GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 97, No. 11, © 2015
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2015
CRAFTING GEORGETOWN
From sports to art to leisure, students hone their respective talents, captured in this photo essay.
EDITORIAL Reducing GUPD Public Safety Alerts creates a false sense of security.
MENTAL HEALTH OPEN FORUM A spike in CAPS visits elicited administration attention Monday.
OPINION, A2
NEWS, A7
GUIDE, B1
Donation funds Multi-Sport Facility renovations, leadership program
JULIA ANASTOS/THE HOYA
Athletics Receives Unprecedented $50M Donation Toby Hung
Hoya Staff Writer
Georgetown received a $50 million gift — the second-largest donation in the university’s history — to bolster its athletics leadership program and fund renovations for Multi-Sport Facility, announced Tuesday. The gift, which came more than a month after the university’s capital campaign passed its goal of $1.5 bil-
lion, was contributed by Peter and Susan Cooper of Newport Beach, Calif., the parents of five alumni. University President John J. DeGioia announced the donation in a university-wide email Tuesday evening. “The Coopers’ investment in our community will allow us to strengthen opportunities for students engaged in intercollegiate athletics and will help to prepare them
for leadership throughout their lives,” DeGioia wrote. It is the largest donation made in the history of the university’s athletics program, and the second-largest donation overall, surpassed only by Frank McCourt Jr.’s (CAS ’75) $100 million gift to endow the McCourt School of Public Policy in 2013. With this donation, the Hoyas Lead program will be renamed the Cooper Athletics Leadership
Program, and Multi-Sport Facility, scheduled for renovation in 12 to 18 months, will be renamed Cooper Field. The donation will expand the athletics leadership program, founded three years ago as an initiative to provide leadership training to Georgetown’s 750 student-athletes through an academic framework. The original program was also entirely funded by an earlier donation
Grant Funds MPD Body Cameras
GUIDE Improving Over Time
Hoya Staff Writer
The United States Justice Department awarded Washington, D.C., $1 million to expand its Body Worn Cameras program for Metropolitan Police Department officers Sept. 21, which will require that the city establish an implementation plan and training policy for cameras, as a response to police violence nationwide.
LaTOYA FOSTER Senior Communications Officer, D.C. Mayor’s Office
The additional funding, combined with the money allocated to the program in the mayor’s budget, will be enough to provide for 2,800 cameras. Currently, officers who have daily interaction with community members in the fifth and seventh police districts use 400 body-worn cameras, which were purchased prior to this grant. There are more than 4,000 officers total in the department. “Body-worn cameras increase accountability, improve police services and strengthen policy-community relations,” Mayor Muriel Bowser said in a press release announcing the grant Sept. 25. “This grant sends a strong message that we are on the right track.” In total, the Justice Department awarded 73 grants worth $23 million to cities nationwide to expand the usage of bodyworn cameras and explore their potential See CAMERAS, A6
See DONATION, A6
FEATURED
Matthew Larson
“It’s increasing accountability, strengthening relations and improving services for our MPD officers.”
from the Coopers. The university began discussing possible philanthropic projects with the Coopers five years ago. Peter Cooper was previously a member of the university’s board of directors from 2001 to 2006 and from 2007 to 2013, serving as the chairman of the investment subcommittee. Since then, the Coopers have contributed to the
The Georgetown Improv Association celebrates its 20th anniversary with a gala. B1
MOLLY COOKE FOR THE HOYA
Georgetown Against Gun Violence President Emma Iannini (SFS ’16), center, addresses Tuesday’s Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence and Generation Progress rally.
GAGV Rallies on Capitol Hill Molly Cooke
Special to The Hoya
Four members of Georgetown Against Gun Violence participated in a rally and press conference co-sponsored by the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence and Generation Progress on the Capitol’s West Lawn on Oct. 6. GAGV co-founder Sarah Clements (COL ’18) of Newtown, Conn., said the rally was a reaction to last week’s shooting at Umpqua Community College in Roseburg, Ore., that killed nine people Oct. 1. “We’re fed up,” Clements said. “We’re tired of our communities being the targets and the reason why is seeing the impact of Congress’ inaction on this issue for decades and decades. They have hidden behind the gun lobby and
Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947
I feel the tide’s changing. The media’s response is changing. Journalists are fed up with covering these incidents over and over again and the public is turning away from the gun lobby, turning away from their talking points, and we’re finally winning this thing.”
“It wants constant attention if you want the Congress to do something.” ElEANOR HOLMES-NORTON Delegate (D-D.C.) House of Representatives
The rally drew a crowd of around 50 people, including students from The George Washington University and American University and cul-
Published Tuesdays and Fridays
minated in a letter delivery to Speaker of the House John Boehner’s office. GAGV, which has previously co-hosted events with the Brady Campaign, aims to promote gun-sense issue voting among youth through activism on campus. The organization held a candlelight vigil with Campus Ministry for the victims in Oregon in Dahlgren Quadrangle the evening of Oct. 1. Moving forward, GAGV members are using #StudentsRising on social media to draw attention to the issue. Members were invited to participate in the rally by an American University student working on the Brady Campaign. There is currently a legislative push for the expansion of
NEWS Leo’s Livens Up
As Aramark’s contract comes up for renewal, the dining hall has pulled out new stops. A5
OPINION Romania, Remembered
Today, after communism, it is corruption that erodes democracy in Romania. A3
Sports Conference Conquerors
The women’s soccer team will aim to improve to 4-0 in Big East play Sunday. B10
See RALLY, A6 Send story ideas and tips to news@thehoya.com