Volume 104 Issue 15

Page 1

104,

Number of Students Getting the Flu Vaccine Increases

With the approach of flu sea son, University Health Services (UHS) has started offering vac cination clinics to combat the spread of the virus. According to Maureen Keown, director of University Health Services, the number of Fordham students receiving the flu vaccination has increased in the last three years following the introduction and spread of COVID-19.

In the 2020-21 academic year, UHS administered 327 flu vacci nations on campus. The follow ing year, 2021-22, UHS admin istered a total of 884 flu vaccines on campus. Keown said so far this year, 174 students have re ceived the vaccine. According to Keown, “COVID-19 has changed how multiple different viruses such as the common cold and flu have changed in their virulence.”

Additionally, “Outreach pro grams and having scheduled flu clinics at both campuses have in creased the number of students receiving the vaccine.” she said.

Many Fordham students say they that getting the flu vaccine is important. Kylie Phillips, GSB

SEE FLU, PAGE 3

The Fordham Ram

Serving The Fordham University Community Since 1918

“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” Comes to Fordham

On Sept. 22 and 23, Fordham acted as the background of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel.” The show’s cast and crew set up on Ed ward’s Parade along with cameras, microphones, monitors and other necessary equipment. “The Mar velous Mrs. Maisel” is a TV show set in New York City in the late 1950s to early 1960s and follows

Miriam “Midge” Maisel as she becomes a comedian.

According to Leslie Timoney, director of conference services, Fordham was used to film a scene at Midge Maisel’s college reunion. Timoney said that “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’s” team needed a quad surrounded by older buildings to achieve the look they were go ing for, which brought them to Fordham. However, Timoney is not sure how much of the campus

will be able to be seen.

“When I looked on the monitors, the garden party looked like it could be any where,” said Timoney.

Preparation for the shoot was done a few days prior as crews came to Fordham to set up a tent and install generators and elec trical equipment on Edward’s Parade. Given that the show takes place in the early 1960s,

2022

Fordham Announces New Booster Shot Requirement

On Sept. 26, Fordham an nounced that all students, fac ulty and staff must receive a COVID-19 bivalent booster vac cination by Nov. 1. The Center for Disease Prevention and Con trol (CDC) now considers a “ful ly vaccinated” individual to have the original vaccination set and the “most recent” booster shot.

Bivalent booster shots are essentially updated COVID-19 vaccine boosters. They are for mulated to protect against the omicron variant and other new er strains of the virus. The bi valent shots include two mRNA strains of the virus. They have one strain from the original CO VID-19 virus, just like previous vaccinations, and they also in clude a strain from the omicron variant.

According to the email sent out by Fordham on Sept. 26, “individuals 12 and older are eli gible for the updated (bivalent) booster that is effective against multiple COVID variants, and in order to be considered up to date with vaccines, they should re ceive the updated booster if it has been 2 months or longer since their last COVID-19 vaccine.”

The Bronx is Blooming

Campus Ministry partnered with The Bronx is Blooming for an Ignatian Day of Service on Sept. 24. The event was mainly composed of the Pedro Arrupe Volunteers, but many other

campus groups also participat ed, such as CCEL, West Wing in O’Hare and Manresa Scholars.

Pedro Arrupe, S.J. was part of the Society of Jesus. He was known for his commitment to social justice and helping others, which is where the volunteers get their name from. He

SEE MINISTRY, PAGE 4

According to Carol Gibney, di rector of the Office of Campus Ministry Solidarity and Leader ship, the Pedro Arrupe Volunteers (PAV) is a student-led multi-faith organization, where students are provided with opportunities to en gage with various partners.

On Sept. 15, Counseling and Psychological Services (CPS) sent out an email to the Fordham University com munity informing them of a change in the department’s practices as part of its com mitment to the delivery of tailored and culturally com petent services.

CPS Unveils New Care System to Address Student Needs Opinion

In regards to the needs that arise from the diverse range of Fordham students’ back grounds and identities, CPS will be implementing a “Customized and EquityBased” model of care and service during the Fall 2022 semester.

