Georgetown University

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Georgetown University

Motto Utraque Unum
("Both into One" [1])
Established January 23, 1789[1]
Type Private
Religious Affiliation Roman Catholic (Jesuit)
Endowment $951 million[2]
Chairman Edmond D. Villani
President John J. DeGioia
Vice-President Todd A. Olson
Provost James J. O'Donnell
Registrar John Q. Pierce IV
Faculty 1,653[3]
Students 14,148[3]
Undergraduates 6,853[3]
Postgraduates 7,295[3]
Location Washington, D.C., 20057, USA (38°54′26″N, 77°4′22″W)
Address 37th and O Streets, NW
Telephone (202) 687-0100
Campus Urban, 104 acres[3]
Conference Big East; Patriot League (football)
Sports 27 varsity teams
Colors Blue and Gray            
Nickname Hoyas
Mascot
Georgetown University Athletics Logo
Jack the Bulldog
Fight song There Goes Old Georgetown
Website www.georgetown.edu
Georgetown University Logo

Coordinates: 38°54′26″N, 77°4′22″W Georgetown University, incorporated as the The President and Directors of the College of Georgetown, is a private university in the United States, located in Georgetown, a historic neighborhood of Washington, D.C. With roots extending back to March 25, 1634 and founded in its current form on January 23, 1789 by Father John Carroll, it is both the oldest Roman Catholic and oldest Jesuit university in the United States, and was the first in the United States to receive a charter from the United States Congress.[4]

It is a member institution of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities. The university has 6,853 full-time and part-time undergraduate students at four schools, 4,490 full-time and part-time graduate students on the Main Campus, 2,017 students at the Law Center and 788 students in the School of Medicine.[3] The university employs approximately 1,202 full-time and 451 part-time faculty members across its three campuses.[3] The University is especially noted for its programs in international relations,[5] law and medicine as well as for its professors and influence on political thought.

Contents

[edit] History

See also: Founding of Georgetown University
Statue of John Carroll in the center of campus
Statue of John Carroll in the center of campus

The arrival in 1634 of the first permanent Jesuits, and previous establishments in 1640 and 1677 set the precedence of Jesuit education in Maryland, and enabled the founding of a school at Georgetown by January 1789. In that year, Bishop John Carroll obtained the property on which Georgetown University and Georgetown Visitation are now built. Instruction began 1792 with William Gaston. In 1796, Louis William Valentine Dubourg, S.S., arrived and became president of the university. He would later become the first bishop of the Louisiana Territory. In 1798, Bishop Carroll called upon Father (later Archbishop) Leonard Neale to be president of the college at Georgetown. He acted in the dual capacity of president and tutor for several years and under his guidance the institution was developed from an academy into a college in 1801. Bishop Carroll had some time previous to this applied to Rome to name Father Neale as his co-adjutor. He was appointed by Bishop Carroll in 1800, but remained as President of Georgetown until 1806 when he was succeeded by the Rev. Father Molyneux. In 1809, his brother, Francis Neale, became president of Georgetown College.

Archbishop Leonard Neale overlooking Georgetown College in 1798
Archbishop Leonard Neale overlooking Georgetown College in 1798

Georgetown College suffered from some financial strain in its early years, but was bolstered when the Society of Jesus was fully restored in 1814, and Georgetown received a federal charter in 1815. The school's first two graduates, a pair of brothers from New York named Charles and George Dinnies, were awarded the degree of bachelor of arts two years later. The Medical School was founded in 1851, and the Law Department (now the Law Center) in 1870.[6] Georgetown's Observatory, completed in 1844, was used in 1846 to determine the latitude and longitude of Washington, D.C., which was the first such calculation for the nation’s capital.[7]

The school was greatly affected during the U.S. Civil War, as most of the students left to fight for both sides. By the time of President Abraham Lincoln's May 1861 visit to campus, 1,400 Union Army troops were stationed in temporary quarters there. Only seven students graduated in 1869, down from over 300 a decade prior. After the war, Georgetown College Boat Club, the school's rowing team, adopted blue and gray as its colors to signify the peaceful unity between students from the North and those from the South. Subsequently these colors were adopted as the official school colors. The school did not begin to recover from the war until the presidency of Reverend Patrick Healy, S.J. (1874-1881). Healy, the first acknowledged African-American to head an American university, is credited with reforming the undergraduate curriculum and the Medical and Law programs, as well as creating the Alumni Association.

