2.20.15

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The Emory Wheel

index

Emory Events Calendar, Page 2

Police Record, Page 2

Student Life, Page 9

Crossword Puzzle, Page 8

Staff Editorial, Page 6

Sports, Page 11

Since 1919

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

Friday, February 20, 2015 Student Life

Undocumented Student Activists Meet With Wagner year to ensure the fund’s longevity. The donor, not the University, designates the purpose of the endowment, Wagner wrote. The University also must take into consideration other groups ineligible for financial aid, like international students, he added. In addition to financial aid, the group of students pushed the University to elucidate, through its website, the fact that the University accepts students living in the U.S. without citizenship but currently does not offer them need-based aid. “We want admissions and financial aid staff to be trained in the intricacies of the process,” Kim said. The group also emphasized Emory’s potential status as a leader in its home state, where the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia banned undocumented students from applying to Georgia’s top five public schools in 2011 and barred them from applying for instate tuition in the same year. “It’s going to be a long process, which is a good thing because we have a lot of things to work out,” Kim said. He noted that undocumented students opening acceptance letters and meager financial aid packages this spring represented an “immediate need” for the University to address. “It’s great that other schools set up these working groups [for aiding undocumented students] and everything, but we can’t let those students fall through the cracks,” Kim said. Though Wagner wrote that he respects Kim’s eagerness to initiate programs for such students, he cautioned that “time is short, considering where we are in the admissions and financial cycle.” Delgadillo, one of the two Freedom University students present, wrote in an email to the Wheel that, though Wagner appeared to understand the group’s

By Lydia O’Neal Asst. News Editor Advocates for undocumented students met with University President James W. Wagner and Special Assistant to the President Evan Goldberg on Wednesday to discuss financial aid opportunities for incoming Emory students who live in the United States without citizenship. The advocates included College senior Andy Kim, co-founder of the undocumented student advocacy group Freedom at Emory University, and Valentina Garcia and Sergio Delgadillo, both high school graduates and students at the Georgiabased Freedom University, an organization for undocumented student advocacy offering college-level classes and leadership training. The three had also met with Wagner three weeks earlier. Rather than give a half-hour presentation, as they did at the previous meeting, the three student advocates, joined this time by College sophomore and Freedom at Emory member Lamija Grbic, presented and discussed the short- and long-term actions the University could take to address the needs of Emory’s incoming undocumented students and future undocumented applicants for about an hour, according to Kim. “We’re asking the University to provide financial aid for undocumented students and trying to think of the ways we can do that,” Kim said. “It’s not that we want to give undocumented students special treatment — it’s more of an idea that we just want undocumented students to be treated like all other students.” The sort of financial aid fund the group is looking for would require a donor to make an endowment at least 20 times the annual payout, Wagner wrote in an email to the Wheel. The University would then invest the endowment with the goal of earning five percent interest each

See Next, Page 4

faculty

Faculty Gov. Meeting Discusses Bylaws By Sam Budnyk A&E Editor

Kenneth Cole, an American fashion designer and social activist, will be this year’s speaker at Class Day, a ceremony for the baccalaureate graduates from Emory College, Goizueta Business School, Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing and the School of Medicine’s Medical Imaging Program. Class Day is a studentorganized ceremony that traditionally takes place the Thursday before Commencement and involves the presentation of the class gift, awards and a keynote speech, according to the Class Day website. Cole graduated as an undergraduate from Emory College in 1976, and, that summer, he began to work for his father’s Brooklyn shoe factory, according to the Harvard Business Review. After turning the company into a $100 million corporation, Cole started his own fashion company, Kenneth Cole Productions in 1982. Since then, the company has developed five brands, creating shoes,

See Cole, Page 4

Salman Rushdie, renowned author and University Distinguished Professor, will deliver the keynote address to Emory University’s Class of 2015 at this year’s Commencement ceremony on May 11. College Dean Robin Forman made the announcement during Rushdie’s final public lecture as an Emory faculty member at Glenn Memorial Auditorium on Sunday evening. Rushdie was named distinguished writer in residence in the Department of English at Emory in 2006 and will conclude his position with Emory this year before joining the faculty at New York University next year. Rushdie is regarded as one of the greatest modern writers, achieving literary eminence with his second novel, Midnight’s Children, which won the Booker Prize in 1981. Rushdie achieved global recognition after the publication of his fourth novel, The Satanic Verses, when former Iranian political and religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini called for Rushdie’s death in 1989. Maintaining the tradition to award the Commencement speaker with an honorary degree, the University will award Rushdie an honorary Doctor of Letters degree. This year, the announcement that Rushdie was chosen as Commencement speaker came as

News Theft, underage

drinking and more in the crime report

...