To create a new frame work for Fordham's fu ture, CPS has drawn on the “Guidelines for Providers of Psychological Services to

CPS, PAGE 3

The university has both Pfizer and Moderna bivalent booster vac cinations. The vaccination clinic is in O’Hare Hall across from the Ram Van pick-up site.

Bob Howe, associate vice presi dent for communications and special adviser to the president, said that vaccination is a large reason why the pandemic has slowed, so it’s important to con tinue vaccinating.

“To the extent that the pandem ic’s lethality has been blunted, it is because of widespread vaccina tion for COVID-19. People are still getting sick, but the percentage of those who require hospitalization

in this issue

Ukrainians Need Support With No Strings Attached Sports

Football Falls to Ohio in Thriller Culture

On Wednesdays, We Go to the Botans

“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” follows a female comedian in the late 1950s and early 1960s New York City. COURTESY OF EMMA KIM FOR THE FORDHAM RAM
September 28,
Volume
Issue 15
Page 14
SEE
SEE BOOSTER, PAGE 4 SEE MAISEL, PAGE 4
Page 10 Page 16

PUBLIC SAFETY BRIEFS

Sept. 21

Faber Hall

7:23 p.m.

The smoke detector in the basement laundry room of Faber Hall was activated, resulting in an alarm being transmitted to FDNY and a building evacuation. Investigation revealed that the dryer directly below the smoke alarm was recently used and left with its door open, which caused the heat to activate the smoke alarm. The panel was reset by FDNY.

Sept. 21

Metro North Station

9:41 p.m.

A student reported that as they were walking to the Metro North train sta tion, they were followed by an unknown male. The male followed the student onto the Westchesterbound train, where he proceeded to expose and fondle himself. Other pas sengers alerted the con ductor who escorted the male off the train at the Woodlawn station.

Sept. 25

Off-Campus

6:45 a.m.

A student reported a male attempting to gain entry to their off-campus apartment building. The student said the male, wearing all black and a baseball cap, began bang ing on their apartment window. They could hear the male banging and kicking the door. Public Safety searched the build ing. The offender was not located. There was visible damage to the entrance door lock.

Class of 2026 and 2025 Rival for Biggest Classes in School History

The classes of 2025 and 2026 are the largest classes to ever come to Fordham. Due to the combined sizes of both classes, some new procedures have had to be taken to ac commodate them on campus.

Many first-year and sopho more students take primarily core-level classes. According to Maura Mast, dean of Fordham College Rose Hill, the univer sity had to add new faculty to teach these classes last year.

“In fall 2021, we definitely needed to add more sections of core courses and, therefore, had to hire more faculty. We also increased course caps for some courses, because room availability at peak times is re ally limited. For fall 2022, we didn’t need to add too many additional sections,” said Mast.

Individual departments have different procedures for hiring staff. According to Mast, the same had to request more fac ulty in the spring of 2022.

“Departments and programs take multiple approaches to staff courses. It helped that last year, over 10 new, tenuretrack faculty were hired in Arts and Sciences. In spring 2022, departments made re quests for additional lecturers in order to fully support the courses that we need to offer,” said Mast. “The Office of the Dean of Faculty of Arts and Sciences manages this pro cess, in consultation with the deans of FCRH and FCLC. De partments and programs also hire adjunct faculty, depend ing on availability and needs. In some departments, gradu ate students teach.”

However, it is important to note that enrollment is low in the class of 2024. Because of that, it is easier to accommo date students in the classes of 2025 and 2026.

“The class that entered in fall 2021 was quite large, but on the other hand the class that entered in fall 2020 was quite small. We look at the size of the entering class but we also look at the overall size of the student body in each col lege,” said Mast. “In fall 2021, the total number of creditbearing students enrolled in FCRH was 3,965. This is more

Wednesday Sept. 28

Dealy 207

1 p.m. – 2 p.m.

A part of the graduate pro gram IPED’s series with the Council on Foreign Relations, academic Yascha Mounk will be discussing how democracy has evolved in history and its place in society today.

Thursday Sept. 29

McShane Center 303

1 p.m. – 2 p.m.

Campus Ministry is hosting a series of volunteering events this Thursday, including their midnight run, which will in volve assembling toiletry kits for the homeless in JMCC. There are other events online.

