But some website commentators have told the students to grow up

A freshman said she 'feared for life' and thought it was a 'KKK rally'

The editor of the student newspaper said some students 'felt victimized'

Students at Emory University claim they were frightened and 'in pain' after someone wrote 'Trump 2016' in chalk around campus.

Officials at the Atlanta school, which has an enrollment of more than 14,000, were forced to act after the youngsters claimed their 'safe space' was violated when the messages of 'hate' appeared on sidewalks and buildings.

One student even said she 'feared for her life' as she thought a 'KKK rally' was going on, while others were scared a mass shooting was going to take place and wouldn't walk alone.

Jim Wagner, president of the 19th century establishment, wrote Tuesday that the students viewed the scrawling as intimidation, and they voiced 'genuine concern and pain' as a result.

He set up an investigation after members of the student government wrote to him and slammed the university's response, prompting a meeting that was shrouded in protests.

Now administrators at the university, which has roughly a 50:50 ratio of white to minority students, want to track down those responsible for the controversial markings.

They have admitted they went against the university's 'values regarding diversity'.

But some commentators on the university's student newspaper website told those affected by the so-called 'hateful' graffiti to grow up and accused them of being babies.

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The president of Emory University has spoken to demonstrators who said they were frightened after someone wrote 'Trump 2016' in chalk around campus. They insisted their 'safe space' had been violated by the messages, prompting the administration to investigate

Students at the Atlanta school, which has an enrollment of more than 14,000 claim their 'safe space' was violated when the messages appeared on sidewalks and buildings

University organizations offered students counselling after the markings were spotted on parts of campus

A group of Emory Students stage a protest at the campus after the graffiti started to appear. They set up meetings with senior university officials to get the matter resolved

Protesters link arms outside the offices of Emory University's administration. The university offered counselling to any students upset by the markings

After the chalk markings started to appear, and pictures began appearing on The Tab, student organizations offered counselling to anyone who may have been impacted by what they had seen.

But some were left fearing for their own safety.

Paula Camila Alarcon told The Daily Beast: 'I legitimately feared for my life. I thought we were having a KKK rally on campus,'

Another student reportedly said they thought there would be a mass shooting on campus.

The Black Student Alliance at Emory University wrote on Facebook: 'We, the Black Student Alliance at Emory University stand in solidarity with the Black and Brown students at Emory, against the intimidation, lies, and deeply rooted racism that people of color continue to face--on their campus, nationwide, and globally. ‪#‎1969not1836‬ ‪#‎BlackBrownAndHere‬'

'If you'd like to stand in solidarity with us, please use this as your status: 'I, a [identity] from [college/university/state/country], stand in solidarity with the Black and Brown students at Emory, against the intimidation, lies, and deeply rooted racism that people of color continue to face--on their campus, nationwide, and globally. #1969not1836 #BlackBrownAndHere.'

Wagner sent a letter to the student body earlier this week, in which he said students confronted by Trump's name in chalk 'heard a message about values regarding diversity and respect that clash with Emory's own.'

You are not listening! Come speak to us, we are in pain! Chant by students to Emory University President Jim Wagner

Emory's student newspaper, The Wheel, said Wagner outlined four steps that administrators plan to take in order to address the issues raised by the protesters.

They reported that the students this week chanted, 'You are not listening! Come speak to us, we are in pain!' shortly before Wagner agreed to meet with them.

In a campus-wide email, he proposed 'immediate refinements to certain policies and procedural deficiencies' that he hoped would improve diversity.

He wrote that he wanted to bring in 'regular and structured opportunities for difficult dialogues; a formal process to institutionalize identification.

Wagner also said there was a need to address 'social justice opportunities' and commitment to an annual retreat to renew [their] efforts.'

Wagner added that the Freedom of Expression Committee is meeting to address whether the person or people responsible for the chalking were in compliance with Emory's policy.

He said that they would debate technical issues, such as whether or not the chalkings were done on an appropriate surface.

However, he believes that the broader concern motivating the protests had to do more with the ideas the chalkings stood for than how they were done.

