The Emory Wheel
INDEX
Emory Events Calendar, Page 2
Staff Editorial, Page 6
Police Record, Page 2
Student Life, Page 9
Crossword Puzzle, Page 8
Sports, Page 11
Since 1919
The Independent Student Newspaper of Emory University www.emorywheel.com
Friday, March 20, 2015
Bobby Jones Scholars to Attend Univ. in Scotland
The Robert T. Jones Trust selected four College seniors to study for a year at the University of St Andrews in Scotland as recipients of the annual Robert T. Jones Jr. Scholarships. The Robert T. Jones Scholarship, often referred to as the Bobby Jones Scholarship, was established in 1976 to honor the renowned golfer and Emory alumnus. Each year, the scholarship provides a tuition waiver and a living stipend for a year at the University of St Andrews. The University, a public research university located in Fife, Scotland, was founded in 1413 and is the third oldest university in the Englishspeaking world. According to the scholarship’s website, award criteria include an outstanding academic record, a record of significant leadership in the Emory community and scholarly interests that can be pursued through the offerings at St Andrews. Kate Cyr
International tudies and Middle Eastern and South Asian studies double-major, wrote in an email to the Wheel that she plans to pursue a one-year Master of Letters in peace and conflict studies degree at the University of St Andrews’ School of International Relations. “My goal is to go into international human rights law, or a related field,” Cyr wrote. “I think it’s really important to understand the field from multiple angles, and a master’s in peace and conflict studies would help me understand the theories that go into international policy regarding violence.” Cyr is currently writing her honors thesis on Kurdish violence in Turkey and its depiction in the media. She wrote that her main interest is in ethnonationalist and independence movements, with a focus on the Kurds specifically. “In Scotland, I want to broaden my understanding of global conflict away from one particular region or sub-topic,” she wrote. Cyr currently serves as co-president of the Emory International
College senior Kate Cyr, an
See STUDENTS, Page 5
Kate Cyr, College senior, internaional studies and Middle Eastern and South Asian Studies
Sara Stavile, College senior, English and creative writing
Peter Habib, College senior, Middle Eastern and South Asain Studies
Kadiata Sy, College senior, political science and Middle Eastern and South Asian Studies
CDC Funds Rollins Project in Africa
By Lydia O’Neal News Editor
E
See INITIATIVE, Page 3
See NATIONWIDE, Page 3
See MEETING, Page 4
mory’s Karma Bhangra dance team performed at the South Asian Arts Mela this past Tuesday. The Indian Cultural Exchange (ICE) and the Halle Institute hosted the event, which showcased Emory’s dance and a capella groups, as a part of India Week at Emory.
EMORY HEALTHCARE
Mandl Appointed Healthcare CEO By Annie McGrew News Editor
Michael J. Mandl will serve as the president and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Emory Healthcare (EHC), according to an all-University email announcement from University President James W. Wagner on March 11. The Executive Committee of the Emory Board of Trustees endorsed Wagner’s appointment, which became effective March 16, according to Wagner’s email. Mandl moved up to CEO from his position as the executive vice president for business and administration, a position he has occupied since he first came to Emory in 2003. Before he joined Emory’s administration, Mandl served as the vice president for financial services at Duke University. Mandl wrote that he is happy to
serve Emory “in this new way that has been asked of me and to work more closely with the extraordinary people of EHC and the School of Medicine to advance our mission.” Wagner is also looking forward to Mandl’s new position. “[Mandl] is an extraordinary executive leader with great capacity and heart,” Wagner wrote in an email to the Wheel. He added that Mandl has been serving as the chair of EHC Board of Directors since September and has been the “point person” in guiding Emory’s engagement with WellStar Health System. The University announced in a Feb. 9 press release that EHC and WellStar would engage in formal discussions regarding a merger. “So he has been building a deepening familiarity with our health care
ACADEMICS
Emory to Offer Course on The Ferguson Movement By Anwesha Guha Contributing Writer
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Hagar Elsayed/Photo Editor
uddhist scholar Geshe Lhakdor spoke about secular ethics, which is the Dalai Lama’s view of a universal education about morality founded on core human values, during India Week on Monday evening in White Hall. Lhakdor is the director of the Library of Tibetan Works and Archives.
OBITUARY
Emory Alum Claude Sitton, 89, Dies By Samantha Goodman Staff Writer
Acclaimed civil rights and Pulitzer prize-winning journalist Claude Sitton, an Emory alum, died of congestive heart failure on Tuesday, March 10 at the age of 89, according to the New York Times. Sitton (‘47OX, ‘49C), who was born in 1925 at Emory University Hospital, eventually chose the school as his
NEWS Undocumented
student aid plans undetermined
enterprise and its mission in the context of Emory’s broader mission,” Wagner wrote. Mandl’s appointment followed the Jan. 7 resignation of John Fox, who served EHC as president and CEO for 16 years. Wagner noted that Fox was among several people with whom he consulted prior to making the decision to appoint Mandl. Mandl wrote in an email to the Wheel that he has worked with Fox over the last 12 years and has worked even more closely with him since his announced departure. As far as the possibility of an EHC-WellStar merger, Mandl wrote that the Board of Trustees will ultimately decide but that the decision will be a “team effort.”