Fordham has had to hire more faculty and expand their residental housing to accomodate bigger class sizes. used two floors of Tierney and some converted triples to assign this class — though it was not as large as the class of 2025 when they entered,” said Clency.

than the total enrollment for fall 2020, which was 3,815, but lower than the total enrollment in fall 2018 and fall 2017.”

Housing is another area that had to adapt to the larger class sizes. Fordham University guar antees housing to students for all four years of their undergradu ate education. Guaranteed housing and COVID-19 isolation housing accommodations can make hous ing difficult. One unique complica tion that faced the class of 2026 was accommodating students in on-campus housing at Lincoln Center. According to Charles Clency, director of residential life, about a dozen Lincoln Cen ter students were “temporar ily placed” at Rose Hill. Clency said all those students have been relocated to Lincoln Cen ter or “scheduled to be assigned as soon as possible.”

Last year to accommodate the class of 2025, Tierney Hall was converted from a sophomore to a first-year residence hall. Ac cording to Clency, it has not en tirely reverted to a sophomore year dorm.

“For the class of 2026, we

According to Clency, the class of 2026 currently has 28 con verted triples.

“Typically, Alumni Court South and Loschert have more con verted spaces as the individual rooms are larger, and Loyola has several rooms that are already designed to be triples,” said Clency.

In a statement to the Ram, Christopher Rodgers, dean of students, spoke to how classes of these sizes can be sustained.

“Fordham is blessed with one of those fortunate prob lems — an extraordinary num ber of students want to join our community. Each year — even through the uncertain environment of the ongoing health emergency — we work with colleagues to manage the number of admitted students guaranteed housing, an im portant tradition at Fordham. Tremendous credit for this ef

This Week at Fordham

Saturday Oct. 1

Jack Coffey Field 1 p.m. – 2 p.m.

The center of the university’s Family Weekend is football! The Rams face the Hoyas of Georgetown this weekend in a Patriot League match up. With the worst record in the league, it should be an easy win.

Monday Oct. 3

Keating Hall 219 1 p.m.

Primarily for FCRH juniors, the GSAS will be hosting their first of many infor mation sessions in Keating, which will “cover the basics of graduate school” and help prepare students for apps.

fort goes to our housing opera tions staff in Residential Life — they are miracle workers, even searching residence halls for new places for students who need an assignment. We will be adjusting our approaches in the coming cycles to insure that our spaces in housing, services, and other necessities match ris ing demand. Looking ahead and through careful strategic plan ning, additional housing will be important for us to consider.”

The combined sizes of the class of 2025 and 2026 have created some changes within the university. When it comes to housing, Clency encourages students to reach out with ques tions or concerns.

“We encourage all students to seek out assistance when ever they may have questions or concerns. Residential Life is equally invested in our resi dents having a good experience living in the residence halls,” said Clency.

Looking to the future, if the class of 2027 is similar in size to the class of 2025 and 2026, changes will have to be made.

Tuesday Oct. 4

Outside the Marketplace

11:30 a.m. – 2 p.m.

To celebrate the national holiday, members of the Communications and Media department will be giving away free swag, treats and fun quizzes for students to take and enjoy.

COURTESY OF PIA FISCHETTI/THE FORDHAM RAM
NEWSPage 2
Sept. 28, 2022 IPED: Defining Democracy Public Service Micro-Fair Fordham vs. Georgetown Graduate School Info Session National News Day Tabling Event Follow us on Instagram! @thefordhamram

Health Services Encourage Flu Vaccines

FROM FLU, PAGE 1

’25, said she will get the flu shot.

“The pandemic hasn’t really positively or negatively affect ed my willingness to get the flu shot. I’ve always been proshot,” said Phillips.

Thomas Huitfeldt, FCRH ’25, felt similarly, affirming that he also plans on receiving the flu shot.

He also added, “The pandemic has definitely positively affect ed my willingness to get the flu shot.”

Huitfeldt and other students state they understand the im portance of receiving vaccina tions, now more than ever, in a COVID-19 world.