Stained glass image of the Georgetown seal used from 1844-1977
Stained glass image of the Georgetown seal used from 1844-1977

In addition to the liberal arts division, previously the College of Arts and Sciences and now known as the Georgetown College, Georgetown University has eight other divisions. The undergraduate School of Nursing was founded in 1903. In 1999, it added three other health related majors and added "Health Studies" to its name to become the School of Nursing & Health Studies. The Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service (SFS) was founded in 1919 by Father Edmund A. Walsh, S.J., in response to the need for institutions to train American youth for leadership in foreign commerce and diplomacy. The School of Business Administration was created out of the SFS in 1955. It was renamed for Robert E. McDonough in 1999 and is now the McDonough School of Business offering both undergraduate and MBA degrees. The graduate programs are the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the Law Center, the School of Medicine, the School of Continuing Studies, and the Center for Professional Development.

In December 2003, Georgetown completed its Third Century Campaign, joining only a handful of universities worldwide to raise at least $1 billion for financial aid, academic chair endowment, and new capital projects.

[edit] People

The spires of Georgetown University rise above the Potomac
The spires of Georgetown University rise above the Potomac
See also: List of Presidents of Georgetown University

[edit] Faculty

For a listing of some of the recent faculty of note, see Category:Georgetown University faculty

The Georgetown University faculty includes leading academics and a number of notable political and business leaders. The current faculty includes former President of the American Philological Association James J. O'Donnell, world-renowned Teilhard scholar Thomas M. King, S.J., leading social activist Sam Marullo, former U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator Andrew Natsios, former CIA director George Tenet, former National Security Advisor Anthony Lake, former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, former US Senator and Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle, former Ambassador-at-Large Robert L. Gallucci, former President of the Government of Spain José María Aznar, Public Health Advisor of the World Bank Bernard Liese, former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith, and former President of Poland Aleksander Kwaśniewski. Notable faculty of Georgetown's past include Secretary of State and National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger, Jan Karski, William Boyd-Carpenter, Robert Drinan, Ambassador Jean Kirkpatrick and Carroll Quigley.

[edit] Alumni

For a comprehensive list of alumni, see the list of notable Georgetown University alumni.

Bill Clinton, class of 1968
Bill Clinton, class of 1968

Besides numerous members of the United States Congress and the senior diplomatic corps, many Heads of state, notably Bill Clinton, former President of the United States, are alumni. Georgetown graduates have served at the head of such diverse and important institutions as the Central Intelligence Agency, AFL-CIO, the United States Marine Corps, the U.S. Department of State, the National Football League, the University of Illinois, the Catholic Archdiocese of New York, Texas A&M University, the American Medical Association, the Internal Revenue Service, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the U.S. Department of Defense, the Conservative Party of Canada, the United States Navy and the Peace Corps. Major corporations run by graduates include Citigroup, Investor AB and Lucent Technologies. Major regulatory bodies such as the Federal Communications Commission, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board have had Georgetown alumni at the helm in recent years. In any election cycle, a number of state governors will, generally, hold Georgetown degrees (Indiana and New Hampshire elected graduates in 2004, and graduates stood for election in Alabama, Pennsylvania and New Jersey in the immediate prior cycles). Both the majority leader of the U.S. House and the majority whip of the U.S. Senate in the 110th Congress are alumni.

In the international military arena, both the current head of the U.S. Multinational Force in Iraq and the Supreme Commander of NATO are alumni from Georgetown's School of Foreign Service, while the current Secretary of Defense is an alumnus of Georgetown's graduate school. In law, both the Solicitor General of the United States and a current Associate Justice of the US Supreme Court received their undergraduate degrees at Georgetown.

Two of the fifteen most powerful women in the world as rated by Forbes magazine in 2005, (Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, the President of the Philippines, and Patricia Russo, the Chair of Lucent Technologies) are alumnae of the university. The only current female owner of a major league baseball team is Jamie McCourt, the President of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Vice Admiral Ann E. Rondeau (G 1982) is the highest ranking woman in the United States Navy.

[edit] Speakers and visitors

Gaston Hall is host to many notable speakers
Gaston Hall is host to many notable speakers

Those who have visited recently include former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan; President Bill Clinton; British Prime Minister Tony Blair; Prince Charles the Prince of Wales; former Secretary of State Colin Powell; Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice; Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia; Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg;Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury; Nigerian Cardinal Francis Arinze; opera singer Plácido Domingo; Noam Chomsky; Sam Donaldson; many senators and former senators, including John Kerry, Bob Dole, Joe Lieberman, Rick Santorum, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton; current Democratic National Committee head Howard Dean; many ambassadors, both US and foreign, including those from China and Syria; and many former presidents, including former presidents of Spain, Italy, Poland, the Dominican Republic, Nigeria, and Brazil. Recent speakers have included the prime minister of Turkey, Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, former prime minister of Norway Kjell Magne Bondevik, President Pervez Musharraf, President of Pakistan; President Hamid Karzai, President of Afghanistan; Madeleine Albright (who is also a professor), Robin Williams, Mad Money host Jim Cramer, and Hardball's Chris Matthews.

