February 15, 2018

Page 1

Since 1919

Emory University’s Independent Student Newspaper

The Emory Wheel

Volume 99, Issue 16

Printed Every Wednesday

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

STUDENT HEALTH

GRADUATION

Dollar Shave Club CEO to Speak at Commencement By MicheLLe Lou Executive Editor

CourtEsy of dollar shavE Club

Michael Dubin, CEO and co-founder of Dollar Shave Club

Dollar Shave Club Co-founder and CEO Michael Dubin (01C) is set to deliver the keynote address at Emory University’s 173rd commencement ceremony May 14, according to Assistant Director of Media Relations Megan McRainey. Emory will confer Dubin an honorary doctor of business degree. Dubin received his bachelor’s degree in history from Emory College

of Arts and Sciences and was a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. The Dollar Shave Club, co-founded by Dubin and Mark Levine in 2011, offers a subscription service that distributes affordable razors and other grooming products through the mail. With a viral online advertising campaign, the Dollar Shave Club garnered millions of views on social media. Unilever purchased the Californiabased company for $1 billion in 2016, according to Fortune. Dubin was named an EY entrepre-

neur of the year in the greater Los Angeles area in 2016. He is also a member of the Accelerator for America’s advisory council for economic development, which is chaired by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. He worked at as an associate producer at MSNBC from 2002-2003, a marketing associate for Time Magazine from 2004-2007, a digital marketing director from 2010-2011

See honoRaRy, Page 3

BeltLine Visionary to Deliver Class Day Keynote By MicheLLe Lou Executive Editor

CourtEsy of Josh MEistEr

Ryan Gravel, Urban planner and BeltLine visionary

Ryan Gravel, an urban planner who helped launch the Atlanta BeltLine, has been named this year’s keynote speaker for Class Day, according to Director of University Events Suzanne Eden-Antola. Class Day, which is set for May 10, is a student-organized ceremony that traditionally occurs the Thursday before the commencement ceremony for the baccalaureate degree can-

didates in the College of Arts and Sciences, Goizueta Business School, Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing and the School of Medicine. The ceremony involves the class gift, awards and a keynote speech, according to the Class Day website. Gravel’s 1999 master’s thesis, completed when he was a student at the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech), served as “the original vision” for the group of trails and parks now known as the Atlanta BeltLine, according to the BeltLine’s website.

The BeltLine, formerly a railway corridor that ran around Atlanta, is undergoing a “sustainable redevelopment” project that is anticipated to be completed by 2030. When it is finished, the BeltLine is expected to include “a planned loop of 33 miles of multi-use trail and 2,000 acres of parks,” the website said. In 2016, Gravel resigned from the Atlanta BeltLine Partnership over concerns of affordability and equity

See GRavEl’s, Page 4

EUSHS Reports 193 Flu Cases By Joshua Lee Contributing Writer

The number of reported “influenza and influenza-type illness” cases at Emory between Jan. 1 and Feb. 10 has reached 193, according to a Feb. 12 email sent to the Wheel by Emory University Student Health and Counseling Services (EUSHS) Executive Director Michael Huey. In 2017, EUSHS had 27 reported cases for about the same time period. The influx of cases at Emory this year matches the nationwide trend for flu outbreak that began 11 weeks ago. That number is expected to rise in following weeks as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) receives more reports. In Georgia, there have been 66 flu-related deaths

See Ga., Page 4

ADMISSIONS

University Admits Three Displaced Puerto Rican Students By aLex KLugerMan News Editor

When Christopher Burgos (20C) arrived at Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport Nov. 1, 2017, he was unsure of what the future would hold. Forced to leave his home in Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria devastated the island, Burgos hoped to transfer to Emory University. Unbeknownst to him at the time, the University would

provide him full tuition for the Spring 2018 semester. The University announced Nov. 17 that it would welcome up to 32 Puerto Rican students displaced by Hurricanes Maria and Irma with all tuition, fees and room and board waived for one semester. The Emory Office of Undergraduate Admission received 27 inquiries about the program and received six applications for consideration, according to Assistant

Vice Provost for Undergraduate Enrollment and Dean of Admission John Latting. Three students were admitted, including Burgos. “Ater Hurricane Maria, my home institution [Inter American University of Puerto Rico], which is a seven-floor building, was all destroyed,” Burgos said. “The opportunities I’ve had since I’ve arrived in Atlanta have been more than double what I had back in Puerto Rico after and before the hurricane.”

