The Hoya: October 31, 2014

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 18, © 2014

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2014

FORGING SOCIAL LIFE

EDITORIAL The editorial board supports legalization of marijuana in D.C.

As GU tries to move social life back on campus, fake IDs still reign.

GUIDE, B1

Mold Worst in Village A Ashley Miller Hoya Staff Writer

Despite measures adopted last fall after an outbreak of mold in dormitories across campus, mold has become an increasing problem in Village A apartments, leaving students frustrated by the housing conditions and concerned about their health and safety. According to Vice President for Planning and Facilities Management Robin Morey, six of the 20 complaints that students have submitted about mold in the past three weeks have been about Village A. Last fall’s infestation primarily concerned Henle Village. Danny Khanin (SFS ’16) was forced to move out of his Village A apartment due to health problems that he believed were caused by mold. “I just kept getting sick so I didn’t know if it was from living there or not,” Khanin, a varsity tennis player, said. “Whenever I would leave I would feel much better and it started affecting my tennis and my schoolwork. I was able to move out and I’ve felt better since.” Morey said that the university still is unsure of what is causing the current mold problems in Village A apartments. “At this point we cannot attribute any circumstance that would result in Village A receiving approximately one quarter of the requests,” Morey wrote in an email. “However, as most of the work orders are related minor mold/mildew in bathrooms, we are inspecting the ventilations systems in the bathroom stacks at Village A, as this could be a potential opportunity to improve.” Morey said that the highest volume See MOLD, A6

OPINION, A2

CLINTON IN GASTON Hillary Clinton spoke about women in the economy Thursday.

MEN’S SOCCER No. 13 Hoyas snuck by No. 9 Xavier 1-0 with a penalty in overtime.

NEWS, A4

SPORTS, B10

Alumni Prepare for Midterm Elections Natalie LaRue

Special to The Hoya

As campaigns enter their final push before midterm elections Tuesday, two Georgetown alumni are clamoring to join the 20 alumni already serving in Congress, while other alumni run for other political seats. Democrat Deborah Dingell (SFS ’75, GRD ’98) remains in control of her campaign to represent Michigan’s 12th Congressional District, while independent candidate Nick Troiano (COL ’11, GRD ’13) and Democrat Sandra Fluke (LAW ’12) continue their push to remain competitive in their respective elections for Pennsylvania’s 10th Congressional District and California State Senate. DEBORAH DINGELL Dingell, who is currently a consultant for the American Automobile Policy Council, is running to fill the seat of her retiring husband, John Dingell (COL ’49, LAW ’52), the longest-serving member of Congress in its history. Decisively winning the August Democratic primary election by 40 points in a predominantly blue district, which spans from Detroit’s western suburbs to Ann Arbor, Dingell is heavily favored in the upcoming midterm against Republican challenger Terry Bowman. According to Roll Call, almost one in six of all women who have ever served in Congress succeeded their deceased partners. If elected, however, she would be the only woman to serve in Congress ever to succeed a husband who retired or resigned. In a statement to The Hoya, Dingell credited her education and the community at Georgetown with guiding her along the campaign trail. “I have stayed very close to the

COURTESY DEBORAH DINGELL

MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA

COURTESY NICK TROIANO

Deborah Dingell (SFS ’75, GRD ’98), left, and Nick Troiano (COL ’11, GRD ’13), center, are running to join the 20 Georgetown alumni in Congress. Sandra Fluke (LAW ’12) is running for California State Senate. Georgetown community since my college days, participating in projects and attending mass,” she said. “My relationship with Georgetown has provided me with a foundation to continually learn and seek knowledge.” NICK TROIANO Troiano, an independent from Milford, Pa., is running to represent Pennsylvania’s 10th Congressional District in the northeast corner of the state to replace incumbent Republican Tom Marino, who has represented the district since 2010. A Harper Poll released on Tuesday placed Marino’s support at 58 percent, ahead of the 22 percent for Democratic candidate Scott Brion and 10 percent for Troiano. A former Republican, Troiano explained that he decided to run as an independent in the wake of the government shutdown last October.