[edit] Campus

The Dahlgren Quadrangle
The Dahlgren Quadrangle

Georgetown University's main campus and Medical School campus are situated on an area of higher elevation above the Potomac River, overlooking Washington, DC and northern Virginia. The campuses, employing collegiate Gothic architecture and Georgian brick architecture, include fountains, a cemetery, large clusters of flowers, groves of mature trees, and open quadrangles. Georgetown Visitation is located on land adjoining the main campus.[8]

The Main Campus is approximately two miles from the White House, and four miles from the United States Capitol building. The main gates, known as the Healy Gates, are located at the intersection of 37th and O Streets, NW. A majority of undergraduates live on campus in several dormitories and apartment complexes, though a minority lives off-campus in the surrounding neighborhoods—Georgetown to the east and Burleith to the north—and a few reside further away. On-campus housing is not available for graduate students, though many of the University's Hall Directors and Area Coordinators attend graduate level courses.

[edit] Main campus

The Main Campus, primary center of Georgetown student life and intellectual activity, is just over 100 acres (400,000 m²) in size. The University counts over 58 buildings, student residences capable of accommodating approximately 80% of the student body, and various athletic facilities. The school's first performing arts center was completed in November 2005, while longer-term projects include a self-contained Business School campus, the construction of a unified sciences center, and expanded athletic facilities.

[edit] Quadrangles

The campus is traditionally centered on Dalgren Quadrangle, though Red Square has replaced it as the focus of student life. Old South was the first building to be built, on the south side of the quad, though this was demolished in 1904 and replaced by Ryan Hall, Gervase Hall, and McGuire Hall. Old North, begun in 1794, remains used for classes and offices. In August 1797, U.S. President George Washington visited the campus and addressed students from the porch of the Old North building; since then it has become a traditional spot for Presidents to speak when they visit campus. Dalgren Quad is completed by the famous and historic Healy Hall, the undisputed gem of Georgetown's campus, which is built in Flemish Romanesque style. In late 2003, the Southwest Quadrangle Project was completed. This project brought a new 784-bed student dorm, an expansive cafeteria, an underground parking facility, and new Jesuit Residence to the campus.

[edit] Libraries

Interior of Riggs Library
Interior of Riggs Library

The Main Campus's main library is Lauinger Library, named after an alumnus killed during service in the Vietnam War. Lauinger Library includes the Woodstock Theological Center Library. Riggs Library dates from the nineteenth century, and was once the institution's primary library, but is now devoted primarily to archival historical materials and as a setting for formal university functions. Dahlgren Medical Library serves the Medical School, and like Lauinger Library, is built in the brutalist style popular in the 1970s.

[edit] Medical School campus

The Medical School is located on a property adjacent to the northwestern part of the Main Campus on Reservoir Road. All students in the Medical School live off-campus, most in the surrounding neighborhoods, with some in Dupont Circle and elsewhere through Washington DC and environs. The School is integrated with Georgetown University Hospital, located between the Main Campus and the Medical School campus.

[edit] Law Center campus

The Hotung International Law Center and the GULC fitness center
The Hotung International Law Center and the GULC fitness center

The Law Center is located in downtown DC on New Jersey Avenue, near Union Station. Some first-year students at the Law Center live in the one on-campus dormitory, the Gewirz Student Center. Most second-year and third-year students, as well as some first-year students, live off-campus. As there is little housing near the Law Center, most are spread throughout the Washington metropolitan area. The "Campus Completion Project," completed in 2005, saw the addition of the Hotung International Building and the Sport and Fitness Center. G Street and F Street are closed off between 1st and 2nd streets to create open lawns flanking McDonough Hall, the main campus building.

[edit] Academics

Bachelor's, master's, and doctoral programs are offered through Georgetown College, the School of Nursing and Health Studies, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the Robert Emmett McDonough School of Business, the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, the Law Center, the School of Medicine, the School of Continuing Studies, and the Center for Professional Development.

[edit] Undergraduate Schools

View of Healy Hall
View of Healy Hall

Georgetown University offers undergraduate degrees in 48 different majors in the four undergraduate schools, as well as offering opportunities for students to design their own individualized courses of study.

