SILT and SPC need Dooley Week volunteers
Student Involvement, Leadership, and Transitions and the Student Programming Council need your help. Dooley's Week, Emory's annual celebration of school spirit, will take place March 28 through April 1. The theme is "Dooley's Jukebox." SILT and SPC organizers need 20-25 volunteers for the concert, April 1 (6 p.m. to 10 p.m.) and 5-10 volunteers for the After Party (10 p.m. to 12 a.m.). Volunteers will roam the field, check-in students, help with crowd control, and more. They will receive a free Dooley's Week T-shirt and free food. Sign up before the deadline on March 30 at 5 p.m. Volunteers will receive a training video via email. Got questions? Contact Vernon Smith. Learn more.
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Creativity+ makes digital debut featuring Emory alumni
This digital collection of alumni interviews highlights non-linear and non-traditional creative career pathways. Season 1 of the series features 25 alumni spanning the classes of 1991 to 2020, representing over a dozen industries from puppetry and film to animal behavior and AI. Episode 1: The myth of I made it. Episode 2: The courage to pivot. Learn about additional episodes.
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Carlos Museum announces spring programs
The museum offers a range of programming from March 18 through June 27, including a concert performance by Emory undergraduates, Student Studio Backstrap Weaving, Student Night, Buddhist Bug Performance, Artist Talks, lectures, open house, and much more. A family concert later this month features Emory President Greg Fenves narrating Serge Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf for piano four-hand, performed by Julie Cucheron and William Ransom. Learn more.
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Read and offer comments on DEI Strategic Planning Report
The Institutional DEI Strategic Planning Communities’ Report to the president and provost has been completed. Please take time to read the report and offer comment. Help craft a way forward that works for us all. Your feedback will be anonymous.
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Adrienne Bryant Smith drops “interim” from SCMIS director title
Now the permanent director of Student Case Management and Intervention Services (SCMIS), Adrienne joined Campus Life in 2016 and has served since July 2020 as interim director. She leads a team of five case workers and seven Student Intervention Services (SIS) responders. She has also led the 1915 Scholars Program and served as a Threat Assessment Team member and Care and Advanced Care facilitator. Adrienne is a licensed clinical social worker with more than a decade of experience in her field. She is an alum of Auburn University and earned a master’s in social work from Virginia Commonwealth University. Learn more about Adrienne.
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Barkley Forum’s Allison Harper honored by her alma mater
George Mason University announced that Allison is the recipient of the institution’s Department of Communication 2022 Outstanding PhD Graduate Alumnus of the Year Award. Allison earned her PhD in communication from GMU in 2018 and joined Emory that summer as associate director of debate. Since 2002, Allison has served as a coach and in other roles with various debate programs at the secondary school and collegiate level. She has also won five top paper awards at the National Communication Association and several coaching awards from national debate organizations. Learn more about Allison.
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Barkley Forum first-year students stand out in national debate championship
Earlier this month, Emory hosted the American Debate Association National Championship tournament. Teams from 38 colleges participated. Three Emory teams reached the elimination rounds. One team, first-year students Aadi Waghray and Miranda Wilson, rose to the finals and earned 2nd place in the Junior Varsity Division. Aadi, Oxford College, and Miranda, Emory College, were also named the 5th and 4th Junior Varsity speakers at the tournament, respectively. Later this month, Barkley Forum will field three partnerships at the National Debate Tournament, the maximum any school is permitted to send; only six teams qualified for that distinction.
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The future starts now – with a flourish
Meet sixteen of Emory’s best and brightest students—from undergraduates to PhD candidates—and find out how the university is helping them flourish by
preparing them for a lifelong journey of transformation, contribution, and service.
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Support our Eagles
Update: Spectators are again allowed in the stands at Eagles competitions with the university now operating in yellow status. You can also support the Eagles by watching webcasts of their competitions.
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