ISIS TERROR ATTACKS
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CATALYST
NOVEMBER 18, 2015 VOLUME XXXIII ISSUE X
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A student newspaper of New College of Florida
Students march in solidarity to combat threatening posters around campus BY RYAN PAICE After a recent appearance of several inappropriate posters found around campus and threatening anonymous emails, Carlos Marcio Ramirez has taken responsibility for the actions, and has been given a No Trespass Order (NTO). Ramirez was a guest of first-year Jacqueline Lebouitz, who denies any involvement with his actions. Ramirez put the posters up and sent the emails for fun as a prank on the New College student body. The posters, which contained
rape jokes, were first brought to the public eye via a Forum post by Emma Kervel, who found a poster near the bathrooms in Hamilton Center. Some of the students who responded to the post received anonymous emails with messages such as, “Your safe spaces are mine” and “I’ll be out tonight. Hope you got some fast legs.” The police were able to track the sender’s IP address. “We investigated the incidents and attempted to get a subpoena to find an IP address,” Chief of Police Michael Kessie said via email. “Since the behavior did
photo courtesy of Carl Romer
The Solidarity March making its way to College Hall in response to the recent threatening posters and emails.
not rise to the level of a crime, we could not receive a subpoena.” Ramirez spoke to Macy McFaddon, a USF student with friends at New College, via KiK about the posters and emails, and McFaddon came forward to show screenshots of their conversation, revealing Ramirez’s admitted involvement with the events. “Ramirez was located in a residence
hall and initially denied the allegations. After being at CPD, he [Carlos Ramirez] admitted to putting up the posters and sending the emails,” Kessie said. “He said that he has done all of it as a prank, as he enjoyed taunting the students.” Students have unified and rallied against the threat the posters posed,
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Racial tensions surge on University of Missouri campus BY JASMINE RESPESS College campuses across the country have been facing racial tension. But now the University of Missouri (Mizzou) is in the spotlight. This month, the school has seen a hunger strike from a black graduate student, multiple protests, and a boycott from the school’s football team. In response, Tim Wolfe, president of the Mizzou university system, as well as Mizzou’s chancellor, R. Bowen Loftin, have both resigned. In the last month Mizzou has experienced an onslaught of instances of racism. There have been a slew of racially charged events on Mizzou’s campuses, including feces being smeared on a wall in the form of a swastika. The inaction of the administration, staff and especially the president, led to the hunger strike of black graduate student Jonathan Butler, which catalyzed other reactions on campus. On Nov. 2, Butler decided that he would not eat until the president resigned. This led to the black members of the Mizzou football team refusing to play until Wolfe stepped down. These students appeared to be supported by their coaches. The Mizzou
WHAT’S INSIDE
head coach, Gary Pinkel, tweeted his support of the black football players actions. It came as no surprise that the players had this level of influence and received such extensive media attention; football is a multi-million dollar enterprise at Mizzou. “The revolting acts that are occurring at Mizzou are a result of a poisonous infestation of apathy that has been spawning from University of Missouri system leadership,” Butler wrote in a letter to the university’s Board of Curators. “He is a smart, calculated and compassionate man,” Symone Lenoir, a 23-year-old black senior in interdisciplinary studies at Mizzou said of Butler. “I feel awesome about what the football players did, because it exemplifies the true power of protest.” Tension had already been brewing when Wolfe resigned on Nov. 9. Wolfe reportedly hit a protestor with his car during a homecoming parade on Oct. 10. The protestor was a member of the group, “#ConcernedStudent1950.” The group, which is involved in addressing racism at Mizzou, was trying to get the attention of the president during the parade. They were voicing
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their complaints over the handling of racial issues on campus. Wolfe did not respond, nor did he get out of his car. “My behavior seemed like I did not care,” Wolfe later said in a statement on the school’s website. “That was not my intention. “I was caught off guard in that moment. Nonetheless, had I gotten out of the car to acknowledge the students and talk with them perhaps we wouldn’t be where we are today.” The #ConcernedStudent1950 name is a reference to the year when black students were first admitted to the University of Missouri. The first black faculty member was hired in 1969. #ConcernedStudent1950 released a list of demands on Oct. 20. The list called for an apology from Wolfe. It also called for his resignation. The letter stipulated that diversity, racial awareness and inclusion courses should be given to all students, faculty and staff, in addition to funding for mental health support programs, and professionals that would focus on people of color at the school. Wolfe met with the #ConcernedStudent1950 group on Oct. 26, but the group disclosed that he was not meeting their demands. The group
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reported in a statement that Wolfe claimed that although he cared for black students, he did not have a clear understanding of systemic racism. In 2010, two white students, Zachary Tucker and Sean Fitzgerald, spread cotton balls across Mizzou’s Black Culture Center. The two students were arrested. “The students found responsible [for vandalizing the Black Culture Center with cotton balls] were barely punished.” Eisenberg said. “There have been several incidents like that on campus, including the recent threats and racist/anti-Semitic vandalism.” On Sept. 12 of this year, Mizzou student body president and homecoming king, Payton Head, a black man, was walking with a friend when he was accosted by a group of white people in a pick-up truck. They yelled racial profanities at Head. Head reported that this was not an isolated incident. On a separate occasion, an inebriated white man called members of the Legion of Black Collegians a racial slur while they were practicing for their homecoming performance. “There has always been racial
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12 FIGHT FOR $15