All majors in the College are currently open to students in the College, the School of Nursing & Health Studies, and the School of Business as minors, as are certain other fields. These include Catholic Studies, Culture and Politics, Environmental Studies, African-American Studies, Justice and Peace Studies, Medieval Studies, Social and Political Thought and Women's Studies. Students in the College and School of Foreign Service may complete certificate programs in African Studies, Arab Studies, Asian Studies, Australian and New Zealand Studies, European Studies, International Business Diplomacy (SFS only), Justice & Peace Studies (SFS only), Latin American Studies, Medieval Studies (SFS only), Muslim-Christian Understanding, Russian, Eurasian and East European Studies, Science, Technology and International Affairs (College only), Social and Political Thought (SFS only) and Women's Studies (SFS only). A new certificate in International Development will be offered for undergraduates of any school by the end of 2006.

[edit] Georgetown College

Main article: Georgetown College

The College is the largest school at Georgetown, and until the founding of the Medical School in 1850, comprised the entirety of the university. Jane Dammen McAuliffe is Dean of the school. Alone, the college accounts for over 3,200 students, 30 academic majors with 23 departments.[9] This forms the core of the undergraduate population. The School of Languages and Linguistics, organized in 1949, has been folded into the College, and is now the Faculty of Languages and Linguistics.

[edit] School of Nursing & Health Studies

Since its founding, the Georgetown University School of Nursing & Health Studies (NHS) has been at the forefront of education in the health care field, offering many programs unique to America's elite institutions. Offering undergraduate and graduate programs in the health sciences, graduates are prepared to enter the complex fields of medicine, law, health policy, and nursing. NHS is made up of the Department of Health Systems Administration, the Department of Human Science, the Department of International Health, and the Department of Nursing.

[edit] Walsh School of Foreign Service

SFS offices are found in the ICC
SFS offices are found in the ICC

The SFS grants the Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service to undergraduate students. Graduate students can pursue six interdisciplinary graduate programs: four regional studies programs as well as the Master of Science in Foreign Service and the Security Studies Program. The regional studies programs include Arab Studies (MAA), German & European Studies (MAGES), Latin American Studies (CLAS), and Russian & East European Studies (REES).

The STIA program is the first of its kind. Harvard and Georgia Tech, among others, now have STIA programs as well.

In 2005 the SFS joined four other U.S. universities in opening a campus in Education City in Doha, Qatar. All costs for the development of this campus are paid for by the non-profit Qatar Foundation. The requirements for the Bachelor of Science in Foreign Service degree are the same as those of the Washington campus. The only major available will be International Politics. Classes started in August 2005 with 25 students. Enrollment will expand to 100 within four years.

[edit] McDonough School of Business

White-Gravenor Hall
White-Gravenor Hall

Offering unparalleled access to the world's business, policy and thought leaders, Georgetown University's Robert Emmett McDonough School of Business ("MSB") is committed to developing leaders capable of making complex business decisions in a global environment and who are dedicated to serving their companies, society and humanity. The McDonough School's undergraduate, MBA, executive education and International Executive MBA programs provide solid grounding in all the core management disciplines, with an emphasis on the global, ethical and political environment of business. The undergraduate program has been ranked #11 by Business Week.[10]

Several academic themes distinguish the McDonough School of Business and give the school a special identity among managers and academicians, including international and intercultural dimensions of the marketplace, the importance of written and oral communication, and interpersonal effectiveness in organizations. Georgetown is currently in the process of constructing a new building to serve as a center for the McDonough School's academics.

The McDonough School core courses in the traditional disciplines of accounting, finance, marketing, management, and the decision sciences support these themes. Additionally these themes are supported by the McDonough School's strong support of a minor concentration in one of the nearly 50 liberal arts disciplines. Undergraduate concentrations include:

[edit] Graduate Schools

[edit] Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

In 1995 the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences celebrated its 175th anniversary. The Graduate School is now the second largest at Georgetown and offers multiple programs in 34 separate departments. One characteristic of the School's dramatic growth in the last decade has been the development of an increased number of joint-programming opportunities. Students may now pursue courses of study in more than 40 separate joint-program configurations.

[edit] School of Continuing Studies

The School of Continuing Studies offers bachelor's and master's degrees through its Liberal Studies Program, and in 2005 Georgetown University became the first university in the nation to offer a doctorate in liberal studies.[11]. The School of Continuing Studies also sponsors a Master's of Professional Studies in Journalism and Public Relations/Corporate Communication and other professional and continuing education programs.

