1.23.15

Page 1

The Emory Wheel

index

Emory Events Calendar, Page 2

Honor Council Cases, Page 2

Student Activities Calendar, Page 8

Staff Editorial, Page 6

Student Life, Page 9

Sports, Page 11

Since 1919

The Independent Student Newspaper of Emory University www.emorywheel.com

Friday, January 23, 2015

CAMpus life

Wilson Resigns, Will Move to Johns Hopkins By Annie McGrew Asst. News Editor

C

Kike Afolabi-Brown/Contributor

ivil rights legend Bob Moses spoke in Winship Ballroom Tuesday for the annual Martin Luther King, Jr. lecture hosted by the Department of African American Studies. Moses was one of the leading organizers of the 1964 Freedom Summer in Mississippi and has continued his activism through the Algebra Project, which teaches students in underserved schools.

EBOLA

Doctors Test Ebola Survivors’ Blood for Treatment Emory doctors are collecting and transfusing plasma from virus survivors to infected patients as part of a new plan to combat the Ebola virus. The Ebola Plasma Bank, a store of the light yellow component of blood taken from Ebola survivors, aims to treat infected patients with antibodies found in the plasma, which may neutralize the active virus in the patients’ blood, according to Dr. Anne Winkler, assistant professor of

pathology and laboratory medicine at Emory and a principal investigator for the clinical trial of the plasma bank. “There is no data to prove that it is efficacious,” Winkler said of the results of the plasma transfusions, but she added that the plasma is under an “active study of investigation.” Winkler added that the plasma is used in conjunction with other treatment in the hopes of improving survival rates. The primary treatment for Ebola patients at the moment is supportive care, including IV fluid

27

Every Tuesday and Friday

a call to action

By Naomi Maisel Senior Staff Writer

Volume 96, Issue

and electrolyte management, Winkler said. According to Winkler, the only requirement for a patient to receive a transfusion is that his or her blood type must be compatible with the blood type of the donor. Since the first American Ebola patient, Dr. Kent Brantly, was taken to Emory University Hospital (EUH) in August 2014 from Liberia, EUH staff has been involved with developing strict protocols and treatment to reduce the number of Ebola infections.

Dr. Colleen Kraft, assistant professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at Emory University and the trial’s clinical investigator, first introduced the idea of the plasma bank to Winkler in fall 2014. Winkler said she could not disclose the month of the first collection so as to protect the patient’s identity. According to Kraft, who helped to treat the first Ebola patients at EUH, she and other doctors had the idea of plasma transfusions but elicited

See Investigators, Page 3

Emory Remembers MLK

Andy Wilson, senior associate dean for Emory’s Division of Campus Life, announced his resignation on Wednesday. Wilson, who has been at the University for 13 years, has accepted the position of Dean of Academic and Student Services at Johns Hopkins U n i v e r s i t y, Andy Wilson, effective April senior associate 6. dean for The search Campus Life for a replacement for Wilson is underway. In addition to being senior associate dean for Emory’s Division of Campus Life, Wilson serves as Interim Assistant Vice President of Community, a new position in Campus Life. Wilson said that he’ll be helping Senior Vice President and Dean of Campus Life Ajay Nair to strategize how to fill the gap. According to Wilson, his replacement should be announced sometime before he leaves. Johns Hopkins offers opportunities for Wilson that will allow him to explore his passion of social justice as well as utilize his student and academic affairs experience, he said. “It’s really a unique position there,” Wilson said. “But it does require me to leave a community that I’ve been a part of for 15 years, and that’s tough.“ After Wilson transitions from Emory during spring break, he will start at Johns Hopkins in early April so that he can meet with some of his future colleagues before the end of the spring semester. Wilson said his new job will be a blend of his work at Emory between

faculty and academic affairs and the intersection between the two. “[A] majority of my job would be working with their school of arts and sciences and their school of engineering and to strengthen their academic services,” Wilson said. “I have a passion for that, so for that to be the entirety of my position [at Hopkins] is a great opportunity.” However, Wilson noted Emory is “a hard place to leave.” “I’m going to miss out on some of the milestones that some of our students will achieve in the near future, and that’s something that I wish I would be here for,” Wilson said. One of Wilson’s colleagues, Interim Senior Director in the Division of Campus Life Matt Garrett, wrote in an email to the Wheel that he is very happy for Wilson despite his sadness of his departure. “[Wilson] has provided very good guidance to staff and students as we work to build a stronger, more inclusive and more engaged Emory community,” Garrett wrote. Many of Wilson’s students expressed similar sentiments. Vice President of the Student Government Association and College junior Raj Tilwa wrote in an email to the Wheel that Wilson has been a mentor, an advisor and a friend to him. “His empathetic leadership has inspired many things that I have accomplished or am working on at Emory,” Tilwa wrote. “Any time I have an idea or a problem, [Wilson] is the first person I reach out to.” College senior Hal Zeitlin wrote in an email to the Wheel that he got to know Wilson through RHA and at 1836 Dinners. As Zeitlin spent more time with Wilson, “[he] began to see [Wilson] as a friend and a personal mentor,” he wrote.