Keown also took time to stress the importance of the flu shot,

encouraging students to re ceive the vaccine even if they do not do so at UHS. Many pharmacies, such as Walgreens and CVS Pharmacy, offer free flu shots available by both ap pointment and walk-in.

However, receiving the flu vaccine through UHS is not free. The vaccination costs $35, which is charged to the

students’ Bursar bill. It can be reimbursed upon students’ submission of a receipt to their medical insurance. Keown also warned about a possible rise in the number of cases this year, saying, “UHS anticipates an increase in flu cases this fall and winter due to relaxation of mandates and mask requirements that COVID-19 had originally brought to our world.

During the 2020-21 and 2021-22 academic years, the number of flu cases decreased due to mask wear ing, social distancing, increased hand washing and other measures taken by people to stay healthy.”

According to an email sent on Sept. 15, UHS plans to offer more clinics as the semester progress es. Students can call ahead to make an appointment.

CPS Starts New “Customized and Equity-Based” Model

FROM CPS, PAGE 1

Ethnic, Linguistic and Culturally Diverse Populations” established by the American Psychological Association. There is an empha sis placed on recognizing the sig nificance of ethnicity and culture in psychological processes and eliminating biases as well as dis criminatory practices.

These guidelines advocate for training providers to be able to accomplish four main goals: to recognize cultural diversity, un derstand the role one’s identity plays in development, understand how socioeconomic and political factors impact development and how to help people understand, maintain and resolve their own sociocultural identification.

CPS staff have made a num ber of changes in conjunction with these guidelines. A CPS Statement on Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Justice lists com mitments to practicing cultural

humility, increasing accessibility and continuing ethical and pro fessional development. Director of CPS Jeffrey Ng will help to lead this shift.

Based on this new model Ng said that care at CPS will be more tai lored to individual student’s needs.

“Rather than offering most stu dents ‘10 counseling sessions,’ we are now customizing the type, frequency and duration of ser vices we offer based on the in tersection of each student’s pre senting concerns, psycho-social history, identities and access to resources,” said Ng.

CPS’s clinical capacity at the time a student is seeking services will also impact their approach.

“In short, this new model means that not every student will be re ceiving the same type, level or frequency of services from CPS. Some students may be seen for just a few sessions while others may be seen indefinitely,” said Ng.

While Ng says the depart ment has been unofficially following this model for ap proximately a decade, this marks an official change in the CPS guidelines.

By adopting less strict guide lines for approaching new patients, CPS aims to provide better, more specialized care to those seeking it. Ng gave an example of the way that CPS can specialize care.

“A student who is struggling with a temporary stressor or adjustment concern may only need to be seen for 3-4 weeks while a student with a long standing psychiatric condition and who does not have the resources/supports to access off-campus care could be seen indefinitely by CPS,” said Ng.

Ng and the rest of CPS aim to fulfill a commitment to re ducing health and educational disparities for young people.

USG Discusses Recent Events and Public Concerns

On Thursday, Sept. 22, the Fordham University Rose Hill United Student Government (USG) met to discuss recent and upcoming events on cam pus, as well as public concerns.

Gaby Simperios, vice president of Fordham College Rose Hill FCRH ’24, reported that there have been issues with room res ervations for the Dean’s Council. Simporios said that Rose Hill Commons, which was reserved for the Dean’s Council meeting last Thursday, was unavail able when she arrived. With out any prior notice, she was told the meeting was moved to Bepler Commons. Stephen Clarke, assistant director of student involvement, clari fied that the issue regarding the reservation was due to an unexpected leak in Rose Hill Commons.

Despite not sending an email with the updated room change, the Office of Stu dent Involvement calendar with all information regard ing USG meetings had been updated prior to the Dean’s

Council meeting.

Newly-elected class of 2026 Senators, Rhianna Danes, FCRH ’26, Lucas Hjertberg, FCRH ’26, Nicky D’Abundo, FCRH ’26, Mi kaela Casanova, GSB ’26, and Muhammed Zaveri, GSB ’26, attended their first meeting on Thursday. Their official inaugu ration occurred at this past week end’s USG’s retreat.

The Campus Activities Board (CAB) has been preparing for the upcoming Family Weekend, from Friday, Sept. 30 to Sunday, Oct. 2. They have prepared ac tivities for the visiting families including a welcome reception and brunch before the football game commences.