[edit] Georgetown University Law Center

The Georgetown University Law Center campus.  From left to right, the Edward Bennett Williams Law Library, McDonough Hall, and Gewirz Student Center.
The Georgetown University Law Center campus. From left to right, the Edward Bennett Williams Law Library, McDonough Hall, and Gewirz Student Center.

The Georgetown University Law School is among the ten most selective law schools in the United States and is considered to be in the "top 14," a legal insider recognition of its reputation. The school is a member of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). Its current dean is T. Alexander Aleinikoff. The law school ranked in the top 10 in 7 categories of U.S. News and World Report 2006 edition, including tax, constitutional law, international law, commercial/finance law and others.

[edit] School of Medicine

The Georgetown University School of Medicine Faculty includes 626 full-time and 2,000 part-time faculty members from 8 basic science and 16 clinical departments, and one center and awards MD, MD/PhD, MD/MBA, and MD/MS degrees.

The School of Medicine also allows students to pursue joint degrees with the MD program, such as: MD/PhD, MD/MBA, MD/MS (only the MS in Biohazardous Threat Agents and the MS in Complementary/Alternative Medicine are allowed for this pairing), as well as MD with a Research Track where MD students spend time in the laboratory and develop a research thesis in their specialty.

The Biomedical Graduate Education division at Georgetown is a subset of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, located on the Medical Center campus. The degrees offered range from traditional PhDs and MS programs to MS specializations in such areas as Nuclear NonProliferation and Complementary/Alternative Medicine, and even Certificate programs in Biotechnology, Biodefence & Public Policy, or Biohazardous Threat Agents. The Biohazardous Threat Agents graduate certificate is currently the only fully recognized graduate program at Georgetown that is available online.

[edit] McDonough School of Business

The full time MBA program has been ranked #19 by the Wall Street Journal,[12] #22 by Business Week,[13] #25 by US News and World Report,[14] and #34 by Financial Times[15] (#3 in International Business).[16] Its international executive MBA program has been ranked in the top 10 by Business Week.[17]

Graduate work offered by the school includes:

  • MBA: The Georgetown MBA Program is a general management program oriented toward those with liberal arts, science, or technical undergraduate degrees. The Program is a two-year, full-time program without majors or concentrations.
  • MBA EP: The MBA evening program (EP) is targeted towards the working professional who is likely to possess a deeper work experience than the typical full-time student. It is taught by the same faculty as the full-time MBA Program, and covers the same academic content.
  • IEMBA: The International Executive MBA (IEMBA) program provides experienced professionals with the tools needed to succeed in today's global business environment. The IEMBA every-other-weekend class structure means students can stay on the job, immediately putting their new knowledge to work.
  • EML: The Executive Master's in Leadership (EML) degree is a distinctive program that focuses on the passion, purpose, and practical skills necessary for effective leadership. The Master's program analyzes leadership as a set of skills on three different levels of analysis: individual, interpersonal, and institutional.

[edit] Georgetown Public Policy Institute

Georgetown Public Policy Institute (GPPI) is a leading public policy school affiliated to Georgetown University in Washington, D.C.. Under the leadership of Dean Judy Feder, GPPI offers both Master of Public Policy and Master of Policy Management degrees and boasts 5 affiliated research institutes, 17 full time faculty, 30 research faculty, and 50 adjunct faculty.

[edit] Admissions

Georgetown's overall undergraduate acceptance rate is 22%, among the most selective of any university in the United States. The rate for transfers is 25%. The undergraduate schools maintain a nonrestrictive Early Action admissions program.[18]

The School of Medicine's acceptance rate for the entering class of 2006 was 4.3%, for which 8,832 applicants applied and 1,321 were interviewed.[19]

[edit] Student life

Healy Hall, circa March 2007.
Healy Hall, circa March 2007.

[edit] University-funded organizations

Georgetown University has a large number of student organizations that cover a variety of interests: student government, club sports, organizations focused on media and publications, performing arts, religion and volunteerism and service. A current list can be found here on the university's website. Georgetown's societies include the nation's oldest debating club, the Philodemic Society, and the oldest continually running dramatic society in the United States, the Mask & Bauble Society.[20]. The Philodemic Debate Society was founded in 1830 and was the first collegiate debate society in the nation. Georgetown's Army R.O.T.C. unit, the Hoya Battalion, is the oldest military unit in the District of Columbia.[21] The Georgetown University Student Investment Fund is one of a few undergraduate-run investment funds in the US and recently hosted CNBC's Jim Cramer to tape Mad Money in September, 2006.