EMORY POLICE

University Provost and Executive Vice President of Academic Affairs Dwight McBride pushed for the plan to come to fruition, according to Latting. The Office of Undergraduate Admission did not take an “active recruiting” approach in reaching out to eligible students, Latting said, but it responded to all inquiries about the program. “We decided it was not appropriate to take an active recruiting approach

in contacting students and nudging them into the applicant pool,” Latting said. “We were not trying to recruit students away from their home institution — we were just trying to help. We were impressed that Emory wanted to be responsive … and step in and take the right approach.” For Burgos, the scholarship did not impact his decision to apply to Emory.

See PRsa, Page 3

LIBRARIES

Package Triggers Bomb Scare Rose Library Director To Depart in March

By Monica Lefton Senior Staff Writer Police issued an “all clear” after Emory Police Department (EPD) and DeKalb County Police responded to a report of a suspicious package at the Woodruff Health Sciences Center Administration Building (WHSCAB) Thursday afternoon. Critical Event Preparedness and Response (CEPAR) received a notice of a “possible suspicious package” on the plaza adjacent to Means Drive between the WHSCAB and the School of Medicine shortly before noon, according to a Feb. 8 University statement sent to the Wheel by Associate Director of University Media Relations Elaine Justice. EPD was notified of the report and responded to the scene. The first floor of WHSCAB was evacuated, Justice told the Wheel in a phone call. DeKalb County Police Bomb Squad

VALENTINE’S DAY SPECIAL SECTION

PAGE 9

By VaLerie sandoVaL Staff Writer

Parth Mody/Photo Editor

DeKalb County and Emory Police Departments respond to the scene Feb. 8 after a suspicious package was discovered. and a K-9 unit also responded to the scene around 12:50 p.m. EPD and local law enforcement “investigated … and determined the package was harmless,” the University statement reads. Police issued the “all clear” around 1:45 p.m. Thursday. EPD Lt. Thomas Manns said that

the investigation is ongoing as of 3:52 p.m. Thursday and declined to provide further information. No further official reports about the incident are available as of press time.

EDITORIAL how

A&E ‘Black Panther’

eMory’s new aP creDit caP hUrts stUDents ... PAGE 6

— Contact Richard Chess at rchess@emory.edu

Draws new BlooD For Marvel Universe ... PAGE 11

Director of the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives and Rare Book Library Rosemary Magee is stepping down March 1 after six years in the position. Associate Director Jennifer Meehan will serve as interim director until the new director is selected, according to Magee. University Librarian Yolanda Cooper will oversee the process of selecting a new director, which may take six to eight months, Magee said. Magee has been at Emory for 40 years in roles ranging from a Ph.D. candidate studying literature and religion to a professor teaching courses in English, women’s gender and sexuality studies and interdisciplinary studies. She was later appointed senior associ-

EMORY LIFE GoinG

ate dean for resources and planning of Emory College of Arts & Sciences, and, in 2005, she was named University vice president and secretary.

Rosemary Magee, Rose Library Director

ayushi agarwal/staff

In 2012, she became director of the Rose Library, where she was closely involved with the acquisition of the Flannery O’Connor collection and former U.S. President Barack Obama’s

See MEEhan, Page 4

SPORTS woMen’s

the Distance: oxForDBasketBall rallies For two atlanta roMances ... PAGE 13 roaD wins ... Back Page


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