Everything about Georgetown University totally explained
Georgetown University is a
Jesuit private university located in
Georgetown, Washington, D.C. Father
John Carroll founded the school in 1789, though its roots extend back to 1634. Campus groups include the nation's oldest student dramatic society and the largest student
corporation,
The Corp. Georgetown's most
notable alumni, such as former
U.S. President Bill Clinton, have served in various levels of government in the United States and abroad. The Georgetown athletics teams are nicknamed "
the Hoyas", made famous by their
men's basketball team, which leads the
Big East Conference with seven
tournament championships.
History
Founding
Jesuit settlers from
England founded the
Province of Maryland in 1634. However, the 1646 defeat of the
Royalists in the
English Civil War led to stringent laws against Catholic education and the extradition of known Jesuits from the colony, including
Andrew White. During the greater part of the Maryland colonial period, Jesuits continued to conduct Catholic schools clandestinely. It wasn't until after the
American Revolution in 1776 that long-term plans to establish a permanent Catholic institution for education in America were realized.
Following the revolution,
Pope Pius VI appointed
John Carroll of Maryland, a former Jesuit, as the first
head of the Catholic Church in America, although the
suppression of the Jesuit order was still in effect. Carroll orchestrated the early development of a new university, and on
January 23,
1789 obtained the property on which Dahlgren Quadrangle was built. Instruction at the school began on
November 22,
1791 with future Congressman
William Gaston as its first student.
In its early years, Georgetown College suffered from considerable financial strain, relying on private sources of funding and the limited profits from local Jesuit-owned lands. The Maryland Society of Jesus was restored in 1805 and given supervision of the school, which bolstered confidence in the college. The
United States Congress issued Georgetown the first federal
university charter in 1815, which allowed it to confer degrees. The college's first two graduates were awarded the degree of
bachelor of arts two years later in 1817. In 1844, the school received a
corporate charter, under the name "The President and Directors of Georgetown College", affording the growing school additional legal rights. In response to the demand for a local option for Catholic students, the
Medical School was founded in 1851.
Civil War
The
U.S. Civil War greatly affected Georgetown as and alumni enlisted and the
Union Army commandeered university buildings. Due to the number of lives lost, enrollment levels remained low until well after the war was over. Only seven students graduated in 1869, down from over 300 in the previous decade. Enrollment didn't recover from the war until the presidency of
Patrick Francis Healy (1873–1881). The first acknowledged head of an American university of
African descent, Healy is credited with reforming the undergraduate
curriculum, lengthening the medical and law programs, and creating the
Alumni Association.
At its founding in 1876, the Georgetown College Boat Club, the school's
rowing team, adopted blue, used for Union uniforms, and gray, used for
Confederate uniforms, as its colors to signify the peaceful unity among students. Subsequently, the school adopted blue and gray as its official colors.
Expansion
After the founding of the Law Department in 1870, Healy and his successors sought to bind the professional schools into a university, and focus on
higher education.
Georgetown Preparatory School relocated from campus in 1919 and fully separated from the University in 1927. The
School of Foreign Service (SFS) was founded in 1919 by
Edmund A. Walsh, to prepare students for leadership in foreign commerce and diplomacy. These new schools have called for new construction, and since completion of
Healy Hall in 1879, Georgetown has added fifty-four buildings on its main campus.
Besides expansion of the University, Georgetown also aimed to expand their resources and their student body. The School of Nursing has admitted female students since its founding, and most of the university was made available on a limited basis by 1952. With the College of Arts and Sciences welcoming its first female students in the 1969–1970
academic year, Georgetown became fully
coeducational. Georgetown ended its bicentennial year of 1989 by electing
Leo J. O'Donovan as president. He subsequently launched the Third Century Campaign to build the school's endowment. In December 2003, Georgetown completed the campaign, joining only a handful of universities worldwide to raise at least for financial aid, academic chair endowment, and new capital projects.
John J. DeGioia, Georgetown's first non-Jesuit president, has led the school since 2001, and has continued its financial modernization and sought to "expand opportunities for intercultural and interreligious dialogue".