[edit] Student Government

The Georgetown University Student Association (GUSA) is the student government organization for undergraduates.

[edit] Orientation

Copley Hall
Copley Hall

New Student Orientation (NSO) is a the student organization that is responsible for planning and executing the New Student Orientation that occurs every August. Over 200 Students participate in NSO.

[edit] Independent organizations

In addition to student organizations and clubs, Georgetown University is also home to the nation’s largest entirely student owned and operated corporation, Students of Georgetown, Inc.[22] Known today as "The Corp," the business sees gross revenues of roughly $3 million a year. The company was founded in 1972 in response to the university's authorization for Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police Department officers to use tear gas on students demonstrating against the Vietnam War. Following the attack, the student government formed an independent organization with the legal ability to file lawsuits on behalf of students without the university's permission, or the university itself.

[edit] Student-run Media

Georgetown University has several student-run newspapers. The Hoya is the university's oldest newspaper. It has been in print since 1920, and since 1987 has published twice weekly. The Georgetown Voice is a weekly newsmagazine that founded after a split from the Hoya in 1969 when students demanded attention to citywide and national issues while the Hoya remained devoted only to news on campus. It is known for its weekly cover story and coverage of both campus and city issues, as opposed to The Hoya's tight campus focus. The Georgetown Independent is a "journal of news, commentary and the arts" published monthly. The University also has a campus-wide television station, GUTV, and a radio station, WGTB. The Georgetown Heckler is an online comedy newspaper founded in 2003 by Georgetown students. The Georgetown Academy targets more conservative readers on campus and the recently founded Georgetown Federalist purports to bring a "conservative and libertarian" viewpoint to campus.

[edit] Performance Groups

The Georgetown Chimes is the university's oldest (founded in 1946) and only all-male singing group. Other a capella groups on campus include the co-ed Phantoms, the all-female GraceNotes, Superfood, and the service-focused Georgetown Saxatones. The Mask & Bauble Dramatic Society is the oldest continually-running collegiate theatre company in the nation.

[edit] Activism

Healy Hall and Lauinger Library
Healy Hall and Lauinger Library

Georgetown University student organizations include diverse array of groups focused on social justice issues, including organizations run through both Student Affairs and the Center for Social Justice.

Take Back the Night (TBTN) is an organization of women and men against gender violence. TBTN coordinates a yearly rally and march to protest against rape and other forms of violence against women.

MEChA de Georgetown works to improve Chicana/o recruitment, admission, retention, and involvement. MEChA de Georgetown coordinates social and cultural events, as well as engaging in activism related to Latina/o communities, immigration and other issues. In the fall of 2006, MEChA de Georgetown brought together a broad coalition of students, "Students Against Racism, Hate & Violence," to protest a paid speaking event by Chris Simcox, leader of the Minutemen Civil Defense Corps.[23]

Georgetown Solidarity Committee (GSC) is a worker rights organization. After a 4 year campaign with campus service workers aimed at persuading the university to pay a living wage, GSC gained widespread notoriety during March 2005 when 26 student activists (including members of GSC, MEChA and other student groups) engaged in a hunger strike, refusing to eat until Georgetown adopted its Just Employment Policy ten days after the hunger strike began.[24][25] Besides its continued advocacy for worker justice on campus, GSC also works with university administrators on the Licensing Oversight Committee, a committee formed after GSC members occupied the university President's office for 85 hours, to end the use of sweatshops in producing Georgetown-logoed apparel.[26]

Georgetown Students for Fair Trade (GSFT) is a part of a national movement of students working to "make trade fair" (see United Students for Fair Trade). GSFT successfully advocated for all coffee in campus cafeteria to be Fair Trade certified.

The reproductive rights organization H*yas for Choice is not officially recognized by the university. President John DeGioia required that the group spell "Hoyas" with an asterisk, citing the group's position on abortion was in conflict the university's Catholic identity.

[edit] Fraternities

The south side of Healy
The south side of Healy

Georgetown University does not officially recognize or fund fraternities, sororities, or secret societies among the student body. Georgetown's Student Affairs Policy specifically prohibits "fraternities and sororities: single sex groups with ritualized, demeaning or secret membership practices, and specifically those organizations affiliated with the national Intrafraternity Council, Pan Hellenic Association, and Pan Hellenic Council" or"secret societies: groups that do not disclose their purpose, membership or activities, or whose purpose, membership or activities are discriminatory" from receiving access to university benefits.[27] While quite a few fraternities and sororities were active at Georgetown before this policy was implemented in the 1960s, most became inactive soon thereafter.[28]

Fraternities with chapters still active on campus include Delta Phi Epsilon (DPE). Georgetown's chapter of this professional foreign service fraternity, Alpha Chapter, was established in 1920. Its members include several deans of the Walsh School of Foreign Service, as well as Jesuits. Also active on campus is Alpha Epsilon Pi. Georgetown's chapter, Eta Sigma chapter, affiliated with campus Hillel, was established in 2002. The Georgetown SEC - DC Gamma chapter of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity was established in 2005.[29] Georgetown University students are also affiliated, in some cases, with fraternities at other nearby universities and colleges including George Washington University, American University, George Mason University, Catholic University of America, and Corcoran College of Art and Design.

