The Student Newspaper of Saint Joseph’s University
Volume XCVIII | Est. 1929 | www.sjuhawknews.com
Oct. 31, 2018
Left: Rabbi Abraham Skorka recites “Mourner’s Kaddish” a traditional Jewish prayer of mourning. Right: A crowd gathers to mourn for the victims of the Pittsburgh, Pa. synagogue attack. (Photos by Luke Malanga ’20).
Solidarity with synagogue shooting victims LUKE MALANGA ’20 Managing Editor
Paul Koenig ’22 stands in the crowd during the service outside the Chapel of Saint Joseph. “I felt anger because although I was not affected at all, the fact that this is still happening, it pisses you off,” Koenig said.
The Institute for Jewish-Catholic Relations held a service of interreligious solidarity in wake of the Oct. 27 synagogue shooting in Pittsburgh, Pa. which killed 11 people. St. Joe’s students, staff, faculty and adminstrators, as well as community members, gathered next to the sculpture “Synagoga and Ecclesia in Our Time,” which depicts Christian-Jewish friendship, to honor the victims and stand for religious tolerance.
Freedom of speech versus silence
Adjunct professors discuss inability to share opinions CHRISTINA PHOTIADES ’20 Special to The Hawk At St. Joe’s, faculty are well aware of current debates about freedom of expression playing out across the country. In one case that made national headlines this summer, James Livingston, Ph.D., a tenured professor of history at Rutgers University, was found guilty for violating the university’s discrimination and harassment for a Facebook post he made that was critical of white gentrification in his New York neighborhood. After Livingston, who is white, received intense backlash for his posts, including death threats, Rutgers began an investigation and eventually concluded that while Livingston had a right to express his opinions, he had violated the university’s policy prohibiting discrimination and harassment. William McDevitt, Ph.D., associate professor of management and president of the Saint Joseph’s University Chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP), said many St. Joe’s faculty are mindful of what they say in the classroom, especially in the current political climate. “I am sure that many adjuncts and non-tenured faculty, and even tenured faculty, have to consider whether they should tailor what they say in order to avoid being the target of threats,” McDevitt said. The AAUP has issued several reports in the last decade that cite the efforts of various political and religious organizations to undermine free speech on college campuses in the
name of defending it. According to the Saint Joseph’s University Faculty Handbook, regardless of their status as tenured or non-tenured, St. Joe’s faculty have the right to freedom in their classroom in discussing course content, but, according to the handbook, they also “should not deliberately inject into their teaching controversial matter which has no proper relation to the subject.” The handbook also states that each department should define its own policy while “keeping in mind compliance with equal opportunity/anti-discrimination standards.” Like Rutgers, St. Joe’s also has a separate Policy Prohibiting Discrimination, Harassment and Retaliation, which applies to all uni-
German major to be removed
versity employees and defines discrimination as any “distinction, preference, or detriment to an individual as compared to others in the terms or conditions of his or her employment or education on the basis of his or her Protected Category status.” Ronald Dufresne, Ph.D., associate proALYSA BAINBRIGE ’21 fessor of management and president of FacSpecial to The Hawk ulty Senate, said academic titles and ranks – that is, a faculty member’s status – should not The university stopped accepting new determine the way a faculty member interacts with or is perceived by students. That’s espe- German majors this fall after the department of modern and classical languages decided to cially true of adjunct faculty, Dufresne said. eliminate the German major. Thomas Buckley, Ph.D., assistant proCONTINUED ON PG. 4 fessor of German and chair of modern and classical languages, said the primary reason behind the decision was simply that the department didn’t have the numbers. German has been decreasing in popularity on campus and nationwide, he said. “It’s never been a large major, but it’s gotten smaller and smaller over the years,” Buckley said. “So that’s been an issue in terms of filling up even one upper-division course.” The department has only had only enough students for one section of an upper-division German course for the past six or seven years, Buckley said. In fact, St. Joe’s currently only has one remaining German major on campus, Allison Clause ’19. Since there are not enough students to have an actual upper-level course, Clause is fulfilling an independent study to complete her major.
Tia Pratt teaches a class about African-American Catholicism in April, 2017 (Photo by Luke Malanga ’20).
CONTINUED ON PG. 4