In a series of meetings over the past month, student activists and University administration officials developed plans for the potential creation of an endowment to support long-term financial aid for undocumented students, as well as programs to help accommodate such students throughout their time on campus, according to the student activists and member of the administration. Student members of Freedom at Emory University, a campus group advocating for undocumented students’ rights, met with Senior Vice President of Development and Alumni Relations Susan Cruse on Feb. 27; Executive Vice President and Dean of Campus Life Ajay Nair on March 3 and Provost and Executive Vice President of Academic Affairs Claire Sterk, Assistant Vice Provost and Dean of Admissions John Latting and Financial Aid Director John Leach on March 11. The discussions followed two preliminary meetings between University President James W. Wagner and members of both Freedom at Emory and Freedom University, a Georgia-based undocumented student leadership school and advocacy organization, on Jan. 28 and Feb. 18. College senior and Freedom at Emory co-founder Andy Kim and College sophomore Julianna Joss met with Cruse to discuss ways to give undocumented students not only the
Erin Baker/Staff
By Brandon Fuhr Asst. Digital Editor A Rollins School of Public Health research team received nearly $7.5 million from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to further train public health workers in West Africa, according to a Feb. 24 University press release. “We are about building local capacity, while respecting national sovereignty and supporting the needs of the people in the region,” Scott McNabb, leader of the Rollins team and research professor at the school, said. “It is not enough to come into a country and tell people what to do because after the experts go home, people revert back to their original ways.” One of the major goals of the Rollins team is to establish The African Centre of Excellence for Public Health Security, a building in West Africa that will serve as the regional headquarters for health safety preparedness. The plan comes after the widespread outbreak of Ebola in mid-2014 in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. “If a pandemic like this swept
ACTIVISM
Admins Meet With Freedom at Emory
INDIA WEEK LECTURE
PUBLIC HEALTH
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Every Tuesday and Friday
INDIA WEEK: SOUTH ASIAN ARTS MELA
AWARDS
By Annie McGrew News Editor
Volume 96, Issue
alma mater. According to James M. Cox Jr. Professor of Journalism Hank Klibanoff, Sitton always had strong ties to Emory. He returned to teach at Emory in 1991, played a large role in the revitalization of the Journalism Program and served on the Board of Counselors at Oxford College until 2001. Sitton enrolled at Emory with the intention to pursue business — until
OP-EDS ESJP President responds to PAGE 6 Truth Wall ...
he got a job working for the Wheel, according to Klibanoff. Sitton then not only became the Wheel’s editorin-chief but also a journalism major in the summer of 1949. During his senior year, Sitton received job offers from the International News Service and United Press. He then worked as a press attaché in Ghana, reporting on
See SITTON’S, Page 3
STUDENT LIFE
Students share Alternative Spring Break stories ... PAGE 9
Last August, the shooting of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown by a white police officer on Aug. 9 in Ferguson, MO sparked riots, protests and a national conversation on police violence against blacks in America. This fall, Emory students have the opportunity to examine the issue through a course designed specifically to explore the event. The Ferguson Movement: Power, Politics and Protest is the first ever course designed by the Center for Faculty Development and Excellence (CFDE) instead of a professor. The course will be offered to undergraduate, graduate and professional students. The creation of the course followed Emory’s own response to the Ferguson events in early December, when students organized a “die-in” protest. This response was inspired by the death of Eric Garner, a black man who was strangled to death by a white police officer in New York. Given the protests, CDFE Director and Professor of African Studies and Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Pamella Scully; Associate CDFE Director and Graduate Institute of the Liberal Arts Adjunct Assistant Professor Donna Troka; and Vice Provost for Academic Affairs and Emory Law Professor Dorothy Brown launched the course. Faculty members from various backgrounds, including the Goizueta
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Business School and the School of Medicine, will give guest lectures and lead discussions regarding the events in Ferguson. Though the list of faculty members teaching this course has not yet been finalized, two professors will take turns teaching each class meeting throughout the semester, according to Brown. Brown said that she pitched the idea to other Emory faculty members. “Then we started laughing when we thought about how busy each of us were, and we couldn’t take on the responsibility of an additional 14-week course,” she said. As she began to speak with Scully, however, the idea solidified. “We both jumped on the idea and started brainstorming,” Brown said. “The response was so overwhelming.” Although the initial plan for the 14-week course was a three-hour session taught by a single faculty member, the current proposed structure of the course will bring together faculty that are researching in similar areas — “and they may not have known about their colleagues across campus,” Brown said. College seniors Jovanna Jones and Sammie Scott responded positively to the introduction of the course. “I think the class is going to be really dope, because it’s a class that’s using Ferguson as a lens, but it’s not just about Ferguson,” Jones said. “So it’s like having a class on a particular moment that everyone is connecting
See FERGUSON, Page 3
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