The Delta Phi Epsilon foreign service sorority is the only sorority chartered at Georgetown University.

Co-ed fraternities at Georgetown include the Alpha Kappa Psi Professional Business Fraternity, and Alpha Phi Omega (APO). Alpha Phi Omega is the only co-ed fraternity recognized and given funding by the university, as it is seen as a service organization.[30]

[edit] Athletics

Main article: Georgetown Hoyas
See also: Georgetown Hoyas basketball
Jack the Bulldog
Jack the Bulldog

The school's sports teams are called "the Hoyas". Many years ago, students well-versed in the classical languages invented the mixed Greek and Latin chant of "hoya saxa", translating roughly as "what (or such) rocks!" Eight years after the founding of The Hoya student newspaper, a campus sports writer began to refer to teams as the "Hoyas" rather than as the "Hilltoppers". The name was picked up in the local dailies, and Hilltoppers soon fell out of view. The mascot of Georgetown athletics programs is Jack the Bulldog.

The teams participate in the NCAA's Division I. Georgetown competes in the Big East Conference in virtually every NCAA sport, though the football team competes in the Division I-AA Patriot League and the rowing teams compete in the Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges (EARC).

The Men's Basketball team won the NCAA championship in 1984 under coach John Thompson. The current coach is his son, John Thompson III. In 2007, the basketball team reached the Final Four in the NCAA tournament and was ranked in national polls for the first time since 2001. The team currently leads the Big East in conference titles with seven.

Besides basketball, Georgetown is known as a national powerhouse in rowing, sailing, and lacrosse.

[edit] Georgetown in fiction

The Exorcist
The Exorcist
St. Elmo's Fire
St. Elmo's Fire
  • The 1973 horror film The Exorcist was set and filmed in Georgetown. It was based on a novel by William Peter Blatty, who received an English degree from Georgetown in 1950. Blatty wrote the script in a room in Holy Trinity Church's school, a Catholic parish adjacent to Georgetown University.
  • The 1985 "Brat Pack" movie St. Elmo's Fire revolved around a group of students who had just graduated from Georgetown. The bar that much of the film takes place in is based on The Tombs, a bar and restaurant known for its large student clientele and rowing decòr, located one block from Georgetown's front gates. The university denied the producers the rights to film on campus, so parts of the film were shot at the nearby University of Maryland.
  • In the NBC television series The West Wing, President Bartlet's daughter Zoey attended Georgetown. In the show's fourth season, an episode entitled "Commencement" was filmed on campus, with current Georgetown students used as extras.
  • In the movie National Treasure, Benjamin "Ben" Gates (played by Nicolas Cage) is said to have a degree in American History from Georgetown.
  • In The Girl Next Door, one of the main character's (Matthew) goals is to get into Georgetown, although the university shown at the film's conclusion is not Georgetown.
  • In Save the Last Dance, one of the main character (Derek) receives an acceptance letter to Georgetown University early in the movie.
  • On The Steve Harvey Show, Romeo tells Steve about his ambitions to go to college by saying, "I don't wanna be one of those guys that just WEARS the Georgetown jacket!"
  • In Above the Rim, the main character, Kyle-Lee, hopes to get a scholarship to play basketball at Georgetown.
  • A second season sub-plotline of The Sopranos concerns Meadow Soprano's ambition to gain acceptance to Georgetown, and her mother Carmela's machinations on her behalf. Rumor has it that the school denied the show permission to film on campus, leading to a somewhat abrupt switch of college choice to Columbia.
  • In Election, the main character, Tracy Flick (played by Reese Witherspoon), ends up at Georgetown.
  • In 24, one of the main characters, President David Palmer attended Georgetown where he played on the basketball team. Dennis Haysbert, the actor who plays David Palmer, is the uncle of Nazareth Haysbert who graduated from Georgetown's College of Arts and Sciences in 2005
  • In Syriana, Prince Nasir al-Subaai says: "I studied at Oxford. I have a Ph.D from Georgetown."
  • The major motion picture "Memento" was written by a Georgetown alumnus, and the main character's nemesis, John G., is said to be named after John Glavin, a professor of creative writing at Georgetown.
  • In Stargate Atlantis, the main character, Dr. Elizabeth Weir taught a political science course at Georgetown before going to Atlantis.
  • In Atlantis: The Lost Empire, Milo Thatch's grandfather, Thaddeus Thatch, and the eccentric millionaire, Preston B. Whitmore, are both members of the Class of 1866.
  • In Enemy of the State, Will Smith's character is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center.
  • In The Pelican Brief, several scenes are shot inside the Georgetown University Law Center and the Edward B. Williams Law Library.
  • In the later Jason Bourne novels, such as The Bourne Ultimatum and The Bourne Legacy, Jason Bourne becomes a professor at Georgetown.
  • Jack Ryan, the main character of several Tom Clancy books, received his Ph.D from Georgetown.
  • In the Vertigo series Y: The Last Man, Yorick befriends and eventually sleeps with Beth, a former flight attendant who holds a theology degree from Georgetown.
  • In Young Indiana Jones and the Plantation Treasure, Jone's father, a professor of Medieval history, lectures at Georgetown while Indiana explores the underground railroad in the Carolinas.

