The Hoya: November 7, 2014

Page 1

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 20, © 2014

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 2014

CREATIVE WRITING

EDITORIAL The 31 club sports teams deserve more than one athletic trainer.

The poems, short stories and other creative work of Georgetown students. SPECIAL PULLOUT GUIDE

RIGBY Ten years after Daniel Rigby’s death, GU has seen changes to fire safety.

WOMEN’S SOCCER Georgetown will face St. John’s Friday in New York for the Big East semifinal.

NEWS, A5

OPINION, A2

SPORTS, A10

DC Votes Early Applications See Demographic Shift To Legalize Marijuana Suzanne Monyak

RACIAL DEMOGRAPHICS

Hoya Staff Writer

Jack Bennett Hoya Staff Writer

Voters in the District of Columbia passed Initiative 71 on Tuesday, voting to legalize the possession of recreational marijuana. The ballot measure, which was supported by 69 percent of voters, will now move to a congressional review period before implementation by the D.C. Council. Initiative 71 allows individuals over 21 to possess up to two ounces of marijuana and cultivate as many as six plants, as long as only three or fewer are mature. The legislation does not allow the sale of recreational marijuana, but individuals may freely give up to one ounce of the substance and sell or use marijuana paraphernalia. D.C.’s marijuana initiative does not put a tax system in place, since voters are not allowed to directly establish a tax system. Residents voted Tuesday to legalize marijuana in Oregon and Alaska as well. The initiative was widely expected to pass, though a recent Washington City Paper poll placed support for legalization at 52 percent, much lower than eventual voter support. “There are no perfect answers to people’s legitimate concerns about marijuana use. But neither are there such answers about tobacco or alcohol, and we believe that on every level — the health effects, the impact on society and law-and-order issues — the balance falls squarely on the side of national legalization,” the New York Times editorial board wrote in its endorsement of the initiative. In accordance with the D.C. Home Rule Act of 1973, the legislation is subject to a 60day congressional review period. If Congress chooses not to act, the bill will become law. However, Rep. Andy Harris (R-Md.) and other congressmen have already expressed their intent to block the initiative. “Actions by those in D.C. will result in higher drug use among teens,” Harris said in a written statement to The Washington Post. “I will consider using all resources available to a member of Congress to stop this action.” To do so, Congress would have to pass a resolution rejecting the initiative, which would then require the president’s signature. After D.C. voters passed legislation legalizing medical marijuana in 1998, Congress delayed its implementation until 2009. After the initiative’s passage, around 70 activists, campaigners and supporters gathered at the Meridian Pint Bar to celebrate legalization in the District by drinking local beer in support of D.C. charities. D.C. Cannabis Campaign Press Officer Zack Pesavento (SFS ’08) noted that while See MARIJUANA, A6

Early applicants to Georgetown’s Class of 2019 changed demographically along with national trends, while the competitiveness of the applicant pool increased and the breakdown of applications between undergraduate schools stayed stable. Early action applications, which are non-binding, were due Nov. 1. This first round of applications precedes regular decision applications, which are due Jan. 10, 2015. This year’s early admissions pool saw a rise in Hispanic applicants and a decrease in non-Hispanic white applicants, in accordance with national trends. This year, 4,454 students who identified themselves as white applied, a decrease from the 4,527 who applied last year. With this decrease in white applicants came an increase in applicants who identified as African-American, rising from 571 last year to 582 applicants this year; Asian-American, which rose from 896 to 912 applicants this year; and Hispanic-American, which rose the most, from 750 to 790 applicants this year. Director of Undergraduate Admissions Charles Deacon attributed this change, a demographic

4,527

Class of 2018

4,454

912

896

White

Asian

trend since 2011, to the rising number of Hispanic high school graduates and decreasing number of white high school graduates. According to a report by the Western Interstate Commission of Higher Education, after rising between 1996 and 2011, the total number of high school graduates has since begun to decline. “The number of people applying [to four-year colleges] is going down, and it’s shifting away from

Hoya Staff Writer

The 20th annual Rangila dance show will be held at the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts on Nov. 22 as a result of structural problems in the show’s usual venue, Gaston Hall. The coordinators of the cultural dance performance, which is put on by the South Asian Society and will feature around 500 student dancers, officially signed a contract

COURTESY SCOTT SUCHMAN

Dance show Rangila will be held at the Kennedy Center this weekend.