Jesuit tradition
Georgetown University was founded by Jesuits in the tradition of
Ignatius of Loyola. Although
president John J. DeGioia isn't a Jesuit, five of the other forty members of Georgetown's Board of Directors are. The institution is a member of the
Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, and home to fifty-eight members of the
Society of Jesus. Most are employed by Georgetown as professors or administrators. While most live in the Wolfington Hall Jesuit Residence on the main campus, some serve as
chaplains-in-residence and live in the undergraduate dormitories. Jesuit Heritage Week has been held every year since 2001 to celebrate the contributions of Jesuits to the Georgetown tradition.
The role that Georgetown's Jesuit Catholic heritage has played in its policies has been controversial at times. For instance, stores in University-owned buildings are not allowed to sell or distribute
birth control products.
Georgetown University Hospital, operated by
MedStar Health, and Georgetown University Medical Center operate under the
Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Services, which prohibits abortions from being performed on the premises. The hospital does perform research using
stem cells from aborted fetuses. In 2007,
Georgetown University Law Center students protested the University's decision to cease funding for a student's internship at
Planned Parenthood's litigation department despite funding it previous years.
Between 1996 and 1999,
crucifixes were hung in many classrooms, attracting national attention. Before 1996, crucifixes had hung only in hospital rooms and historic classrooms. Some of these crucifixes are historic works of art, and are noted as such. Pressure to remove the crucifixes comes, however, from within the Catholic community, while campus leaders of other faiths have defended their placement. The Intercultural Center is an exception to this controversy, rotating displays of various faith symbols in the lobby.
Academics
As of 2007, the University has students, students on the main campus, at the
Law Center, and in the
School of Medicine.
Bachelor's programs are offered through
Georgetown College, the
School of Nursing and Health Studies, the
Robert Emmett McDonough School of Business, and the
Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, which includes the
Qatar campus. Qatar has three classes totaling 114 students. Some high school students from
Georgetown Visitation are permitted to attend classes for
Advanced Placement credit.
Georgetown University offers undergraduate degrees in forty-eight
majors in the four undergraduate schools, as well as the opportunity for students to design their own individualized courses of study. All majors in the College are open as minors to students in the College, the School of Nursing and Health Studies, and the School of Business. Students in the School of Foreign Service can't receive minors, but can complete certificates instead. All courses are on a
credit hour system.
Master's and
doctoral programs are offered through the
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, the
Law Center, the
School of Medicine, the
Public Policy Institute, and the
School of Continuing Studies. The
McDonough School of Business and the
Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service both offer masters programs. Masters students also share some advanced
seminars with undergraduates, and most undergraduate schools offer abbreviated bachelors and masters programs following completion of the undergraduate degree. Each graduate school offers at least one
double degree with another graduate school. Additionally, the Law Center offers a joint degree with the
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. The School of Continuing Studies includes the Center for Continuing and Professional Education, and operates four types of degree programs, over thirty professional certificates and non-degree courses, undergraduate and
graduate degrees in Liberal Studies, as well as summer courses for graduates, undergraduates, and high school students.
Faculty
As of 2007, Georgetown University employs approximately and faculty members across its three campuses. Many former politicians choose to teach at Georgetown, including
U.S. Agency for International Development administrator
Andrew Natsios, National Security Advisor
Anthony Lake, U.S. Senator and Senate Democratic Leader
Tom Daschle, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy
Douglas Feith, and CIA director
George Tenet. Internationally, the school attracts numerous former
ambassadors and
heads of state, such as Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright, Ambassador-at-Large
Robert Gallucci, President of the Government of Spain
José María Aznar, and President of Poland
Aleksander Kwaśniewski. Politically, Georgetown's faculty members give more support to liberal candidates, and their donation patterns are consistent with those of other American university faculties.
Research
Georgetown University is a self described "student-centered research university" considered by the
Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education to have "very high research activity". As of 2007, Georgetown's libraries hold in seven buildings, with most in
Lauinger Library. Additionally, the Law School campus includes the nation's fifth largest
law library. Georgetown faculty conduct research in hundreds of subjects, but have priorities in the fields of religion, ethics, science, public policy, and cancer medicine. Cross-institutional research is performed with
Columbia University and
Virginia Tech.