Vice President of International Integration Luisa Rosa, FCRH ’24, discussed her plans for an international student mixer dur ing Family Weekend. Rosa ex plained how difficult Family Weekend can be for international students, and she introduced the mixer as a way to provide them with a community.

The International Student Mixer will be taking place on Sept. 30 from 6-8 p.m. in the Campbell Multipurpose Room, and she invited all international

students as well as any other stu dent whose family is unable to attend Family Weekend.

Vice President of Diversity and Inclusion Briana Al-Omoush, FCRH ’24, reported the Diversity Action Coalition (DAC) submit ted two requests to increase fund ing for two future DAC events.

The first request was for DAC’s October Tabling Event, a mental health event where they will hand out t-shirts and stickers.

The second request was for a student activism event where there will be catered food and raf fles for two social justice books. Both requests for funding have been approved.

Executive President Santiago Vidal, FCRH ’24, and Alex Chavez, FCRH ’23, vice president of finance and budgets, worked together to create the Ad Hoc Appeal where they asked for additional fund ing for upcoming projects and events this semester and were approved for a new budget of about $14,200.

Lastly, Vidal reported that Rolling Loud gave away 3,000 free tickets to multiple New York college students this past weekend, including 250 free tickets to Fordham students.

COURTESY OF FACEBOOK USG gave out 250 tickets to Rolling Loud, a music festival. CPS gives psycological services to students on campus.
September 28, 2022 Page 3NEWS

Campus Ministry’s Day of Service in Bronx

is known for his phrase “Men and Women for others.”

“He dedicated his life in service to others, and he is the one who really did move the Jesuits into a direction of faith and service and justice,” said Gibney.

According to the Fordham web site, PAV’s goals include “commu nity engagement; nurturing and sustaining relationships between the Fordham community and our neighbors in the Bronx and NYC.”

The Bronx is Blooming is a Bronx-based nonprofit organiza tion that is dedicated to “envi ronmental stewardship, commu nity building and youth leadership development.” In the past, other Fordham groups have also part nered with them.

Campus Ministry partnered with The Bronx is Blooming because of their similar values. “Their mission aligns with what Fordham’s mission is,” said Gibney.

“It is about raising awareness for community members and be ing good stewards of the land. The Bronx [has] the largest swath of parks per capita more than all

other boroughs.”

“With cuts in city budgets, they are filling a gap,” said Gibney. “This organization re ally helps make this community more beautiful and a pleasant place to be living in.”

On Saturday, 75 Fordham volunteers walked from cam pus to Mosholu Park. They worked on cleaning, planting trees, mulching and getting rid of invasive plants.

“The trees will be covered soon, and in the springtime, hopefully, they will take root. We want the kids and the elders in the com munity to have lots of trees and oxygen and birds and all the things the great outdoors pro vide,” said Gibney.

Marlaina Cirone, FCRH ’24, first participated in The Bronx is Blooming service project three years ago when she was a freshman in the Manresa pro gram. “Since then, I have joined Campus Ministry’s PAV and got the opportunity to captain this Saturday’s project, where we led over 70 volunteers to Mosholu park,” said Cirone.

“Bronx is Blooming is an im portant local nonprofit that helps

to care for parks in the Bronx that don’t nearly get enough funding and resources as they should,” said Cirone, “It was great to see Fordham students out in our community to learn how small efforts like caring for trees can have far-reaching effects on our environment.”

Michela Fahy, FCRH ’23, also helped run Saturday’s event by working to winterize the trees at Mosholu Park by removing dead branches and insulating them.

“This community partner is so important as the Bronx is New York City’s greenest borough, it is a constant effort to main tain it for the community. It is a privilege to be able to spend time in the community, working to maintain the park’s beauty while also getting to form stronger connections between fellow stu dents,” said Fahy.

Overall, Gibney said that she hopes students were able to take away a sense of community and meet other people interested in environmental justice. “They might meet people that will spark interest in topics that they might be interested in deepening their understanding of.”

