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Emory University to search for new president
Emory University to search for new president

Yahoo

time28-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Emory University to search for new president

Emory University is making leadership changes. The current president, Gregory Fenves, will become the university's sixth chancellor. The university's Board of Trustees announced that former Georgia Supreme Court Justice Leah Ward Sears will be interim president. The changes will happen Sept. 1. The board says it will conduct a national search for a new president. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] 'I'm honored and excited to announce the appointment of Greg Fenves as chancellor and Leah Ward Sears as interim president,' said Board of Trustees Chair Bob Goddard. 'Dr. Fenves has been a highly effective and dedicated president, and this new role will enable him to build on the essential growth he helped facilitate while focusing on Emory's future.' Sears has served on the Emory Board of Trustees since 2010 and is a graduate of the Emory School of Law. TRENDING STORIES: Man killed in shooting at Atlanta park Police ask for help identifying man they say shot, killed homeowner during robbery Man sentenced to nearly 6 years for buying 150+ guns in GA, trying to smuggle them to Mexico [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

Emory protests: Students to rally on anniversary of pro-Palestine encampment arrests
Emory protests: Students to rally on anniversary of pro-Palestine encampment arrests

Yahoo

time22-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Emory protests: Students to rally on anniversary of pro-Palestine encampment arrests

The Brief Students and staff at Emory University are planning multiple days of rallies, protests, and teach-ins to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the clash between police and pro-Palestine protesters. Authorities say 28 people were arrested after the university called the Atlanta Police Department and Georgia State Patrol to help remove an encampment on its quad. This week's events will begin on Tuesday afternoon with a rally on the quad. ATLANTA - This week marks one year since a clash between law enforcement and pro-Palestine protesters at Emory University, and students and staff are planning multiple days of activities to commemorate the anniversary. A group of activists says the "Week of Action" will begin on Tuesday afternoon on Emory's quad. The backstory On April 25, 2024, a group of protesters set up camps and displays on the Emory quadrangle, saying the protest was in support of the people of Palestine and against the soon-to-be completed Atlanta Public Safety Training Center. Emory officials said the protesters who had set up an encampment were trespassing on private property and refused to leave, leading the school to ask the Atlanta Police Department and Georgia State Patrol for assistance. The officers used Tasers and pepper balls to bring the crowd under control. Several people were placed in handcuffs and loaded into vans. Authorities say 28 people were arrested in the chaos. Video circulated widely on social media shows two women who identified themselves as professors being detained, with one of them slammed to the ground by one officer as a second officer then pushes her chest and face onto a concrete sidewalk. The school claimed that the group were activists who were not connected with Emory, with a spokesperson claiming that the protesters were "attempting to disrupt our university as our students finish classes and prepare for finals." Days later, Emory President Gregory Fenves backtracked from that claim, saying it "was not fully accurate." Dig deeper In the days following the arrest, Fenves announced that the university would conduct a review of the events surrounding the protests to "develop recommendations to improve how we keep our community safe." "Let me be clear: I am devastated that members of our community were caught up in law enforcement activity enforcing the removal of the encampment. The videos of these interactions are deeply distressing. I take Thursday's events very seriously and we are launching a thorough review of them so that we can develop recommendations to improve how we keep our community safe," Fenves wrote. Following the arrests, a majority of both Emory's undergraduate students and the faculty senate for Emory's College of Arts and Science have voted in favor of a no-confidence referendum against Fenves. In August, the school announced a change to its Open Expression Policy, banning students, staff, and faculty members from camping and protesting on campus between the hours of midnight and 7 a.m. and prohibiting all encampments and building occupations. What's next To commemorate the anniversary, multiple student activist groups plan four days of rallies, teach-ins, and protests on Emory's campus. On Tuesday, there will be a rally at 2:30 p.m. on the quad. The groups will then host art installations on Wednesday and a teach-in and "field training day" on Thursday. The event will culminate on Friday with a press conference at the DeKalb County Courthouse followed by another rally on the quad. The Source Information for this story came from a post by the Emory Divest Coalition and other activists groups as well as previous FOX 5 reporting.

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