GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 33, © 2015
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2015
SISTER ACT
Daphne and Rachel Corboz were selected to train with the U.S. national women’s soccer teams.
COMMENTARY A Navy ROTC student reflects on an unorthodox college career.
WATER OUTAGE Half of campus will be without water from 10 p.m. tonight until 5 a.m.
OPINION, A3
NEWS, A4
SPORTS, A10
Charitable Donations Peak With $236M, university records highest level of giving CHARLOTTE ALLEN Hoya Staff Writer
Last year marked the highest charitable donations total given to Georgetown University, mirroring a national trend of increased alumni giving to alma maters. In the 2014 fiscal year, which ran from July 2013 to June 2014,
Georgetown raised $236 million in donations, $40 million more than the previous record total of $189 million in fiscal year 2013. The period was highlighted by the $100 million donation by Frank McCourt Jr. (CAS ’75) to create the McCourt School of Public Policy in September 2013. The donation was the largest received by George-
DONATIONS SINCE 2012 FY14 DONATIONS ($236 MILLION)
FY13 DONATIONS ($189 MILLION)
FY12 DONATIONS ($179 MILLION)
= $50 MILLION
SHANNON HOU/THE HOYA
Fiscal year 2014 saw record donations for Georgetown, bolstered by the endowment for the McCourt School and TAC gifts.
town. “We believe that this marks a transition point, and helps to send a signal that Georgetown is continuing to progress and is maturing into an organization that fundraises and receives support from donors that is consistent with both our peer group and our aspirational peer group,” Vice President for Advancement R. Bartley Moore (SFS ’87) said. Ongoing fundraising for fiscal year 2015, which began in July 2014, has solicited $72.78 million as of the end of December. The Georgetown increase reflects a nationwide increase in charitable giving to colleges and universities, which reached a record high in 2014 for the second year in a row, according to a Jan. 28 report in The Chronicle of Higher Education. Giving across the United States totaled $37.45 billion in 2014, a 10.8 percent increase from 2013 and the highest amount that has been recorded since the survey started in 1957. The Chronicle attributed the increase to an explosion of wealth, rather than an increase in income. According to Senior Director of Campaign Management and Donor Relations Stephanie Jacobson-Landon, trends in charitable giving strongly correlate with the state of the economy and the stock market — the increases have occurred since the end of the recession. “It really does map closely to the
FILE PHOTO: HUNTER MAIN/THE HOYA
Rhino Bar & Pumphouse, a Georgetown hotspot, will shutter its doors Feb. 28, a result of increased rents, and will not relocate.
Rhino Closes, Ending 63-Year Bar Legacy KRISTEN FEDOR Hoya Staff Writer
Rhino Bar & Pumphouse, the popular M Street sports bar, will be closing its doors Feb. 28. Manager George Kennedy confirmed Rhino is not renewing its lease when it expires at the end of the month, citing the rising rent cost as reason for the closure. The bar is owned by restauranteur Britt Swan. “The landlords decided to rent it out to somebody else,” he said. “They were asking for more than we could afford. They found someone that was willing to pay that amount.”
See DONATIONS, A6
Kennedy also said the bar is not looking to relocate. “This is the end of the establishment,” he said. Rhino has been an oft-frequented spot by Georgetown students since its opening in 1998. 3295 M St., where Rhino is housed, has been home to a bar since the Shamrock opened in 1952. After the Shamrock’s closure in 1972, Winstons Bar occupied the location until Rhino’s entrance near the end of the millennium. Kennedy said that a clothing store would take the location of the establishment but did not know any addiSee PUMPHOUSE, A6
2015 EXECUTIVE ELECTIONS
Unconventional Trio Serves as Watchdog MARGARET HEFTLER Hoya Staff Writer
As the five tickets campaign for the Georgetown University Student Association executive position, hundreds of fliers and social media blasts will go up, seemingly countless meet-and-greets will be held and thousands of doors will be knocked on. Three election commissioners — Pavan Rajgopal (SFS ’14), Alden Fletcher (SFS ’17) and Grady Willard (SFS ’18) — are responsible for making sure these campaign activities all adhere to standards. According to his LinkedIn account, Rajgopal graduated from Georgetown in 2014, yet he remains an election commissioner. The GUSA Election Commission enforces all GUSA bylaws during elections and audits the campaigns upon suspicion of broken
rules. “[The Election Commission members] are supposed to audit the candidates’ campaigns and make sure they’re within their spending limits, not fliering in places they’re not supposed to be. And if they find a candidate has violated those regulations, they are then supposed to issue sanctions,” GUSA Constitutional Council Chief Justice Josh Shinbrot (COL ’16) said. The GUSA Constitutional Council oversees and regulates the Election Commission to ensure fair elections and is composed of three justices, who are charged with interpreting the bylaws and regulations of GUSA. These justices are appointed by the GUSA president and are tenured for the length of their undergraduate years. The ConstiSee COMMISSION, A6
Next Exec Key to 2018 CampusPlan
RELATED
ALICIA CHE
Special to The Hoya
The next Georgetown University Student Association executive, who will be elected next week, will play an important role in the upcoming negotiations for the 2018 Campus Plan. The university and the neighboring community will negotiate to solidify plans for the next 20 years of construction and maintenance around campus as part of the 2018 Campus Plan. Contentious negotiations for the 2010 Campus Plan required the university to house more students on campus, necessitating extensive construction projects around campus. According to Associate Vice President for Community Engagement and Strategic Initiatives Lauralyn Lee, who heads the Office of Community Engagement, the negotiation process has already commenced, and the
FILE PHOTO: ARIEL POURMORADY/THE HOYA
The five tickets’ respective platforms, which vary drastically in length and focus, are broken down. See A5 In a change from previous years, no candidates in this year’s race are members of secret societies. See A5
See ENGAGEMENT, A6
FEATURED NEWS NAIMUN LII
NEWS Spirit of Georgetown
Prospective applicants to the Spirit of Georgetown LLC can take tours of the dormitory. A4
OPINION Editorial ISABEL BINAMIRA/THE HOYA
Alden Fletcher (SFS ’17), left, and Grady Willard (SFS ’18) are new to the commission; third commissioner Pavan Rajgopal (SFS ’14) has graduated. Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947
The reformed study abroad housing policy leaves sophomores in the dark. A2 Published Tuesdays and Fridays Published Tuesdays and Fridays
This year’s edition of the high school Model United Nations is the biggest yet. A7
SPORTS Humbled Hoyas
Losing three of its last four, men’s basketball hopes to get back on track today. A10
MULTIMEDIA Campaigns on Camera
Stay abreast of the 2015 GUSA executive race with The Hoya’s video series. thehoya.com
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