A group of downhearted Emory students hold up a sign during a meeting with senior university executives, who have promised to hunt down whoever was responsible for the messages

One students grasps the hand of another during a meeting between students and university officials to determine how they can deal with the markings

Eventually the 'Trump' markings were rubbed out from walls and sidewalks - but other chalk markings started appearing in different places

Emory University students protested after someone wrote Trump 2016 on campus. Dozens claim the message of support for Trump were causing pain

Some students were upset as they do not support Trump and are against some of his political values.

The student newspaper's editor, Zak Hudak, posted an editorial addressing what had happened.

He wrote: I do not take lightly the fears and pains of those students who felt victimized by the 'Trump 2016' chalkings around campus, and I try my best to support oppressed groups on campus.

'The duty of a newspaper to give a voice to the voiceless surpasses that of echoing those in power. I acknowledge again that Donald Trump is unlike any recent candidate who has lasted to this stage of a presidential election and that, for many Emory students, support of him holds a different connotation than support for Hillary Clinton or John Kasich.

'It is nonetheless necessary to ask those protesters what would happen should the tables be turned. Suppose we had a different administration.

'Suppose it was ruled that protests, such as the one on Tuesday, made Trump supporters feel threatened on campus. Freedom of speech works both ways, and its hindrance affects both sides.

'It is not the role of an institution that is devoted to the critical education of its students to tell those students which opinions they are allowed to have.'

It drew a handful of scathing comments, including one which read: 'While this response is inadequate in countering the anti-democratic impulses of the students frightened by chalk, it is at least better than limp, coddling responses from administrators, who are letting students with the maturity of 10-year-olds drive the conversation and campus policy.

'Mr. Hudak--in this context, you shouldn't even engage in the question of whether Trump is 'an offensive man.'

Some of the discontented students were then accused of hypocrisy by scrawling their own signs in chalk around the grounds of the school

'The crybaby students forfeited any expectation of an open discussion with their demands that any talk or chalk of Trump should be banished from their fantasyland.'

Another read: 'I have no idea how you kids will survive once you get out into the real world. People have different opinions than you. You need to grow up, and fast.'

One person also wrote: 'Within a year I am ashamed of both my undergraduate college (Yale) and my graduate university (Emory Law, '77).

I have no idea how you kids will survive once you get out into the real world. People have different opinions than you. You need to grow up, and fast Reader commenting on Emory University's student newspaper website, The Wheel

'I am a liberal supporter of Clinton and Sanders (the former by a shade) and I want to shout at the thin-skinned crybabies on these campuses who are so obsessed with 'safe spaces' and so dismissive of free speech values: 'GROW THE F*** UP !''

One person told The Tab: 'It's sad. At University all my professors and TA's were very leftist and if you wanted good grades you had to pretend to agree with the absolute nonsense.

'This is why so many Bernie supporters are students. Our educational system is in serious trouble, they mold kids minds and feed them lies.'

Emory student, Junior Josh Goodman was interviewed on Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor and criticized Wagner for hearing out protesters.

He said Wagner 'legitimized their claims' and he had hoped that President Wagner would have defended the first amendment rights of pro-Trump students.

They were also mocked by media commentators such as Reason.com, who wrote: 'Some Emory students are so fragile, and terrified of innocuous political speech they dislike, that they immediately sought comfort from campus authority figures. These figures, of course, were more than willing to coddle them.'

On Wednesday, the scrawlings were swapped with messages of anti-hate including: 'Hate not love' and 'Stand against hatred'.

Administrators at Emory (pictured) have insisted they will try and track down whoever is responsible for the markings and meet with them

Trump won the Georgia Republican primary earlier this month.

One student organization who condemned the actions of the 'vandals' was The Emory Latino Student Organization. They posted a statement on Facebook which has since been removed.

'Yesterday, the Emory community was witness to an act of cowardice, when someone decided to plaster pro-Donald Trump slogans all over campus.

'The people who did this knew that what they were doing was wrong, because why else would they do so in the dead of night when no one else could witness them?

'They did not do this merely to support the presidential candidate, but to promote the hate and discrimination that goes along with him. While some students only see the name of a potential nominee, others see hostility and venom which promises to destroy lives.

'The Emory Latino Student Organization condemns this as an act meant to instigate division on our campus. We have the freedom of speech in this country to express different ideas. But it is un-American to support hatred against others, and that is exactly what Donald Trump is doing.