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OCTOBER 22, 2015 VOLUME XXXV, ISSUE 11
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Council Focuses on Bias Incidents
Photo Feature
By CONNOR MANNION News Co-Editor/Asst. Literary Editor
The College Council on Oct.15 took a different schedule than usual, dedicating the entire meeting to discussing ways to have professors and academic departments respond to the ‘bias incidents’ at Rose Hill. According to Robert Grimes, dean of Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC), “Many professors had voiced their concerns about being able to respond properly after Father McShane’s’ email asking professors to discuss this in class … students have also noted that they felt that many professors were not responsive.” The usual business of the College Council was quickly moved through so that the rest of the meeting could give way to an open forum on how professors might respond to the bias incidents, and how they felt they should discuss these incidents with students. To help facilitate the conversation, Clara Rodriguez, professor of sociology, was asked to speak in front of the forum held in LL 816. “I do teach on race, and discuss this on a daily basis in class, but I had a lot of faculty ask me about how to discuss this subject.” Also invited to the council were members of the Dorothy Day Center for Service and Justice (CSJ); Ijeoma Nwaogu, assistant director of the Office of Multicultural Affairs (OMA) and Zann BallsunSimms, FCLC ’16 and president of Black Student Alliance (BSA). “There’s a larger concern about the language that students are using, so we’d like help in addressing that from professors,” BallsunSimms added. Faculty, when prompted to talk about race by the email sent by McShane, felt completely unprepared to talk. According to Sarah Zimmerman, professor and associate chair of the English department, “Some of the teachers feel like we need scripts or defined ground rules for conversations, we need practical advice to do this.” Nwaogu answered Zimmersee COUNCIL pg. 3
LYDIA BENNER /THE OBSERVER
The Observer photographers documented the arrival of fall in New York City. See centerfold and fordhamobserver.com for more.
Award Winning Novelist Speaks On Death By STEPHAN KOZUB Staff Writer
On Thursday, Oct. 16, the Fordham Center on Religion and Culture hosted writers Alice McDermott and Thomas Lynch for a literary discussion, or as Director of the Fordham College on Religion and Culture, James P. McCartin, called it in his opening remarks, “a conversation between the two very best people I could think of to discuss our mortal end.” The event, titled “Unto Dust: A Literary Wake,” was a conversation between the two writers on death, dying, and the concept of a “good funeral,” as Lynch referred to it throughout the evening, both in literature and in life. McDermott, the author of seven
books, has been a three time finalist for the Pulitzer Award, and has won both the National Book Award and the American Book Award for fiction for her 1998 book, “Charming Billy.” More recently, her book “Somewhere” was published in 2013, as well as “These Short Dark Days,” which was published in the New Yorker. edition. She is also the Richard A. Macksey Professor at the Johns Hopkins University, where she teaches creative writing. Thomas Lynch is a poet and essayist, his publications include his 1997 collection of essays, “The Undertaking: Life Studies from the Dismal Trade,” which won the Heartland Prize for nonfiction and the American Book Award, and was a finalist for the National Book Award. He has recently published
“The Sin-Eater: A Breviary,” a book of poems. He is also the proprietor of Lynch & Sons Funeral Director, a family business in eastern Michigan. The evening began with opening remarks from McCartin, who set the mood with the statement “Where else except at a good funeral are we expected to have truly complicated and emotional responses. Sadness or even devastation mixing with joy and consolation and reconnecting with old friends, anger at the shortcomings or tragic turns of a life, hinged with a dose of gratitude that may just make way for forgiveness or acceptance.” Before handing the program over to McDermott and Lynch, McCartin said to the audience “You will be moved, if not to cry, then
certainly to laugh, and maybe you’ll even be moved to go to a good funeral tomorrow.” Surprisingly, despite the morbid nature of the discussion’s topic, the audience was frequently moved to laughter, due to the authors’ light hearted jokes about death and their Irish ancestry, such as Lynch’s statement that the Irish “are very good around corpses.” Although the authors’ discussion frequently elicited laughter, a melancholic attitude of longing for the better days of the past clung to the air throughout the event, as they discussed death, funerals, their lives and their literature. “If we speak of the afterlife, it is either with vague piety, or cautious facetiousness, tentatively suggestsee DEATH pg. 4
Inside
FEATURES
SPORTS
ARTS & CULTURE
Service Learning at FCLC
411 on the Flu
A Life in NYC Ballet
Where class studies meet social justice
We’re sick and tired of dealing with this
PCS student balances fulltime school and dance
Safeguards are needed for mental health
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THE STUDENT VOICE OF FORDHAM LINCOLN CENTER
OPINIONS
Trigger Warnings