In 2007, the school received about $14.8 million in federal funds for research, with sixty-four percent from the
National Science Foundation,
National Institutes of Health, and the
Department of Defense.
Georgetown University Medical Center received an additional $118.4 million from these and other government sources. Centers which conduct and sponsor research at Georgetown include the
Berkley Center for Religion, Peace, and World Affairs, the
Prince Alwaleed Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding and the
Woodstock Theological Center. In 2006, researchers at Georgetown's Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center developed the breakthrough
HPV vaccine for cervical cancer. Regular publications include the
Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law and Policy, the
Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, the
Georgetown Law Journal, the
Georgetown Law Weekly, the
Georgetown Journal of International Affairs, and the
Georgetown Public Policy Review.
Admissions
With and for the class of 2012, Georgetown has an overall undergraduate acceptance rate of 18%. As
The Fiske Guide to Colleges 2007 states, "only
Stanford and a handful of
Ivy League schools are tougher to get into than Georgetown." A
National Bureau of Economic Research study on revealed preference of U.S. colleges showed that Georgetown is the 16th most-preferred choice. Eighty-four percent of accepted applicants were in the top ten percent of their graduating class, and about thirty-five percent of accepted applicants were first, second, or third in their class in terms of
class rank. The middle fifty percent of accepted students had
SAT scores ranging from 680–760 in Critical Reading, and 670–760 in Math. Georgetown doesn't consider the essay/writing portion of the SAT in admissions. The undergraduate schools maintain a nonrestrictive
Early Action admissions program, though students who have applied through an
Early Decision process at another school are not permitted to apply to Georgetown's Early Action program. Fifty-five percent of undergraduates receive financial aid, and the university meets one-hundred percent of demonstrated need, with an average financial aid package of $ and about seventy percent of aid distributed in the forms of grants or scholarships.
The School of Medicine's acceptance rate for the entering class of 2007 was 3.5%, for which applied and 1,228 were interviewed for the 190 available slots. Of those admitted, fifty-seven percent majored in a
biological science. Graduate students accepted into the Georgetown University Law Center in 2006 had a median
LSAT score of 169, and a median GPA of 3.71. Thirty-five percent of applicants to the McDonough School of Business Daytime MBA program were admitted in 2007. They have a median age of 28 and
GMAT scores with 80% between 640 and 720, with a mean of 677.
Campuses
Georgetown University has three campuses in
Washington, D.C.: the undergraduate campus, the
Medical Center, and the Law Center. The undergraduate campus and Medical Center together form the main campus. Georgetown also operates a facility in
Doha,
Qatar, and villas in
Alanya,
Turkey and
Fiesole,
Italy. In their campus layout, Georgetown's administrators consistently used the traditional
quadrangle design.
Main campus
Georgetown University's undergraduate campus and medical school campus are situated on an elevated site above the
Potomac River, overlooking
northern Virginia. The main gates, known as the
Healy Gates, are located at the intersection of 37th and O Streets, NW.
Georgetown University Medical Center is on a property adjacent to the northwestern part of the undergraduate campus on Reservoir Road, and is integrated with
Georgetown University Hospital, which is operated by
MedStar Health.
The main campus is just over in area and includes fifty-eight buildings, student residences capable of accommodating eighty percent of undergraduates, and various athletic facilities. The main campus has traditionally centered on Dahlgren Quadrangle, although Red Square has replaced it as the focus of student life.
Healy Hall, built in
Flemish Romanesque style from 1877 to 1879, is the architectural gem of Georgetown's campus, and is a
National Historic Landmark. Both Healy Hall and the Georgetown University Astronomical Observatory, built in 1844, are listed on the
National Register of Historic Places.
In late 2003, the school completed the Southwest Quadrangle Project, and brought a new student dorm, an expansive dining hall, an underground parking facility, and new Jesuit Residence to the campus. The school's first
performing arts center, named for
Royden B. Davis, was completed in November 2005, while longer-term projects include a self-contained business school campus, construction of a unified sciences center, and expanded athletic facilities.
