GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY’S NEWSPAPER OF RECORD SINCE 1920 thehoya.com
Georgetown University • Washington, D.C. Vol. 96, No. 42, © 2015
FridAY, MARCH 27, 2015
SEX & GEORGETOWN
A special pullout issue explores the sexual health and history of Hoyas, often contentious topics.
COMMENTARY CAPS impedes a student’s struggle with mental health, after two years.
UNCONVENTIONAL ROLE One men’s soccer player plays a special role for women’s basketball.
OPINION, A3
SPORTS, A10
THE GUIDE
SFS Graduates Increasingly Shun Public Service Owen Eagan
of 2014. The percentages were drawn from the 80 percent of respondents who are currently employed. Despite the longstanding connotaSFS Associate Dean Emily Zenick tion of the School of Foreign Service said that the employment statistics do with the pursuit of careers in public not worry the school’s administration. service, recent statistics reveal that “I don’t see anything as worrionly a small percentage of SFS stu- some, about the trends,” Zenick said. dents enter the public sector after “Students make all kinds of choices graduation. on what they should do after graduaAmong SFS graduates in the Class tion, and I respect that.” of 2014 who participated in the CawZenick said that these numbers ley Career Edudo not represent cation Center’s “If you would look even two or total fallout in First Destination three years out, I think that you the long-term Report poll, only would see a lot more students in involvement of 11 percent found SFS alumni in jobs in nonprofit these fields of public service, of public service, and public ser- government, of education.” citing that many vice work, and graduates evenEMILY ZENICK only 6 percent tually transfer SFS Associate Dean held positions in to public service government. By contrast, 25 percent work later in their careers. of graduates pursued employment in “I don’t think that we can really consulting services, while 15 percent see the trajectory until we see some pursued the financial sector. Two long-term data, and all we have is anhundred and sixty-nine out of 356 ecdotal evidence from my colleagues SFS graduating students responded and from keeping in touch with to the survey. alumni,” Zenick said. “If you would The Cawley Career Education Cen- look even two or three years out, I ter compiled these statistics with input from 76 percent of the SFS Class See CAREERS, A6
Hoya Staff Writer
FILE PHOTO: ALEXANDER BROWN/THE HOYA
Former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates (GRD ’74) urged School of Foreign Service graduates to buck trends and embrace public service in his May commencement address to the Class of 2014.
Bylines From the Front Lines NYT reporters deliver inaugural journalism program lecture Emma Rizk
Hoya Staff Writer
FILE PHOTO: MICHELLE XU/THE HOYA
MPD faces criticism for subpar relations with minority communities. City activists cited D.C. Ferguson protests, pictured.
City Activists Decry MPD Practices Matthew Larson Hoya Staff Writer
The Metropolitan Police Department received criticism from city activists for maintaining poor relationships with black and LGBTQ communities in Washington, D.C., during its annual public oversight hearing March 8. The hearing, held in front of the D.C. Council’s Committee on the Judiciary, included extensive testimony from MPD Chief of Po-
lice Cathy Lanier, who noted a 9 percent drop in violent crime around the city and a steady rate of homicide over the past two years. There were 105 homicides in 2014 and 104 in 2013. Representatives from the D.C. Ferguson campaign, a grassroots movement formed by members of the National Black United Front and the Act Now to Stop War and End Racism Coalition, See HEARING, A6
Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times journalists C.J. Chivers and Tyler Hicks discussed their experiences as war reporters in Ukraine, Syria and on other fronts. The Wednesday night conversation, held in the Intercultural Center Auditorium, was the inaugural event in the Georgetown journalism program’s Salim El-Lozi Lecture Series. The lecture series honors the memory of El-Lozi, a Lebanese political journalist who was kidnapped and murdered in 1980 for voicing his criticism of the Syrian occupation of Lebanon, and Libya’s Muammar al-Gaddafi. Each lecture to follow in the series will focus on international freedom of the press and the First Amendment. Chivers, who served in the U.S. Marine Corps after graduating college in 1987, began reporting in 1995. He has reported as a foreign correspondent from Israel, Afghanistan, Iraq, Russia and Uzbekistan. Hicks is a photojournalist who is currently based in Kenya but has covered news in Syria, Libya, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Chechnya, among others since 1992. The event was moderated by Alex Horton (COL ’14), a lecturer in the journalism program, who began by asking Chivers and Hicks about
SOPHIE FAABORG-ANDERSEN/THE HOYA
New York Times reporters C.J. Chivers, left, and Tyler Hicks featured in the inaugural Salim El-Lozi Lecture, discussing war reporting. their understanding of journalistic ethics in a war zone. Chivers said that he and Hicks avoided interfering with the squads that took them into the field, and that he
was constantly concerned that his curiosity might endanger the lives of others. “From the moment you’ve divertSee LECTURE, A6
FEATURED
THE GUIDE: SEX ISSUE NEWS Rare Books
Lauinger Library’s Booth Family Center for Special Collections reopens. A4
NEWS #FreeAustinTice
Sports Hunting for Upsets
GUIDE Killer Joe
MULTIMEDIA On Hookups
The campaign to free the imprisoned reporter, a graduate, comes to campus. A5
DANIEL SMITH/THE HOYA
From the Friday tabling of H*yas for Choice and Vita Saxa to Friday night parties to contraception vending bans, sex is everywhere on campus — and nowhere. This special nine-page issue covers the sexual lifestyle of Georgetown students: health, taboos, LGBTQ ... and bondage. THE GUIDE, B SECTION Newsroom: (202) 687-3415 Business: (202) 687-3947
Published Tuesdays and Fridays
Nomadic Theatre and Mask and Bauble’s co-production shocks and enthralls. thehoya.com
Men’s lacrosse heads to Denver to face the reigning NBA champion. A10
Students share their definitions of the nebulous and ubiquitous term. thehoya.com
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