August 30, 2017

Page 1

Since 1919

Emory University’s Independent Student Newspaper

The Emory Wheel

Volume 99, Issue 1

Printed Every Wednesday

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

SONGFEST

MIGOS

SGS Prohibits Vendor Deposits New Policy Follows Migos Booking Scam By RichaRd chess News Editor/City

Student Governance Services (SGS) is no longer allowing deposit payments to vendors following the phony Migos concert booking that cost Emory $37,500, according to SGA adviser Lisa Loveall. “We don’t do deposits because of things like that,” Loveall told about 150 SGA club treasurers Monday. “We are out that money if anything happens so please plan ahead and talk with your

vendors.” Loveall explained vendors may apply pressure to provide a deposit, but according to her, vendors are aware that most state universities do not allow deposits either. Advance deposits for alcoholic beverages will still be allowed, Loveall said. Last March, students lost $37,500 after paying a deposit to an illegitimate booking agency for the 2017 Dooley’s week concert.

Gabrielle Davis/staff

Residents of The Complex, who claimed first place in Songfest for the second consecutive year, perform parodies of popular songs Aug. 25 at the WoodPEC.

See MigoS, Page 3

See CoMPlEx, Page 17

GREEK LIFE

Theta’s ZBT Loses House, on Probation Housing Offer Blocked By RichaRd chess News Editor/City

By RichaRd chess News Editor/City Emory’s Kappa Alpha Theta (Theta) chapter will not have housing in Sorority Village for the 20172018 academic year, although it is in good standing with the University, according to Director of Sorority and Fraternity Life Marlon Gibson. The sorority’s lack of housing lies with its national headquarters, which disallowed the chapter from accepting Emory’s housing offer, Gibson

See SoRoRiTy, Page 3

Emory’s Zeta Beta Tau (ZBT) chapter faces sanctions after an investigation uncovered violations of the school’s anti-hazing policy and use or possession of alcoholic beverages under the age of 21. The chapter lost their on-campus housing at 8 Eagle Row for the 20172018 academic year and will be under disciplinary probation until Aug. 1, 2019, according to an Aug. 7 email Campus Life Senior Director for Communications Tomika DePriest sent the Wheel. The chapter will also lose University recognition pending completion of a membership review, according to DePriest. She said that those are the only sanctions being placed on the fraternity. The Office of Student Conduct, in cooperation with Emory Police Department (EPD), determined that the fraternity violated the Undergraduate Code of Conduct after the office concluded an investigation

MIGRATION

Professor Returns to US After Detention By Michelle lou Executive Editor

ruth r eyes/Photo eDitor

The former Zeta Beta Tau (ZBT) house at 8 Eagle Row is now a residence hall for sophomores, juniors and seniors. mid-July into ZBT for allegations of hazing and use or possession of alcoholic beverages under the age of 21, DePriest wrote. ZBT International Headquarters was notified July 27 that the chapter had violated three codes of student conduct at Emory, according to a

July 28 statement Headquarters sent to the Wheel. DePriest originally told the Wheel “serving beverages to individuals under the age of 21” was a third violation but later corrected that statement, saying the chapter was only

“You’re on your own.” That’s what Isabella Alexander remembers an Algerian police officer telling her during a days-long detention in Algeria, during which she was deprived of food and water for 24-hour periods. The Algerian police, she realized, were not going to contact the U.S. Embassy on her behalf despite her repeated requests. isabella Alexander, visiting assistant professor of anthropology

See FRATERniTy, Page 4

CONFEDERATE MONUMENTS

Georgia Debates Fate of Confederate Symbols By Nicole sadek Copy Editor

Two summers ago, a South Carolina native set out to ignite a race war. Two weeks ago, his hopes were fulfilled when several hundred white supremacists emerged from the guise of the internet, chanting “blood and soil.”

Before walking into a Charleston, S.C., church with a .45-caliber Glock handgun, Dylann Roof was known for posing with Confederate flags on the internet. His actions spurred an extremist movement that had been largely absent from the mainstream news cycle until the recent clashes in Charlottesville, Va., where the ideas

and violence espoused by the so-called “alt-right” alarmed the nation and triggered discourse about Confederate-era symbols and their place in modern society. Georgia is home to the second-largest number of Confederate symbols — including monuments, streets, counties and parks — in the United States

Nafimul huDa/staff

with 194, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The August “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville prompted petitions nationwide to relocate Confederate monuments from public spaces, including the “Lost Cause” monument

Alexander, a visiting assistant professor of anthropology, was in Algeria working on a documentary over summer break when police arrested her on suspicion of foreign espionage. In detention, she was tired and hungry and had been “roughed up,” she told the Wheel. But several days into the

See SEnd, Page 4

See JouRnAliST, Page 2

back to school, PaGe 7 NEWS Vote on emory

AnnexAtion into AtlAntA PostPoned ... PAGE 4

OP-ED confederAte

stAtues rePresent hAtred, not history ... PAGE 5

A&E ‘the emoji moVie’

BloAted Work of Pure mArketing ... PAGE 15

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EMORY LIFE diy

SPORTS soccer teAm

reciPes for students At the heAds to field With neW eAd coAch ... duc-ling ... h Back Page PAGE 17


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