Fordham Requires Second COVID-19 Booster

FROM BOOSTER, PAGE 1

or who die is much lower — this, by itself, is reason enough to require everyone on campus to be vacci nated and boosted,” said Howe.

Howe noted that it’s important to consider university commu nity members who have medical conditions that make COVID-19

a large concern.

“Also, the university commu nity is composed of more than just students, obviously, and there are many faculty and staff (and some students) who are vulnerable because of their age and other factors,” said Howe.

Many university community

members who have medical con ditions echo Howe’s sentiments.

Claire Bickel, FCRH ’24, is a Type 1 diabetic.

“I feel safer knowing that the university is taking the recom mended steps to protect the com munity,” said Bickel.

Other students are also glad

that Fordham is requiring vac cinations.

“I like that Fordham is requir ing the new booster because it makes the campus a more secure and safe place for those that are immunocompromised,”said Malvi Patel, FCRH ’24.

Howe said that the university

made the decision to require an other booster shot based on the advice of medical professionals.

“We follow this advice for the health and safety of our students, faculty and staff. As an institution that practices care for the whole person, we can’t do otherwise,” said Bob Howe.

Students Cite TV Show Filming as an Inconvenience

FROM MAISEL, PAGE 1 Timoney said that signs of modern life had to be disguised.

“This episode took place in 1961, so we had to remove air condition ers, replace VIP parking with pe riod cars, turn off the tower bells, turn off the stadium lights, turn off the Coffey Field PA system, hide Maisel bathrooms, hide Maisel generators, make sure the street cable runs were safe for students and work with the construction crew,” said Timoney.

Timoney said it would have been ideal to have filmed during the summer without students. However, that was not possible.

“Ideally, we’d love to film over the summer when there is less ac tivity on campus. But to be in this business, you need to allow some filming during the academic year,” said Timoney.

Members of the campus com munity reported that the filming on campus caused disruptions for students, faculty and staff. While the cameras were rolling, students were prohibited from walking around Edward’s Parade in certain areas so they would not be in the background of the shot. For many, this was an inconvenience when

trying to get around campus for classes or daily life.

“I was trying to go from Eddies to the [Marketplace], and they wouldn’t let me cross the street in front of the student center for about five minutes,” said Joseph Ryan, FCRH ’24. “[It was] annoy ing because it didn’t seem to be in the shot at all.”

According to Timoney, the tele vision crew tried to avoid this prob lem by filming during class peri ods, however, sometimes, a scene took a little longer.

“On typical productions, cam eras roll for 5 minutes at a time.

'The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel' rolls film for 6-8 minutes with 20-min ute scene setups in between shoot ing. We were hoping to be able to shoot twice in each class period but sometimes it fell into the 15 minute class change,” said Timoney.

Despite students’ frustration with the filming, the crew was happy with the students, faculty and staff’s cooperation according to Timoney.

“The crew was so impressed with how quiet our students were, especially by the fountain when we were all watching the lawn game filming. As a matter of fact,

Maisel stayed on schedule both days thanks to the cooperation of Fordham students,” said Timoney.

Regardless of the inconve nience, Ryan also thought it was cool that “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” was filming on Fordham’s campus.

“I think it’s cool that they filmed here. I just wish they would have made it more clear where they didn’t want us to walk,” said Ryan.

Ryan also added that he “might” watch the show when it comes out.

During the taping, students, staff and faculty got to see actors in costume and what an active set looks like. Some students even took pictures with the star of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel,” Rachel Brosnahan, who plays Midge Maisel.

“The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” is not the first piece of media to be filmed at Fordham. Fordham has been in other notable produc tions such as “A Bronx Tale,” “The Exorcist” and “Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps.” Timon ey said that this episode of “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” should be coming out on on Amazon Prime in late February or early March.