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contractor. (Robertson is also a sales associate at the Wheel.) Bon Appétit gave its presentation on Monday evening and Sodexo gave its presentation on Tuesday. At the Bon Appétit presentation, Bon Appétit Cofounder and Chief Executive Officer Fedele Bauccio described his dream for the company. “We want to be the premier on-site restaurant company,” Bauccio said. “The word ‘restaurant’ is important, known for its culinary expertise and a commitment to social and responsible practices.” He added that his goal was to create a chef-driven restaurant company that had healthy but delicious food. According to Bauccio, Bon Appétit, which cooks everything from scratch, operates at 500 locations and has approximately 17,000 employees. Bauccio also estimated that Bon

Note: Names of faculty members who spoke during the meeting have been omitted in accordance to the terms that allowed the Wheel to attend the meeting. This article is a continuation of coverage on the faculty meeting that began and was adjourned on Feb. 11. Faculty members returned to White Hall on Feb. 18 to finish voting on the proposed faculty bylaw revisions, a process that began last week. These bylaw revisions passed by faculty vote and will involve the formation of the inaugural College Senate by election by May 1. Resuming where discussion had left off the week prior, the meeting started at just after 4 p.m. Most of the issues raised by faculty consisted of clarification or rewording of some proposed language, but there were several topics that generated controversy. One provision that was held over from the previous version of the bylaws stated that all members of the Grievance Committee shall be tenured faculty members. This provision resulted in lengthy discussion of both the fairness of the provision and confusion over its original purpose. History Professor Clifton Crais, who led the presentation of the proposed bylaw revision as the Governance Committee (GovCom) Chair, told one speaker that it was difficult to know what it was intended to do. “The intentions of [this] provision are not clear,” he said, emphasizing

See Sodexo, Page 3

See amendment, Page 5

Hagar Elsayed /Photo Editor

Todd Schram, resident district manager for Sodexo, answers questions raised from the Emory community at the Sodexo dining presentation in Harland Cinema on Tuesday.

Community Explores Dining Options By Brandon Fuhr Senior Staff Writer Two dining services finalists, Bon Appétit Management and Sodexo, gave presentations to the Emory community earlier this week as the University prepares to renew its dining contract with Sodexo. Sodexo currently manages Emory’s dining operations, which include the Dobbs Market, Cox Hall and Peet’s Coffee & Tea, among others. According to Senior Director of the University Food Service Administration Dave Furhman, Emory is in the final year of a 10-year contract with Sodexo that will expire on May 31. “Like any campus that outsources their dining, there are choices,” Furhman said. “You could just renew a contract, and we decided not to, not because we are not happy with Sodexo, but we felt it was our respon-

sibility to do that.” According to Furhman, a committee including students, faculty and staff narrowed the field down to two finalists: Sodexo, the incumbent, and Bon Appétit. “We looked for students that represented different constituents on campus,” Furhman said. “We have a couple students representing the Food Advisory Committee Emory (FACE), a student representing SGA [Student Government Association], a student representing RHA [Residence Hall Association] and a graduate student.” According to FACE Co-Chair Molly Talman, students who wanted to increase the student voice in Emory Dining started the committee three years ago. Talman and her co-chair, Bryce Robertson, work with an executive board of about 10 students to establish working relationships and relay communications between the students, Emory Dining and the dining

tedx at wonderful wednesday

Kenneth Rushdie Chosen as 2015 Cole To Be Commencement Speaker Class Day Speaker By Wendy Becker Staff Writer

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Every Tuesday and Friday

dining

Graduation

By Sarah Husain Staff Writer

Volume 96, Issue

a surprise to many. Vice President and Deputy to the President Gary Hauk confirmed that Rushdie was not on the original list of choices. Each spring, Hauk forms a committee of around 20 third-year students to begin the process of choosing the next year’s Commencement speaker. Deans and faculty members that interact with students daily suggest juniors that they feel are actively involved on campus and respected by their peers, according to Hauk. The committee then develops a list of eight to 10 unranked choices. According to Hauk, this list typically includes anyone from Supreme Court justices to comedians and musicians, to renowned politicians and world figures. The committee looks for individuals who exemplify Emory’s vision statement, have a bit of name recognition and are known to speak eloquently and interestingly, Hauk said. “I can say that what we do is start very early, right after Commencement, and right after the list is prepared by the committee and submitted to the President, to reach out to some of the people who are on the list,” Hauk said. “When we run up against certain obstacles or brick walls, we often have to go to this pool of honorary degree candidates.” According to Goizueta Business School senior and com-

See committee, Page 5

OP-EDs Emory

students debate

University ...

Freedom PAGE 6

C

Andrew Le/Staff

ollege junior Sasha Cukier jumped in the ball pit which was sponsored by TEDxEmory during Wonderful Wednesday this week. TEDx promoted their annual main event which will take place next Saturday, Feb. 28.

brief

Shopping Shuttles, Poetry Reading & More By Lydia O’Neal Asst. News Editor Cliff Shuttle to Walmart and Your DeKalb Farmers Market A Cliff shuttle will take students to an Atlanta Walmart and the Your DeKalb Farmers Market (YDFM) grocery store in Avondale Estates on Sunday, according to an email sent to Emory students from the Office of Residence Life and Housing.

Student Life

Spotlight: integrated visual arts co-major ... PAGE 9

Student Government Association Sophomore Representative Crystal McBrown wrote the bill, which was approved by the College Council this year, as well as for services on Nov. 15 and Dec. 6. “A few of my friends complained about how neighboring Emory stores are so expensive and didn’t allow them to buy in bulk,” McBrown said. The bus, which departs from Woodruff Circle every 30 to 35 minutes between 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. on

Sunday, Feb. 22, will head to the Walmart Supercenter on Memorial Drive in Atlanta, as well as the nearby 7,500 square-foot farmers market, which includes a massive selection of organic, international and niche foods. “I included the DeKalb Farmers Market for two reasons — more ridership, and it’s close to the Walmart,” McBrown said.

See social, Page 4

Sports Baseball sweeps Next Issue Emory

opening home tournament at

Chappell Park ...

Page 11

Semester Online courses ... Tuesday brings back


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