790

750

Hispanic

people who have traditionally been most likely to apply — white Americans in particular, who’ve been the ones most likely to apply, are significantly dropping. Hispanic-Americans who have been the least likely to apply is the increasing number,” Deacon said. With 6,827 applications received as of Nov. 6, Deacon projected that Georgetown would receive about 6,860 applications total, an alltime high for the past four years,

582

571

Black including the trickle of excused late applications that arrive after the deadline. Georgetown received at least two applications from all 50 states in this early round, and 516 applications from international addresses. Early application numbers to the College, the School of Foreign Service and the McDonough School of Business went up this year, while See APPLICATIONS, A6

Fluke Falls Short in California State Senate Bid Maureen Tabet Hoya Staff Writer

California State Senate candidate Sandra Fluke (LAW ’12) lost her race in the state’s 26th District to fellow Democrat and longtime area resident Ben Allen on Tuesday. Fluke received 39 percent of the vote in the runoff election, which pitted the two Democrats against each other as part of California’s “jungle primary” rules, in which the top two finishers in the primary election, regardless of party, face off in the general election. Her large margin of defeat comes in stark contrast to her close secondplace finish in the June primary and her fundraising advantage over Allen throughout the campaign. Fluke gained national recognition after testifying in 2012 in front of Congress about the Affordable Care Act’s birth control mandate, urging Georgetown University to cover the co-pay for female

students’ contraceptives, which it did not do until August 2012. Conservative radio show host Rush Limbaugh called Fluke a “slut” in response to her testimony, drawing widespread criticism for his comments. Fluke continued to stand up for women’s rights after the incident, and spoke on the role of women at the 2012 Democratic National Convention. She originally contemplated a run for the retiring Rep. Henry Waxman’s (D-Calif.) seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. H*yas for Choice President Abby Grace (SFS ’16) attributed Fluke’s candidacy and primary success to the positive national attention she received for standing up for women’s needs. “The positive media reaction afterward, reporting her and using that as a larger platform to call out not only Rush Limbaugh but other Republican commentators increased her name ID to where See FLUKE, A6

COURTESY STAND WITH SANDRA

Women’s rights advocate Sandra Fluke (LAW ’12) lost to fellow Democrat Ben Allen in her bid to become a California state senator.

Rangila to Grace the Kennedy Center Stage Emma Rizk

Class of 2019

with the Kennedy Center last Friday. Last month, The Office of Planning and Facilities Management performed an engineering analysis on Gaston Hall’s stage and found it to be structurally unsound for groups of over 45 people. Renovations will occur on the stage this summer. Event coordinators Alisha Datwani (MSB ’15) and Medha Chandorkar (COL ’15) said that after discovering that Gaston Hall was no longer an option for the performance, they met with the Center for Student Engagement and the Office of the President to brainstorm venues. “As soon as we found out that we didn’t have Gaston, we called a meeting with the South Asian Society board and we all collaboratively came up with every single option in the general vicinity of Georgetown as to where we could hold Rangila,” Datwani said. Rangila Master of Ceremony Priya Sharma (MSB ’15) said that the sudden announcement regarding Gaston’s condition worried many performers and choreographers. “The second you take away Gaston Hall, that’s at the core of what Rangila is, it’s a tradition,” Sharma said. “People are excited to perform in such a

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

See RANGILA, A6

Stage Not Structurally Sound Margaret Heftler Hoya Staff Writer

FILE PHOTO: ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA

After 19 years of Rangila, the stage in Gaston Hall cannot support the dance show and is in need of structural repairs. Published Tuesdays and Fridays

Gaston Hall’s stage can no longer support large groups of performers, like those in Rangila, and will undergo construction this summer, after an engineering analysis conducted recently found structural problems with the platform. According to the Office of the President’s Chief of Staff Joseph Ferrara, the engineers who evaluated the space said that the stage is not structurally sound for groups of over 45 people. The first consequence of this analysis will be the relocation of the South Asian Society’s Rangila dance show from its traditional Gaston performance to the Kennedy Center this weekend. “Most events could continue as planned with two important restrictions,” Ferrara wrote in an email. “First, we should not do an event with more than 45 people on the stage at the same time. Second, we should not do an event that involves a lot of dancing, jumping and stomping on the stage.” See STAGE, A6

Send Story Ideas and Tips to news@thehoya.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.