The process consisted of applying for university endorsement during the spring of students’ junior years, See FELLOWSHIPS, A6

#BBGU Million-Dollar Mesclun: Sweetgreen Gets Investor Prompts Discussion Natasha Khan Hoya Staff Writer

Twitter protest led by Black House explores minority students’ experience Suzanne Monyak Hoya Staff Writer

“Having an academic advisor who acts really surprised when you excel in your classes,” “When everyone looks at you when the word ‘slavery’ is brought up in discussion.” “No black hairdressers on this side of town. So you have to trek 30-plus minutes.” “Having to defend why I am part of student organizations that are predominately white.” “Being asked to speak for your whole race in an article for The Hoya.” These tweets, from Shavonnia CorbinJohnson (SFS ’14), Raquel Caldwell (COL ’16), Kendra Tonette (NHS ’13), Jimmy Ramirez (COL ’15) and Aya Waller-Bey (COL ’14), respectively, were all accompanied by the hashtag #BBGU, short for “being black at Georgetown University,” yesterday. The hashtag was part of a Twitter protest held by the Black House between 11 a.m. and 11 p.m. Thursday, during which students, alumni, faculty and administrators discussed the experience many students of color encounter on campus. A similar event at the University of Michigan, #BBUM, inspired the Black House’s effort, which Waller-Bey, who is the Black House resident director, organized. “I wanted to bring that conversation to Georgetown, and I really wanted us to have an outlet to often speak out,” Waller-Bey said. Students tweeted about racism they have encountered on campus, prejudice in the classroom, uninformed conversations and daily inconveniences — like other students asking to touch black students’ hair — along with the sense of community among organizations like the Black Students Association and the Georgetown chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. “I just wish, you know, the greater Georgetown community can really see… how we feel when someone asks if they can touch our hair,” Waller-Bey told The Hoya. “If you do something racist or say something racist, and you say ‘I’m so sorry I didn’t know that was offensive, I didn’t

After expanding to New York and Boston this year, Sweetgreen has again raised its national profile. Founded by two Georgetown alumni in 2007, the salad chain will receive a $22 million investment from venture capital firm Revolution Growth, the firm announced Wednesday. Revolution Growth, also based in Washington D.C. and founded by former AOL Time Warner Chairman Steve Case, former Exclusive Resorts CEO Donn Davis and Monumental Sports & Entertainment founder, Chairman and Majority Owner Ted Leonsis (CAS ’77), has thus far concentrated its invest-

ments in the tech industry, investing in startups such as Living Social and Zipcar. Sweetgreen marks Revolution Growth’s first investment in the restaurant industry. Nicolas Jammet (MSB ’07), Jonathan Neman (MSB ’07) and Nathaniel Ru (MSB ’07) opened their first location on M Street in Georgetown shortly after graduating. Two years later in 2009, the trio opened a location in Dupont Circle before quickly expanding up the eastern seaboard; Sweetgreen now operates 22 storefronts. “Nic, Jonathan and Nate have developed an iconic brand in an industry that is ripe for disruption,” Case wrote in an email to The Hoya. With funding from Revolution Growth, Sweetgreen will focus

on a three-pronged approach to the restaurant’s current team and structure as well as expansion. “One is to invest in our people, so really invest in building a great team, invest in the culture, invest in training, really build the capabilities of a great company,” Neman told The Hoya. “The second is to invest in our community, to amp up our community efforts. And lastly we are going to expand Sweetgreen, not aggressively but I would say very consciously, both in the markets we are in as well as new markets.” Case hopes Sweetgreen will become a model for quick dining beyond traditional fast food See SWEETGREEN, A6

ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA

Once a local D.C. shop, Sweetgreen is set to expand nationwide.

WHITE HOUSE

Nelson Mandela in Philadelphia with Bill Clinton in July 1993.

GU Reacts to Mandela’s Death Madison Ashley Hoya Staff Writer

The world came to a collective pause Thursday to mourn the death of human rights leader Nelson Mandela. A prolific anti-apartheid activist and the first black president of South Africa, Mandela, 95, died in his house surrounded by family. In a television address to the South African people Thursday, President Jacob Zuma mourned the leader’s loss he said, “We’ve lost our greatest son.”

Born to a Xhosa chief in South Africa in 1918, Mandela was a restless activist from a young age. First imprisoned for his activism while a law student at the South African University of Fort Hare, Mandela continued his civil rights advocacy by joining the anti-apartheid African National Congress in 1942 and later founding the offshoot MK movement, an armed wing of the ANC. Mandela served as president of South Africa from 1994 to 1999. See MANDELA, A5

FILE PHOTO: CHRISTIN DRISCOLL/THE HOYA

Georgetown students protest the university’s investments in apartheid South Africa in an April 1985 march to the country’s embassy.

See BBGU, A5 Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

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