— Contact Annie McGrew at anne.elizabeth.mcgrew@emory.edu

CANDLELIGHT VIGIL

Franklin Explores Meaning of King’s Legacy Today By Annie McGrew Asst. News Editor “How will we know we are living up to King’s vision? How will we know we are on the way forward?” Dr. Robert M. Franklin, the new James T. and Berta R. Laney Professor in Moral Leadership at the Candler School of Theology, lectured to a room of over 50 people on Wednesday morning as part of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Week events. The lecture, titled “From Here to

There: Dr. King’s Vision, Our Current Reality and the Way Forward,” is one in a series of periodic talks that Candler holds on Wednesdays at 11 a.m. Last Wednesday’s lecture was particularly timely, given Emory’s week-long celebration of Martin Luther King Jr., according to Jan Love, dean of the Candler School of Theology. Franklin is also the senior advisor for community and diversity at Emory, the director of the Religion Department at the Chautauqua

Institution in Chautauqua, New York and the president emeritus of Morehouse College. During the lecture, Franklin emphasized King’s role as not just a social activist but also as a man of faith. King was a minister who once preached at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, and Franklin highlighted King’s belief of the interconnectedness of all people. Highlighting King’s determi-

See lecture, Page 4

Panel Compares Civil Rights Era, Volunteer Today’s Immigration Policies Emory Hosts Service Day By Lydia O’Neal Asst. News Editor

How do the struggles of the undocumented hearken back to the Civil Rights Movement? A panel explored that question as part of Emory’s week-long celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr. on Thursday night. The King Week discussion titled “Dreamers: Yesterday, Today & Tomorrow,” drew on the discrimination and violence African Americans faced during the 1960s Civil Rights Movement, as well as those faced by the children of immigrants who have come to the U.S. without proper documentation. The two students and a professor from a school dedicated to immi-

grant students’ rights joined Emory Associate Professor of African American Studies Carol Anderson for the event at the Woodruff Health Sciences Center Administration Building (WHSCAB). Chief Executive Officer of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights (NCCHR) Doug Shipman (’95C) moderated the talk. Laura Emiko Soltis (’12G), the executive director of Georgia’s Freedom University — a school that provides college-level courses and scholarship help to undocumented students unable to apply to many public schools in Georgia, presented to the audience her own photographic work, some of which depicted

See Emory, Page 4

News Emory

recognized for community engagement

...

PAGE 3

In honor of civil rights advocate and leader Martin Luther King Jr., Emory’s King Week kicked off this week with Emory’s Day On, a day of volunteer work hosted by Volunteer Emory (VE). On Monday morning students gathered at the Dobbs University Center (DUC) to travel to one of 12 non-profit service organizations across Atlanta, where they engaged in volunteer work from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

See students, Page 4

OP-EDs American

problem

...

PAGE 7

irst-year Law School student Haseeb Husain, College senior Farhan Momin, McTyeire Residence Hall Director Areeba Qazi and College sophomore Faizan Kothari gathered in Asbury Circle Friday evening, honoring the victims of the massacre at a school in Peshwar, Pakistan on Dec. 16.

Law SCHOOL

By Emily Lim Staff Writer

media’s “islamophobia”

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Erin Baker/Staff-

New Law School Dean to Focus on Student Public Service Opportunities By Rupsha Basu News Editor

Emory School of Law has appointed Rita Sheffey to the newly created position of assistant dean of public service. The new position was designed to expand on the existing opportunities and provide a broader array of pro

Student life Vine

Emory radio show “The Mix” ... PAGE 9 star visits

bono, or free legal service for usually low-income clients, and public service opportunities, including expanding involvement in Atlanta-area organizations and increasing relationships with local judges, Sheffey said. Sheffey will oversee the school’s public service and interest programs, counsel students interested in pro bono opportunities and expand

Sports Track and

Division i and ii competitors ... Page 11 field crush

post-graduation judicial clerkship participation. Sheffey attended law school at Boston College after receiving a Ph.D. in chemistry from Duke University and a fellowship at Harvard Medical School. She then worked for a number of years at the law firm Hunton

See Sheffey, Page 3

Next Issue

Sororities complete recruitment ... Tuesday


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