COURTESY OF NICOLE BRAUN/ THE FORDHAM RAM The cast and crew of the television show filmed on Edward’s Parade. COURTESY OF DALIA FOURQUART FOR THE FORDHAM RAM Extras of the show walked around Fordham s campus in 1960s costumes. COURTESY OF OWEN SIBAL FOR THE FORDHAM RAM Students work with Campus Ministry on a day of service in the Bronx. Students volunteered at Mosholu Park. COURTESY OF OWEN SIBAL FOR THE FORDHAM RAM
September 28, 2022Page 4 NEWS
FROM MINISTRY, PAGE 1

SEAJ Attends Friday for Future’s Climate Strike

On Friday, Sept. 23, leaders of Students for Environmental Awareness and Justice (SEAJ) took a group of students to Battery Park in Manhattan for Fridays for Future’s global cli mate strike. The strike included a march from Foley Square to Battery Park. At Battery Park, speakers ranging from New York State Assemblymembers to Indigenous leaders spoke about the importance of revers ing climate change.

Fridays for Future is a glob al youth-led climate advocacy group. The group was started in 2018 by climate advocate Greta Thunberg and others. Every day leading up to the Swedish parliamentary elec tions, Thunberg sat in front of parliament to advocate for climate change legislation. She started alone but was soon joined by other young advocates. Videos and pic tures of their strike caught attention online, and people worldwide started following suit. Now, among other initia tives, Fridays for Future plans an annual Global Climate Strike day, which took place this year on Sept. 23.

SEAJ’s group left Fordham’s Rose Hill campus to catch the speakers presenting at Battery Park. The group made signs the night before on pieces of reused cardboard. For many, the experi ence of traveling and attending

the strike with other Fordham stu dents was powerful.

“I think what stuck with me was the fact that I was able to at tend the strike with an amazing group of people from Fordham,” said SEAJ’s secretary, Zainab Ali, FCRH ’24. “I have always attended strikes by myself and met people along the way, however making posters and commuting to Battery Park was very special.”

The strike focused on how young people can help reverse the effects of climate change. Some speakers like Assemblymember Yuh-Line Niou urged students to take action by voting on local bills to help reverse climate change in New York City. Others, like White House advisor Jerome Foster II, spoke about how climate change disproportionately affects com munities and people of color.

“My favorite part of the strike was hearing an advisor from the White House speak. It was inspir ing to see a young representative using his voice in politics. We don’t see that much,” said Ali.

Young Indigenous leaders from South and Central American communities came to the New York City strike to speak about how climate change has affect ed their lives.

“I enjoyed listening to all the speeches given by Indigenous Youth Activists. It was incred ibly inspiring that they were able to come to the strike and to hear about the work that needs to be done,” said Tarchithaa Chandra Sekharan, FCRH ’24,

treasurer of SEAJ.

Ali and Chandra Sekharan echoed common sentiments pre sented at the strike. They think that young people, specifically college students, need to take ac tion against climate change.

“College students are the prime voters because there are so many of us, and we have ac cess to education,” said Ali. “Climate change is also a gen erational issue. If this gets worse we will have to live with constant fear and anxiety, from surviving floods in our own campus to de ciding whether we should have children in the future.”

Chandra Sekharan thinks that students should use the independence that they have in college to take action for cli mate justice, given that climate

change is a pressing issue.

“College students are for the most part stepping out into their own independence for the first time,” said Chandra Sekharan. “Our first intentional and inde pendent actions as adults must have climate change as a factor even if it is indirect as we are al ready falling behind.”

According to Ali, there are many ways that college students can get involved in the climate movement.

“I would say [college students can get] involved in voting for representatives of the youth and making sustainability our goal for our future careers, whether it is business, art, poli tics, etc,” said Ali.

Chandra Sekharan also said that students should be peti tioning and voting for climate

reform, but that there are also ways to be more environmen tally conscious in everyday life. She said that “rinsing re cyclable items before putting them in the bin [and] being intentional with single-use items being bought as well as clothes,” are easy ways to help the environment.

SEAJ has attended Friday for Future’s climate strikes in the past. SEAJ is also attempt ing to change their name from Students for Environmental Awareness and Justice to Students for Environmental Justice and Action. Accord ing to Chandra Sekharan, the club has moved past environ mental awareness and now focuses on actions related to the issue.