“I decided to run for office because we need to fix our broken political system and restore real representation in Washington,” Troiano said. “We will not be able to address any of the major issues we face, including our unsustainable federal budget and national debt, with continued partisan gridlock and special interest corruption.” Troiano’s campaign, which calls itself citizen-funded, parades the slogan, “America Deserves Better,” particularly highlighting environmental sustainability, fiscal responsibility, economic mobility and political reform as critical issues. “I am running as an independent candidate and refusing to accept any special interest contributions to my campaign,” Troiano said. “I believe America deserves better than politics as usual.” If elected, Troiano, who is cur-

rently 25 years old, would become the youngest member of Congress, a title that currently belongs to 31-year-old Patrick Murphy (D-Fla.). “It’s very important for young people to run for office so that our generation has a voice because we are the ones who are going to have to deal with the consequences of the decisions that Congress does or does not make now,” Rachel Vierling, press secretary and policy director for Troiano’s campaign, said. “We need to engage more young people in politics in general. Many are apathetic because they see a broken system with elected officials who aren’t doing what’s in the best interest of our generation, and feel helpless to fix it.” Troiano nodded to Georgetown’s role in his success. “My education in government at Georgetown taught me how See ELECTIONS, A6

CARRY THE WEIGHT

MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA

A group of students gathered to watch and counter anti-Catholic, born-again Christian protesters at the front gates Wednesday afternoon.

MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA

Anti-Catholic Protesters Draw Crowd at Front Gates West African Admissions

Zoe Dobkin (SFS ’16), back left, was joined by Josi Sinagoga (SFS ’16), front left, Sarah Eng (NHS ’16), front right, and Maria Philip (SFS ’15) to help carry a mattress for Carry The Weight, a day of sexual assault awareness at college campuses across the country.

Molly Simio

Hoya Staff Writer

Three anti-Catholic, born-again Christian preachers stood outside the university’s front gates reading gospel passages and trying to spread an evangelical message to about 50 onlookers for about an hour-and-a-half Wednesday afternoon. “Your good works don’t save you. Trying to be a good person doesn’t work for God. You can’t be any better than what you are, because it compares you to God, and in his righteousness and his holiness, you are an object of wrath,” one preacher said into a megaphone. “Your heart is corrupt. You can’t meet God’s standards.” The preachers walked onto campus around 12 p.m. and were promptly removed from Healy Circle by the Georgetown University Police Department. They then stood on 37th and O streets, outside of the front gates. According to GUPD Chief Jay Gruber, the department called the Metropolitan Police Department because the demon-

stration blocked part of 37th Street. The group left at about 1:45 p.m. after MPD arrived. “It’s very simple,” GUPD Chief Jay Gruber said. “They’re not a student group so they don’t have any access to rights or benefits on campus, so they had to be off campus.” According to Gruber, MPD did not ask the group to leave, and no citations were issued. The preachers, who are not affiliated with any group, have held similar demonstrations around the country. “We go all over the country doing this — preaching to universities, campuses, community colleges and high schools. We’re just preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ. We’re born-again Christians,” a demonstrator named Randy, who would not provide his last name, said. About five GUPD officers were located near the front gates throughout the demonstration. The demonstrators held signs citing

Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947

See PROTESTERS, A6

Unaffected by Ebola Outbreak Toby Hung

Hoya Staff Writer

Despite the travel policies put in place by the Office of Risk Management prohibiting universitysponsored travel to Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone in light of the outbreak of the Ebola virus, the Office of Undergraduate Admissions will not implement regulations on international student admissions from Central and West Africa. Kathryn Timlin, associate director of admissions for the Africa, Europe, Middle East, Central Asia and Russia regions, said that since students would not arrive on campus until next fall, it is unlikely that international student admissions would be affected by

Published Tuesdays and Fridays

the Ebola outbreak. “As of now, we have no policy. It does not have an immediate impact,” Timlin said. “Because we’re recruiting for the fall of 2015 at this point, we’re 10 months or

“The countries in question are not producers of many students.” KATHRYN TIMLIN Associate Director of Admissions

so away to worry about a student from anywhere, including [Western] Africa, coming to Georgetown and whether that would be

perceived as an issue for our office to tackle.” Historically, the number of applications from the region affected by Ebola has been low. “We receive applications throughout the African continent, but the countries that are in question … are not producers of many international students,” Timlin said. “If we do end up admitting a student from that region who ends up being infected, that would be something that we would tackle from the provost’s office.” The Office of Risk Management issued an updated visitor policy last week to apply the university protocol of risk assessment to visiSee EBOLA, A6

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