Law Center campus
The
Law Center campus is located in the
Capitol Hill neighborhood on New Jersey Avenue, near
Union Station. First-year students at the Law Center can live in the single on-campus dormitory, the Gewirz Student Center. Most second- and third-year students, as well as some first-year students, live off-campus. As there's little housing near the Law Center, most are spread throughout the Washington metropolitan area. The "Campus Completion Project", finished 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 building on the campus.
Facilities abroad
In December 1979, the
Marquesa Margaret Rockefeller de Larrain, granddaughter of
John D. Rockefeller, gave the
Villa Le Balze to Georgetown University. The Villa is in
Fiesole,
Italy, on a hill above the city of
Florence. The Villa is used year-round for study abroad programs focused on specialized
interdisciplinary study of
Italian culture and civilization. The main facility for the
McGhee Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies was donated to Georgetown in 1989 by alumnus and former
United States Ambassador to Turkey George C. McGhee. The school is in the town of
Alanya,
Turkey within the
Seljuq-era
Alanya Castle, on the
Mediterranean Sea. The Center operates study abroad programs one semester each year, concentrating on
Turkish language,
architectural history, and
Islamic studies. In 2002, the
Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development presented the
School of Foreign Service with the resources and space to open a facility in the new
Education City in
Doha,
Qatar.
SFS-Qatar opened in 2005 as a liberal arts and international affairs undergraduate school for regional students.
Student life
The Georgetown undergraduate student body is composed primarily of students from outside the
District of Columbia, with one-third from
Mid-Atlantic States. As of 2007, the racial diversity of the undergraduate student body was 64.9%
white, 9.1%
Asian, 6.7%
black, and 5.8%
Hispanic. Of these students, 53.9% are female. The largest minority (twelve percent of the full-time student body) is
international, representing 120 countries. Over three-hundred international undergraduates annually choose to come to Georgetown as a
study abroad destination.
Although it's a Jesuit university, only fifty-eight percent of the student body is Catholic. Georgetown hosts a
Buddhist clergyman and a full-time
rabbi, as twelve to fifteen percent of undergraduates are
Jewish. It was the first U.S. college to have a full-time
imam, to serve the over four-hundred
Muslims on campus. The student body is generally religious and volunteer minded, and more than four-hundred
freshmen and transfer students attend a nonreligious
Ignatian retreat annually. A survey of the student body also suggests that the campus is 62.8% sexually active.
Almost all undergraduates attend full-time. A majority of undergraduates, seventy-two percent, live on-campus in several dormitories and apartment complexes. The remainder live off-campus, mostly in the
Georgetown,
Burleith, and
Foxhall neighborhoods. On-campus housing isn't available for main campus graduate students, although many of the University's hall directors and area coordinators attend graduate level courses. All students in the Medical School live off-campus, most in the surrounding neighborhoods, with some in
Dupont Circle and elsewhere through the region.
Student groups
Georgetown University has student organizations that cover a variety of interests: student government, club sports, media and publications, performing arts, religion, and volunteer and service. Students often find their interests at the Student Activities Commission Club Fair, where both official and unofficial organizations set up tables. The
Georgetown University Student Association is the student government organization for undergraduates. There are also student representatives within the schools, to the Board of Directors, and, since 1996, to the Georgetown
Advisory Neighborhood Commission. New Student Orientation is the sponsored student organization responsible for planning and executing the annual pre-orientation and orientation of freshmen and transfer students. Georgetown's
Army ROTC unit, the Hoya Battalion, is the oldest military unit native to the District of Columbia.
Georgetown's student organizations include one of the nation's oldest debating clubs, the
Philodemic Society, and the oldest continuously producing student dramatic society, the Mask & Bauble Society. Nomadic Theatre, founded in 1982 as an alternative troupe without an on-campus home, produces musicals, and small-scale comedies and dramas.
The Georgetown Chimes, founded in 1946, is the University's oldest and only all-male singing group. Other
a cappella groups on campus include the coed Phantoms, the coed Superfood, the all-female GraceNotes, the all-female international group Harmony, and the service-focused Georgetown Saxatones. The Georgetown University Band is composed of the Georgetown Pep Band and the Georgetown Wind Ensemble, and performs on campus, in Washington, D.C., and at post-season basketball tournaments.
