October 25, 2017

Page 1

Since 1919

Emory University’s Independent Student Newspaper

The Emory Wheel

Volume 99, Issue 8

Printed Every Wednesday

Wednesday, October 25, 2017

RSGA

HOMECOMING WEEK

Unaided By RSGA, Debate Proceeds

UNIONIZATION

LGS Students Opt to Form Voluntary Union

By Alex KlugermAn News Editor At least one Rollins Student Government Association (RSGA) member and one Rollins School of Public Health student have called for debates to be held before the upcoming RSGA presidential elections, alleging that the RSGA president is abusing power in deciding to not hold debates for fear of stressing students. In a span of three days, current RSGA Department of Health Policy and Management Representative Christopher DeVore (18PH) and Sana Charania (13Ox, 16C, 18PH) went from

See ELECtion, Page 5

GabriEllE davis/staff

Rapper Post Malone headlined Friday night’s Homecoming Ball, which included performances of popular singles ‘Rockstar’ and ‘Congratulations.’

said. Emily Siegel (18C) said that when she arrived at McDonough Field at about 10:20 p.m., she and at least 20 other students were denied entry, with Emory Police Department (EPD) offi-

Laney Graduate School (LGS) students originally seeking to form a graduate student union have withdrawn plans to form a full labor union, now planning to form a “voluntary membership union.” The Emory Graduate Organizing Committee has stopped petitioning for signatures on authorization cards. The committee is working with Service Employees International Union (SEIU) to develop a strategy

See SPC, Page 4

See voLuntaRy, Page 5

Post Malone Attracts Full Crowd By christinA yAn Contributing Writer

Due to rapper Post Malone’s popularity, some students listened to his Homecoming Ball performance from outside of McDonough Field, which reached maximum capacity.

Friday evening’s Homecoming Ball reached the maximum capacity of 4,500 people, according to Student Programming Council (SPC) President Tamara Ezzat (18B). “From my experience this has never happened before, and we were delighted that we had high attendance,” Ezzat

CAMPUS LIFE PAVILION

LEGISLATURE

SGA Augments Diwali Funding By BeliciA rodriguez Contributing Writer

Parth Mody/Photo Editor

Students and alumni gather to celebrate the dedication of the Campus Life Pavilion Friday to honor the 13 black students who integrated Emory in 1962 and 1963.

See PaviLion, Page 3

ROSE LIBRARY

Letters Reveal Young Obama’s Hopes By michelle lou Executive Editor

By richArd chess And michelle lou News Editor and Executive Editor

“Moments trip gently along over here,” a young Barack Obama writes. Obama, then a college student, writes a letter in the winter of 1983 to his then-girlfriend, Alexandra McNear, detailing his usual routine at Columbia University: running on the indoor track, eating “the best bran muffin in New York City,” studying in the library. The former president’s letter, alongside eight other letters to McNear acquired by Emory University’s Rose Library, reveals more than his day-today collegiate life. The missives also disclose the musings of a young man discovering his

potential and passion for enacting change in the world. “Life longs to be understood, Alex, but it contains mechanisms, sometimes sharp and cruel, sometimes a wide wash of mundane, to keep one from getting too close,” Obama writes. A private individual provided the nine letters, dated between September 1982 and April 1984, to the University, according to Rose Library Director Rosemary Magee. Over the course of their correspondence, McNear was a student at Occidental College (Calif.), where the pair had met. Obama had attended Occidental from 1979 to 1981 before he transferred to Columbia. Emory acquired the letters in 2014 from a private individual with whom

Emory mutually agreed to wait until 2017 to announce the acquisition. Magee declined to provide more information about the acquisition, citing confidentiality. Neat cursive discussing topics from economic inequality to monogamy adorns the sheets of paper. Among the sentences lie the occasional crossedout word or misspelling. In the margins of some of the letters, brief annotations, most likely from McNear, according to Magee, answer Obama’s questions and react to his thoughts. “I care for you as yourself, nothing less, but also nothing more. Does this anger you?” Obama asks on Sept. 1,

NEWS Study ShowS Fox

OP-ED For poLiticaL

A&E poSt MaLoNe

See RoSE, Page 2

NewS ViewerS More LikeLy to chaNge, MiLLeNNiaLS Need to deStroyS hiS hoMecoMiNg Set, Vote repubLicaN ... PAGE 4 be poSitiVe ... PAGE 9 PAGE 7 LiteraLLy ...

The 51st legislature of the Student Government Association (SGA) convened Monday to approve funding requests for for four student organization-held events totaling $3,376.53. Indian Cultural Exchange (ICE) President Roshan Modi (19C), Treasurer Rahul Nair (18C) and Diwali Chair Hithardhi Duggireddy (20C) presented Bill 51sl26 to request $3,244 to fund catering and student transportation for ICE’’ Diwali 2017. The requested amount is a 190 percent increase from the $945 ICE received last year from SGA for Diwali. The bill was amended to allocate $2,744, which is $500 less than what ICE asked for, and passed with 1o votes. College Junior Representative Madelyn Zapata (19C) left early and did not vote. The ICE representatives said that the organization received $1,000 from the Executive Office of the President, a decrease from the $2,000 ICE received last year from that office. Campus Life (CL) also contributed $1,000, significantly less than the amount it donated last year. The Emory Alumni Association had not responded to ICE’s request for $500 as of Monday night. The BBA office, which provided $750 last year, provided ICE $500 this year. Those decreases in contributions put ICE $4,200 short in funds needed for the annual event. “When we do our contracts,

EMORY LIFE

Meet

those things take a lot of time for it to be signed by Emory and for it to be approved and signed by the vendors,” Modi said to the legislature. “We weren’t really able to foresee [the projections] when we were planning our budget.” Although there is a $1,500 decrease in the overall cost of the event, the loss of some funding caused ICE to request more funding from SGA, Modi added. During the debate of the bill, Vice President of Finance Javi Reyes (18B) said SGA could fully fund the event with $3,244, pointing out that since SGA is now an undergraduate-wide organization, that it no longer has to factor in potentially funding events for graduate students. “Most of the things that we end up seeing that come through here are relatively small scale, and this is just one of the very few that happen to be on the upper limit of things that we would fund,” Reyes said. “I do think that we have room within the contingency to fund this event.” Singh, Executive Vice President Natasha Armstrong (18B) and Emory SAPA President Katherine Gabay (18C) submitted Bill 50sl24, which allocates $350 to fund Take Back the Night custom buttons, candles and event posters. SAPA Treasurer Leah Shine (18C) explained the event raises awareness about sexual assault and provides a platform for survivors to share their stories.

See Sga, Page 3

SPORTS SwiMMiNg aNd

the aLuMS behiNd eMory diViNg gLide to Victory at aNtheM ... Back Page PAGE 13 hoMe ...


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