[edit] External links

[edit] Schools and programs

[edit] Student organizations

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Nevils, William Coleman (1934). Miniatures of Georgetown: Tercentennial Causeries. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 1-25. 
  2. ^ Endowment Approaches $1 Billion. The Hoya (2007-01-26). Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Georgetown At A Glance (2006-12-12). Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  4. ^ The Federal Charter. About Georgetown. Retrieved on March 6, 2007.
  5. ^ Dwulet, Andrew. "SFS Master's Degree Named Best in U.S.", The Hoya, 2007-02-27. Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  6. ^ The Medical School. About Georgetown. Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  7. ^ O'Neill, Paul R.; Paul K. Williams (2003). Georgetown University. Arcadia, 28. ISBN 0-7385-1509-4. 
  8. ^ About Visitation: Map & Directions. Georgetown Visitation. Retrieved on March 28, 2007.
  9. ^ Prospective Students. Georgetown College. Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  10. ^ Undergrad Rankings 2007. Business Week (2007). Retrieved on April 8, 2007.
  11. ^ Doctor of Liberal Studies Degree Website Georgetown University
  12. ^ Recruiters’ Scorecard. Wall Street Journal (2006). Retrieved on April 8, 2007.
  13. ^ 2006 Full-Time MBA Program Rankings. Business Week (2006). Retrieved on April 8, 2007.
  14. ^ America's Best Graduate Schools 2008. US News & World Report (2007). Retrieved on April 8, 2007.
  15. ^ Global MBA Rankings 2007. Financial Times (2007). Retrieved on April 8, 2007.
  16. ^ Top 10s in selected categories. Financial Times (2007-01-29). Retrieved on April 8, 2007.
  17. ^ 2005 EMBA Rankings. Business Week (2005). Retrieved on April 8, 2007.
  18. ^ College Search Georgetown University. College Board (2007). Retrieved on March 13, 2007.
  19. ^ Admission Information. Georgetown University Medical Center (2006). Retrieved on March 13, 2007.
  20. ^ http://www.georgetown.edu/organizations/mask/
  21. ^ HOYA Battalion and the Washington Consortium (2005). Retrieved on March 2, 2007.
  22. ^ About The Corp. The Corp (2005). Retrieved on March 10, 2007.
  23. ^ Steiner, Keenan. "Students protest ‘Minutemen’ leader", The Georgetown Voice, 2006-11-02. Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  24. ^ Raghavan, Sudarsan. "GU Activists Go Hungry To Help Janitors", The Washington Post, 2005-03-21. Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  25. ^ Lederman, Doug. "Compromise Ends Hunger Strike", Inside Higher Ed, 2005-03-25. Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  26. ^ Amend, Andy. "Compromise Reached", The Hoya, 1999-02-09. Retrieved on March 4, 2007.
  27. ^ Eligibility for University Benefits. Student Affairs. Retrieved on March 10, 2007.
  28. ^ Singh, Suma. "Greek Life: Alive and Well At Georgetown", The Hoya, 2000-09-19. Retrieved on March 10, 2007.
  29. ^ DC-Georgetown University SEC. SigEp (2007). Retrieved on March 10, 2007.
  30. ^ About Alpha Phi Omega. APO (2002-03-21). Retrieved on March 10, 2007.