In addition to student organizations and clubs, Georgetown University is home to the nation’s largest entirely student-owned and -operated corporation,
Students of Georgetown, Inc. Known as "The Corp", the business has an annual gross revenue of over $3 million. Founded in 1972, The Corp operates three
coffee shops and two
grocery stores. It also runs biannual book sales, box storage, and airport shuttles for students. Another student-run group, the
Georgetown Emergency Response Medical Service, "GERMS", is an all-volunteer ambulance service founded in 1982 that serves campus and the surrounding communities. GUGS, the Georgetown University Grilling Society, has quickly become a Georgetown tradition, serving up half-pound burgers in Red Square on most Fridays. The
Georgetown University Student Investment Fund is one of a few undergraduate-run
investment funds in the United States, and hosted CNBC's
Jim Cramer to tape
Mad Money in September 2006.
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, is published twice weekly.
The Georgetown Voice, known for its weekly cover stories, is a
newsmagazine that split from
The Hoya to focus more attention on citywide and national issues.
The Georgetown Independent is a monthly "journal of news, commentary and the arts".
The Georgetown Academy targets more
conservative readers on campus and the
Georgetown Federalist, founded in 2006, purports to bring a "conservative and
libertarian" viewpoint to campus.
The Georgetown Heckler is a humor magazine founded on the Internet in 2003 by Georgetown students, releasing its first print issue in 2007.
The Fire This Time is Georgetown University's only minority newssource. It is currently under the helm of Erica Beal and Lauren Lightfoot, co-editors-in-chief.
The University has a campus-wide television station,
GUTV, which began broadcasting in 1999. The station hosts an annual student
film festival in April for campus filmmakers.
WGTB, Georgetown's radio station, is available as a
webcast and on 92.3 FM in certain dormitories. The station was founded in 1946, and broadcast on 90.1 FM from 1960 to 1979, when president
Timothy S. Healy gave away the frequency and broadcast capabilities to the
University of the District of Columbia because of WGTB's
far left political orientation.
Activism
Georgetown University student organizations include a diverse array of groups focused on social justice issues, including organizations run through both Student Affairs and the Center for Social Justice. Oriented against gender violence,
Take Back the Night coordinates an annual rally and march to protest against rape and other forms of violence against women.
Georgetown Solidarity Committee is a workers' rights organization whose successes include ending use of sweatshops in producing Georgetown-logoed apparel, and garnering pay raises for both university cleaning staff and police. Georgetown Students for
Fair Trade successfully advocated for all coffee in campus cafeterias to be
Fair Trade Certified.
Georgetown has many additional groups representing national, ethnic, and linguistic interests. In 2006,
MEChA de Georgetown, which works to improve Chicano recruitment and involvement, brought together a broad coalition of groups as "GU Students United Against Racism" to protest the perceived racism during a paid speaking event by
Chris Simcox, leader of the
Minutemen Civil Defense Corps. Georgetown's student body is particularly active in politics; groups based on local, national, and international issues are popular, and free speech is generally respected. The
reproductive rights organization H*yas for Choice isn't officially recognized by the University, prompting the asterisk in "hoyas". While not financially supported by the school (its positions on
abortion are in opposition to University policy), the organization is permitted to meet and table in university spaces. The issue contributes to Georgetown's 'red light' status on free speech under the
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education rating system.
Greek life
Although Jesuit schools are not obliged to disassociate from Greek systems, many do, and Georgetown University doesn't officially recognize or fund
fraternities, sororities, or
secret societies among the student body. Despite this, Greek organizations persist on campus, although none require members to live in fraternal housing. Additionally, Georgetown University students are affiliated, in some cases, with fraternities at other nearby universities and colleges.
