Since 1919
Emory University’s Independent Student Newspaper
The Emory Wheel
Volume 99, Issue 4
Printed Every Wednesday
Wednesday, September 20, 2017
MUSIC MIDTOWN
COLLEGE COUNCIL
Two Senior Legislators Resign From CC
GEORGIA TECH
Fatal Shooting Sparks Protests
By Julia Berley Contributing Writer
By madiSon BoBer Contributing Writer
Two College Council (CC) senior legislators have resigned “due to unforeseen circumstances,” according to a Sept. 18 email from CC President Cassidy Schwartz (17C). Their positions will be filled through an “interview process,” Schwartz told the Wheel. The positions must be filled by students who are enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences and have senior standing. The legislators who resigned were Matt Goldman (18C) and Karen Shim (19C). Schwartz and CC Vice President Naman Jain (18C) plan to interview candidates Sept. 19 and 20, Schwartz said. They will then present to the legislature their nominations for senior legislators next Wednesday. At least 15 students expressed interest in the position, and 11 have already scheduled interviews, Schwartz said. If a vacancy for an elected position
chapter is aligned with the values of the organization, according to Doctor. During the investigation, the national headquarters halted chapter activities. Now, the chapter will not host social events this year and remains on
The death of a campus LGBT leader at the Georgia Institute of Technology over the weekend prompted violent protests after a vigil Monday night. Georgia Tech Police officer Tyler Beck shot Georgia Tech student Scout Schultz, 21, who was allegedly advancing on officers with a knife, according to the Atlanta-Journal Constitution. Schultz did not put down the knife blade, which was not extended, and kept advancing toward police Saturday night outside a dorm, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI). “Officers provided multiple verbal commands and attempted to speak with Shultz who was not cooperative and would not comply with the officers’ commands,” the agency said in the Sept. 18 statement. “Schultz continued to advance on the officers with the knife. Subsequently, one officer fired striking Schultz.” Students were told to seek shelter by the University
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Gemy Sethaputra/Senior Staff
Singer Tove Lo performs at Music Midtown festival in Piedmont Park. The 19th edition of the annual festival held Sept. 16 and 17 featured a diverse lineup of acts, including Bruno Mars, Blink-182 and Mumford and Sons. See MUSiC, Page 9
SORORITY
Tri Delta Members Offered Ultimatum By richard cheSS News Editor When a national headquarters investigation into Emory’s chapter of Delta Delta Delta (Tri Delta) began, members were presented with two options: relinquish membership or undergo a membership review,
according to Associate Director of the Office of Sorority and Fraternity Life (OSFL) Arthur Doctor. Some chose to relinquish membership, Doctor said. For those who chose the membership review, Tri Delta personnel asked members questions that may have included whether members felt the
TOWN HALL
QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS
Other Univs. Follow In QTM’s Footsteps By Valerie SandoVal Contributing Writer
Parth Mody/Photo Editor
Former President and Emory University Distinguished Professor Jimmy Carter discussed national politics, health care and peanut farming last Wednesday in the WoodPEC.
Carter: Give Trump Credit for DACA By madiSon BoBer Contributing Writer Former President and Emory University Distinguished Professor Jimmy Carter isn’t shy about criticizing the Trump administration, but last Wednesday Carter said that “we have to give [President Donald J. Trump] credit” for his approach to immigration law. Speaking to an animated crowd
in the WoodPEC, Carter, 92, praised Trump for his controversial rollback of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and giving Congress six months to pass a DACA replacement, “which is long overdue.” Trump’s decision applied the pressure needed to push Democratic and Republican legislators into passing an immigration reform bill, Carter said. The former U.S. president’s remarks came during the 36th annual Carter
Town Hall, during which Carter discussed the state of national politics, health care and his personal life to about 1,400 Emory freshmen and other community members. Carter answered questions submitted by audience members in writing and via Twitter and Facebook. Carter noted that Trump has “not ended DACA yet,” and reminded the
NEWS SGA UpdAteS
EDITORIAL police
A&E MUSic Midtown
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The Institute for Quantitative Theory and Methods (QTM) at Emory has caught the attention of top colleges such as Vanderbilt University (Tenn.) and Dartmouth College (N.H.), which are creating similar departments in an effort to better prepare students for the workforce. Created in 2011, the QTM Department at Emory teaches students quantitative analysis across disciplines, according to its website. The curriculum aims to provide students technical skills and substantive knowledge in a specific field such as law or politics, according to QTM Director and Professor of Political Science and Law by Courtesy Clifford Carrubba. “One of our goals is to demonstrate that in fact liberal arts education and vocational skills are complements not substitutes, and that the best education does both,” Carrubba said. Looking to Emory as a model, Vanderbilt is designing a similar program for students to develop a strong foundation in mathematics and quantitative analysis in addition to
EMORY LIFE find
a substantive area of expertise, said Vanderbilt Professor of Law Alan Wiseman, who chairs a committee tasked with launching the program. “The curriculum draws on the programmatic design of Emory’s quantitative sciences, and, similar to Emory’s program, students are required to take core math and programming courses,” Wiseman said. The Vanderbilt committee is still in the process of developing its curriculum and receiving approval, but it hopes to establish the quantitative social sciences (QSS) major by Fall 2018. Emory based its own QTM department on the mathematical methods and social sciences program at Northwestern University (Ill.), according to Carrubba. In 2011, then-College Dean Robin Forman wanted to create an institute to promote quantitative sciences at Emory, according to Carrubba. Carrubba expanded on Northwestern’s program by composing an undergraduate curriculum that included natural sciences and humanities in addition to
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SPORTS oRGAniSAk
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