The Hoya: April 8, 2016

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

Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 97, No. 42, © 2016

FRIday, APRIL 8, 2016

A DIAMOND EDUCATION

Alumna Kara Ross uses the success of her jewelry business to fund charitable work.

EDITORIAL It is time for students to speak up and help bring Austin Tice home.

LESSONS FROM TRUMP RALLY Trump’s success is based on his valuing the working-class voice.

OPINION, A2

OPINION, A3

GUIDE, B1

Undocumented GU Students Supported marina pitofsky and syed humza moinuddin Hoya Staff Writers

Georgetown University announced the launch of the Undocumented Student Resource website — an online portal meant to provide information and resources for undocumented current and prospective Georgetown students — in a campus-wide email from Vice President for Student Affairs Todd Olson on Thursday. The announcement arrived on the same day as National Institutions Coming Out Day for undocumented students. The annual celebration, created by the United We Dream Network in 2015, recognizes higher education’s commitment to students under undocumented status.

In his email, Olson cited Georgetown’s responsibility as a Jesuit institution to welcome undocumented students and to recognize the challenges they face across the country. According to Olson’s email, approximately 65,000 students born abroad who are not U.S. citizens or legal residents graduate from U.S. high schools annually, and it is Georgetown’s responsibility to support all students in the spirit of growing globalization. “I’m writing today to express the university’s support for undocumented students in our Georgetown community,” Olson wrote in an email to students. “As a Catholic and Jesuit institution, we have a unique responsibility to welcome and support all of our students, See UNDOCUMENTED, A6

COURTESY HOYAS FOR IMMIGRANT RIGHTS

Following advocacy by groups such as Hoyas for Immigrant Rights, the university has launched a website for undocumented students.

ILLUSTRATION BY HAILEY MAHER/THE HOYA

The Georgetown University Student Association Finance and Appropriations Committee’s student activities budget for the fiscal year 2017 was passed by the GUSA senate Sunday.

Activities Budget Passes

GUSA Fin/App Committee cuts budget of CSJ, GPB jack lynch

Hoya Staff Writer

The Center for Social Justice and the Georgetown Program Board saw their funding cut by $12,000 each in the Georgetown University Student Association Finance and Appropriations Committee’s student activities budget for fiscal year 2017. Passed by the GUSA senate on Sunday, the budget also included increases for the club sports budget, the Media Board, the Georgetown University Lecture Fund and the Performing Arts Advisory Council. The Fin/App committee allotted $998,202 from the Student Activities Fee for the 2017 fiscal year. Requests from the 14 committees and student groups totaled $1,607,311. Fin/App Chair Betsy Johnson (COL ’16) said the decrease to the CSJ’s allocation comes

Albright Discusses Religion Kshithij Shrinath Hoya Staff Writer

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright explored the integral role of religion in foreign affairs — both as a positive force for peace and as a contributor to violence around the world — in her keynote address at the 10th anniversary celebration of the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs in Gaston Hall on Thursday. Albright’s speech kicked off the celebration, a two-day affair entitled “Rethinking Religion and World Affairs,” comprised of panel discussions around the intersection of religious understanding and international affairs. The symposium reflects the work of the center, which was founded in 2006 by a donation from William R. Berkley partly in response to the 9/11 attacks. According to Vice President for Global Engagement and Berkley Center Director Thomas Banchoff, who introduced Thursday’s event, the center believes that a greater emphasis on religion can help academics, policymakers and civil society better understand the violence and hope that arise in response to religion. “We’ve sought to address religion’s complex role in the world and, over the long term, to advance peace in practice,” Banchoff said. “This critical work thrives here at Georgetown … in our mission as a global university committed to the global common good.” University President John J. DeGioia echoed Banchoff after his introduction, lauding the Berkley Center’s work as critical to the spirit that animates the university. “This ethos come[s] alive in our community with our identity as a Catholic and Jesuit institution and in our commitment to genuine dialogue, to the exchange of

in large part from Fin/App’s concern over the use of Student Activities Fee funds to financially support international travel scholarships. In its official budget report, Fin/ App urged CSJ Advisory Board for Student Organizations to

“We feel that we could have done a lot with that money to cater to a wide audience.”

JOSH KANG (col ’16) Chair, Georgetown Program Board

cut or reduce international travel scholarships, or find a different way to fund international ventures. “In my opinion and the opinion of a lot of people on

the committee, doing an alternative break program in a different country is not that much better of an experience than doing it here [in the U.S.],” Johnson said. “But obviously it is up to them how to spend their money.” CSJ ABSO Chair Antara Joardar (SFS ’16) said that while the CSJ ABSO understands and appreciates the Fin/App Committee’s input, she stands by the importance of international travel scholarships. “Given growing student demand for such experiences, we strongly believe that providing scholarships is important in giving students, regardless of financial situation, the opportunity to have an international service experience,” Joardar wrote in an email to The Hoya. The committee had originally cut $17,000 from GPB’s See BUDGET, A6

Bowser Signs North Carolina Travel Ban aly pachter and matthew riley Hoya Staff Writers

Washington, D.C. legislators and Mayor Muriel Bowser (D) have introduced legislation banning city-funded travel to states with laws discriminating against LGBTQ individuals. Bowser signed an order March 31 prohibiting the official travel of city employees to North Carolina in response to the state’s Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act, which went into effect April 1 and requires transgender people to use public restroom facilities corresponding with the gender stated on their

birth certificates. Additionally, the law, also known as House Bill 2, prevents local municipalities from implementing their own regulations prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in public spaces. North Carolina Gov. Pat McCrory (R) signed the act after North Carolina Republican legislators — who comprise a majority of the state’s general assembly — unveiled the bill March 23. In a press statement released March 23, McCrory explained his decision to enact the legislation in response to an ordinance See TRAVEL, A6

FEATURED NAAZ MODAN/THE HOYA

Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright gave the keynote address at the 10th anniversary celebration for the Berkley Center. ideas especially with those different than our own and to the idea that we arrive closer to the truth when we presume the best in one another,” DeGioia said. Through this frame, DeGioia said there was “no one better” to discuss the role of religion in global affairs than Albright, who has been a part of the Georgetown community since 1982 in various professorships and who, in 2006, published “The Mighty and the Almighty,” a book that directly confronts the intersection of religion and international affairs. Albright began her speech by tracing the history of religion in international relations theory, noting that secularism was domi-

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nant throughout the Cold War. An emphasis on realism and rational decision making shunned religious warfare as a remnant of the past. “It’s not that religion was forgotten as much as it was compartmentalized,” Albright said. “It was personal, not public, and local, not global.” Yet, beginning in the 1970s with the Iranian Revolution, followed by Afghanistan in the 1980s and the Balkans in the 1990s, religion became a resurgent feature of international affairs. This required policymakers to understand religion to comprehend the nuances of See ALBRIGHT, A6 Published Tuesdays and Fridays

NEWS Addressing Austin Tice Case Panelists discussed the disappearance of journalist Austin Tice (SFS ’02). A4

NEWS

Sports

GSP Seeks Endowment In order to secure resources for the future, GSP is seeking a $25 million endowment. A5

Stellar Freshmen The tennis team’s freshman class has been crucial to the program’s success. B10

NEWS

Sports

Students Join CGI U Thirteen Georgetown students joined the ninth Clinton Global Initiative University. A5

Crucial Matchup The men’s lacrosse team aims to break its losing skid against Providence. B10

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