The Emory Wheel since 1919
Emory University’s Independent Student Newspaper
Volume 102, Issue 3
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Printed Every Other Wednesday
COVID-19 Cases Surge, Emory Expands Testing By Madison Hopkins, Grace Lee and Sarah Du Senior Staff Writer and Contributing Writers
University President Gregory Fenves announced Emory recorded 106 cases Wednesday and Thursday last week. The University recorded a total of 174 cases between Feb. 15 and Feb. 22, according to Emory’s COVID19 Dashboard. As of Tuesday evening, the Dashboard reported 51 confirmed cases on Feb. 17, with 50 student cases and 1 staff case. This is the University’s highest single-day case total to date. The majority of cases were off-campus students, with clusters of cases at Raoul, Harris and Longstreet Means residence halls. Overall, only six cases in the last week were staff. As of Sunday night, there were 125 students in isolation and quarantine at the Emory Conference Center Hotel, almost twice the peak number during the fall. Associate Vice President and Executive Director of COVID-19 Response and Recovery Amir St. Clair urged students to comply not only with testing, but also with safety guidelines both on and off campus. “Our students wear their masks, they’re physically distancing, they’re doing what they should on campus,” St. Clair said. “For whatever reason, we’re not demonstrating those good practices off campus..”
Conservative Students Maneuver Campus Politics By Caelan Bailey Senior Staff Writer
Mackenzie Jones (22Ox) said it was “saddening and frustrating” that while she does her best to abide by COVID19 guidelines, she feels others purposefully disregard these guidelines despite knowing the consequences for the Emory community. “They’re making a conscious decision to go out and party, and put themselves in risky situations, and they’re not only risking themselves but they’re
risking us,” Jones said. “It’s not only like putting us in harm’s way, I feel like it’s also disrespectful to everyone on this campus. I just feel like you have to have a lot of disrespect to do that.” On-Campus Students to Receive Two Tests Per Week In response to the spike, the University increased weekly screen-
ing test requirements for on-campus students from once to twice per week. Students were assigned to a Monday and Thursday or Tuesday and Friday rotation based on their residence hall. Off-campus students must still test once per week if they wish to use campus facilities. The University also added the
As competitive presidential and Senate elections in Georgia ushered in a record degree of political engagement among students, Emory conservatives are navigating a highly charged campus. Today, students and professors alike point to a dichotomy between the Emory’s robust open expression policy that formally protects speech on campus and overwhelming social pressures that shame conservative expression. Emory College Republicans (ECR) President Jasmine Jaffe (22C) noted that former President Donald Trump was particularly divisive, saying that ECR members voted for both President Joe Biden and Trump in the 2020 election. Even with Trump out of office, she doubts cross-ideological dialogue
See DIRECTOR, Page 3
See STUDENTS, Page 3
The Life and Legacy Of Hamilton Holmes By Hannah Risman Contributing Writer
Courtesy of Colter Frey
Snow blankets South Congress Avenue, a major road in Austin, Texas, after Winter Storm Uri swept the state on Feb. 14.
Emory Texans Battle Winter Storm By Hannah Risman and Hannah Book Contributing Writers Amid a pandemic on the most romantic day of the year, the perfect storm hit Texas. Texas faced record-low temperatures as Winter Storm Uri swept across the state on Feb. 14. Unprepared for extreme weather conditions, the Energy Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) – the state’s power grid oper-
NEWS
Professor Appointed to Kamala Harris’ Advisory Board ... PAGE 4 P
ator – failed to meet the increasing energy demands, leaving millions of Texans without access to electricity or heat. After enduring multiple days of subfreezing temperatures, over 14.4 million Texans in 190 counties continue to face water disruptions without a clear end in sight. Kendall Kalmans (24C), who is attending classes from her home in Houston, described the initial, collective sense of curious bewilderment as
Texans basked in the foreign flurries, unaware of the turmoil to come. “It was like the snow day that everyone dreams of until Monday when people started losing power,” Kalmans said. Mo Singhal (22C), a student currently residing in Dallas, echoed feeling astonished when snow first arrived on his doorstep. “I’ve been here for about 12, 13 years
EDITORIAL Work Study Is Inequitable, Inefficient ... PAGE 5
A&E Daft Punk Announces Split ...
See DESPERATE, Page 2
As the first Black student admitted to the Emory School of Medicine, Hamilton Earl Holmes (67M) is a trailblazing figure in Emory history. Hamilton Holmes, nicknamed “Hamp,” was born on July 8, 1941 in Atlanta. Hamilton grew up in a renowned family within the civil rights community. A “third-generation integrationist,” Hamilton succeeded his grandfather and father who successfully filed suit in 1955 to desegregate Atlanta’s public golf courses. Hamilton attended Henry McNeal Turner High School, the most prestigious public high school for Black students in Atlanta at the time. He excelled at Turner, balancing his esteemed scholastic record and athletic accomplishments as senior class president and co-captain of the football team. Hamilton graduated as valedictorian from Turner in 1959. His success at Turner attracted the attention of Jesse Hill, a member of the Atlanta NAACP education committee, who recruited Black students to desegregate Georgia higher-education institutions. Hill suggested that Hamilton and Charlayne Hunter, a fellow Turner graduate, apply to the University of Georgia (UGA), an institution thenGovernor Ernest Vandiver famously
vowed no Black student would attend. UGA rejected both Hamilton’s and Hunter’s fall 1959 applications, citing “space shortage,” but the NAACP persisted. Following a two-and-a-halfyear legal battle, federal judge William Bootle ruled in favor of the students on Jan. 6, 1961, arguing that Hamilton and Hunter were “fully qualified for immediate admission” and “would have already been admitted had it not been for their race and color.” Consequently, UGA admitted the first two Black students in its 175-year history. Hamilton transferred from Morehouse College (Ga.) to UGA in 1961 and was met with burning crosses, a hanging black effigy named “Hamilton Holmes” and a studentorganized riot. Braving racial hostility, Hamilton still excelled scholastically, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1963. Like UGA, Hamilton’s admission to the Emory School of Medicine as a student of color required legal action. Two Emory administrators sued Georgia in 1961 to overturn a discriminatory state tax statute that would have revoked Emory’s tax-exemption status if it admitted students of color. The Georgia Supreme Court ruled in favor of Emory in 1962, and Hamilton became the first Black student admit-
See HOLMES, Page 2
EMORY LIFE What SPORTS Emory Athletics Black History Month Means Restarts With Obstacles ... Back Page PAGE 7 to Black Profs. ... PAGE 9