GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 97, No. 9, © 2015
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2015
FALL FASHION
This fall’s trends are inspired by crisp, clean-cut menswear and sleek, tailored silhouettes.
EDITORIAL The administration must take efforts to better support disabled students.
GUSA SENATE 46 students vied for GUSA senate, but some districts remained empty.
OPINION, A2
NEWS, A5
TABLOID
Low-Income Accessibility Falters Aly Pachter
Special to The Hoya
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
Nobel Prize winner George Akerlof, an economics professor, released a new book.
Akerlof Co-Authors New Book
Nobel Prize-winning faculty member discusses markets
Georgetown dropped in The New York Times’ rankings of colleges doing the most for low-income students, falling from 46th to 88th among the 179 schools on the list, released Sept. 16. Launched in 2014 by The Upshot, the newspaper’s politics, policy and economic analysis section, the rankings are based on the number of students who receive federal Pell Grants, the graduation rates of those students and the average tuition cost for low- and middle-income students. Pell Grants typically go to families making less than $70,000 a year.
$84K endowment per student rate. In the second year of the rankings, The Upshot included colleges with a five-year graduation rate of 75 percent or higher, whereas the cutoff last year only applied to the four-year graduation rate,
including only 90 schools versus this year’s total of 179. Each school is given a College Access Index, a figure derived from the number of Pell graduates and the net price for middle-income students. A college with an average
score based on these two factors would receive a score of one. Scores of higher than one indicate that a school exerts aboveaverage effort in these areas, See SOCIOECONOMICS, A6
“That’s the most difficult part of our ability to compete out there — the fact that we are not as generous as many of our competitors are in financial aid.” CHARLES DEACON Dean, Undergraduate Admissions
For Georgetown, the rankings reveal the Pell Grant share is 12, the net price for middle-income students is $16K and there is an
Jesse Jacobs
Special to The Hoya
George Akerlof, an economics professor at the McCourt School of Public Policy, released “Phishing for Phools,” co-written with Robert Shiller of Yale University, Sept. 22. The co-recipient of the 2001 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences, Akerlof served as a visiting scholar at the International Monetary Fund from 2010 to 2014. His career in teaching began in 1978, and he taught at the London School of Economics and the University of California, Berkeley before joining Georgetown’s faculty last year. In his book, Akerlof argues against the idea that economic markets solely provide citizens with material well-being and can actually harm more than help. “Phishing for Phools” is Akerlof’s second collaboration with Shiller, after 2009’s “Animal Spirits,” which also examined economic policy making, but on a macro level. In an exclusive interview with The Hoya, Akerlof discussed the economic ideas in his new book and how his experience in academia influenced his work.
PLAYERS IN PEACE
Chan Outlines Responsibility Toby Hung
Hoya Staff Writer
What are the main ideas of your book and what are you trying to convey? Economics is mainly about equilibrium. SOPHIE FAABORG ANDERSEN/THE HOYA
See AKERLOF, A6
Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright discussed the role of women in peacekeeping efforts in Gaston Hall on Wednesday.
Dining With a Strange Twist Returns Lisa Burgoa
Special to The Hoya
When Janine Karo (COL ’19) walked into her host’s apartment in Arlington, Va., for dinner Sunday evening, she did not have the faintest idea of what to expect.
Over a meal of pasta, she exchanged pleasantries with her host, an alumna interning at the Department of Justice, and six complete strangers from the Georgetown community: a graduate student, a sophomore Arabic major, two selfproclaimed theater geeks and a
Dinner with 7 Strangers, an initiative that coordinates dinners for members of the Georgetown community, returned to campus this semester. Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947
freshman who had graduated high school in Hong Kong. By the time the guests were presented with a dessert of homemade brownies and pumpkin spice macarons, Karo felt at ease. The small talk had dissipated and evolved into peals of laughter over an impersonation of one guest’s professor’s French accent, gripes about the bureaucracy behind student employment and speculation about who was behind Dinner With 7 Strangers, the secretive organization that had brought them all together. While the current coordinators of DW7S maintain their anonymity, the initiative, which organizes dinners for six guests and a host who sign up through its website, has nonetheless gained traction since it first launched its campaign in late February through Facebook and fliers across campus. DW7S relaunched this year, with invitations to sign up for a dinner put up around campus. Last semester alone, the coordinators organized three dinners per day at its peak to accommodate more than 500 sign-ups from Georgetown students, faculty and staff. In May, The Washington Post featured
World Health Organization Director General Margaret Chan discussed the responsibility of governments and international organizations to address global health issues Friday in Gaston Hall at the second Global Futures Initiative lecture of this semester. The event, entitled “Governance, Global Health, 21st Century Challenges,” continued the semester’s series topic of the future of global governance. Vice President for Global Engagement Thomas Ban-
choff, who leads the Global Futures Initiative, began the event by connecting the topic of the lecture to the Sustainable Development Goals approved by the United Nations last weekend. “Health connects to so many of the other goals, ranging from the elimination of poverty to the achievement of gender equality,” Banchoff said. “They are issues with a strong justice dimension that involve governance challenges at the local, national and international levels.” University President John See CHAN, A6
FEATURED
s
MULTIMEDIA Autumn Mode
Go behind the scenes219 of the 2015 fall fashion issue and meet the models. thehoya.com
NEWS Planned Parenthood
Students in College Democrats held a rally in support of the organization. A5
Sports Road Warriors
Georgetown’s football team travels to Cambridge to face undefeated Harvard. A10
OPINION A Cultural Campus
Our intersectional campus must embrace South Asian cultures and traditions. A3
NEWS Taste of Georgetown
Numerous local eateries will present their fare at the 22nd annual festival this weekend. A5
OPINION Taking Action
The creation of a working group should not delay a name change for Mulledy Hall. A3
See DINNER, A6 Published Tuesdays and Fridays
Send story ideas and tips to news@thehoya.com