Active fraternities at Georgetown include
Delta Phi Epsilon, a professional foreign service fraternity;
Alpha Kappa Psi, a professional business fraternity;
Alpha Phi Omega, a national co-ed community service fraternity;
Alpha Epsilon Pi, a Jewish social fraternity; and
Sigma Phi Epsilon, a social fraternity. Delta Phi Epsilon was founded at Georgetown in 1920, and members of their Alpha Chapter include Jesuits and several deans of the
School of Foreign Service. The Delta Phi Epsilon foreign service sorority, founded in 1973, is the only sorority active at Georgetown. Georgetown's chapter of Alpha Epsilon Pi, affiliated with the, was established in 2002. Sigma Phi Epsilon chartered its chapter as a general social fraternity in 2007. Business fraternity Alpha Kappa Psi replaced
Delta Sigma Pi, which lost its charter in 2006. Besides the full-day carnival, the day rewards the best professor of the year with the Dorothy Brown Award, as voted by students. Every year since 2002,
Traditions Day has focused attention in early November on the two centuries of Georgetown history. Clubs can compete in a "Best Traditions" contest, with students voting for their favorites.
Halloween is celebrated with public viewings of alumnus
William Peter Blatty's film
The Exorcist.
Homecoming coincides with a home football game, and festivities such as tailgating and a formal dance are sponsored by the Alumni Association to draw past graduates back to campus. The largest planned sports related celebration is the first basketball practice of the season. Dubbed
Midnight Madness, this event introduces the men's and women's basketball teams shortly after midnight on the first day the teams are allowed by NCAA rules to formally practice together. In 2008, Georgetown again played host to a first round division of the
NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament.
Georgetown University hosts notable speakers each year, largely because of the success of the Georgetown Lecture Fund and the Office of Communications. These are frequently important
heads of state who visit Georgetown while in the capital, as well as scholars, authors, U.S. politicians, and religious leaders. The Office of the President hosts numerous symposia on religious topics, such as
Nostra Ætate and the Building Bridges Seminar.
Athletics
NCAA's
Division I. The school generally competes in the
Big East Conference, although the
football team competes in the
Division I FCS Patriot League, the men's lacrosse team in
Eastern College Athletic Conference, and the rowing teams in the
Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges. Georgetown University graduates over ninety percent of its student athletes.
U.S. News and World Report listed Georgetown's athletics program among the 20 best in the nation.
The school's teams are called "Hoyas", a name whose origin is uncertain. Sometime after 1866, students well versed in classical languages invented the mixed
Greek and
Latin chant of "hoya saxa", translating roughly as "what (or such) rocks". Some say it originated in a cheer referring to the stones that comprised the school's outer walls; others say it began in the 19th century with the birth of Georgetown's Stonewalls
baseball team, founded 1870, or its
football team founded in 1874. Shortly after its founding in 1920, students requested that Georgetown's newspaper take the name
The Hoya rather than
The Hilltopper. By 1928, campus sports writers began to refer to teams as the "Hoyas" rather than as the "Hilltoppers". The name was picked up in the
local publications, and became official shortly after. The mascot of Georgetown athletics programs is
Jack the Bulldog and the school
fight song is
There Goes Old Georgetown.
The
men's basketball team is particularly noteworthy as it won the
NCAA championship in
1984 under coach
John Thompson and continues to be a perennial favorite in the NCAA tournament. The current coach is his son,
John Thompson III, who coached the team to the
Final Four in the
2007 NCAA tournament. The team leads the Big East with seven
conference tournament titles, and has made 24
NCAA tournament appearances. Well-known team alumni include
Patrick Ewing,
Dikembe Mutombo,
Alonzo Mourning,
Allen Iverson, and
Jeff Green. In all over one-hundred student athletes have gone on to professional careers. Besides
basketball, Georgetown is nationally successful in
rugby,
rowing,
sailing,
lacrosse, and
track and field.
Alumni
Marquis Who's Who, the 14th highest percentage and eighth highest raw number among American universities.
NNDB, the Notable Names Database, lists alumni.
Five alumni serve in the
United States Senate, and 16 in the
House of Representatives. Besides numerous members of the senior diplomatic corps, ten heads of state are alumni, including former U.S. president
Bill Clinton and
Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, President of The Philippines.
In the legal profession, alumni include a current Associate Justice of the
U.S. Supreme Court,
Antonin Scalia, and former Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
Edward Douglass White. Of schools with less than annually, Georgetown produces more
Peace Corps volunteers than any other private university. Georgetown graduates have served at the head of diverse institutions, such as
Patricia Russo of
Alcatel and
Susan Hockfield of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, both in the public and private sector, and have headed military organizations on both the national and international level.
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