Senior Writes Musical About Shanghainese Immigrant

For the past three years, Miguel Sutedjo, FCRH ’23, has been working on writing his own mu sical for his senior thesis project. Over the summer, Sutedjo, who is studying music, international political economy and Mandarin, received a grant from the univer sity to participate in the Narnia International Vocal Arts Festival in Narni, Italy. At this festival, Sutedjo had the opportunity to premiere two new theatric vo cal works, an art song and a musical theater scene. Sutedjo was also able to have his pieces performed by professional mu sicians and singers.

“Using the knowledge that I gained while workshopping and premiering those pieces, I have since come back and used the tools that I have learned from there to inform this musical that I’m working on,” said Sutedjo.

Writing this musical has been an ongoing process for Sutedjo, but using the musical as his senior thesis project has provided him with a more rigid framework and structure to complete the work. The musical, entitled “A Taste” is Sutedjo’s reflection on the Asian American hustle culture that is present in America.

The plot centers around a Shanghainese businessman fa ther and his jazz pianist son who

move from Shanghai to New York City’s Chinatown. The son decides to explore the city’s jazz culture against the wishes of his father, who wants him to follow the standard, more traditional path of studying and going to college. Within the musical, Sutedjo explores the themes of the conflict be tween passions and practical ity and how American society defines success.

Sutedjo wrote the first song for his musical many years ago. The song is used in a scene dur ing which the main character reflects on his life as he pre pares to move from Shanghai to New York City with his father.

After this initial song, Sutedjo started to construct an outline for the plot of the musical and the story he wanted to convey.

After nailing down this out line, Sutedjo wrote the songs and the script for the musical. Then Sutedjo focused on revis ing, editing and receiving feed back from his advisor here at Fordham, Eric Bianchi, Ph.D., of the music department.

“That process varies from day to day, some days I’ll be writing a new number, some days I’ll be go ing out and studying a musical’s libretto or score and seeing what I can learn from that and doing that analysis to inform my own work,” said Sutedjo.

Some of Sutedjo’s classes this semester, like Asian diasporic literatures and a class on famed composer Stephen Sondheim, have also been extremely helpful and relevant to his project as well.

Throughout his entire life, Sutedjo has always been ex tremely involved in music and in many different types of mu sical disciplines.

He started classical piano at the age of three and later switched to jazz piano during high school. He also participated in musical the ater during high school.

“For me, I knew I wanted to try it out because I felt like writ ing musicals combines all of my skill sets into one project, but as I

kept on working on it, it’s really been sort of the culmination of not only my artistic journey over these past 21 years but also intel lectually how I view myself as an Asian American facing a lot of the same issues regarding hustle cul ture,” said Sutedjo.

This element of the musical is essential for Sutedjo. He said that he strives to be “emotionally autobiographical” in the work that he creates.

Looking towards the future, Sutedjo hopes that in the spring, he can put on some sort of read ing or performance of his musical.

Since the musical meditates on the Asian American experience, Sutedjo wants to use a cast made up of entirely AAPI performers.

He is unsure whether or not he will have to look outside of Fordham for these resources. After that, Sutedjo says that he would love to be able to do some sort of professional production of the show, but he mostly will just be reaching out to people and seeing where the project can go.

“But at the end of the day, I think for me, writing this piece is not only just a musical that I’m doing but an emotionally charged, memory type work as well, and I think that the process of it has already been so fulfill ing that I think that for me, it’s enough reward even if it doesn’t go anywhere,” said Sutedjo.

COURTESY OF TWITTER On Friday in Manhattan, Friday for Future's Global Climate Strike occured. COURTESY OF MIGUEL SUTEDJO Sutedjo's musical focuses on a Shanghainese immigrant in New York City and his relationship with his father.
September 28, 2022 Page 5NEWS

R

The Fordham Ram is the uni versity journal of record. The mis sion of The Fordham Ram is to provide a forum for the free and open exchange of ideas in service to the community and to act as a student advocate. The Fordham Ram is published every Wednes day during the academic year to all campuses.

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OPINION

From the Desk | Nicoleta Papavasilakis

My Failures Are Integral to My Resume

I hate updating my resume and writing cover letters. Every time I feel like a phony. Don’t get me wrong: I’ve never fab ricated my accomplishments, pretended I speak five different languages or feigned a black belt in karate. I’ve done every thing I listed, like announcing for the New Balance Armory Track, hosting for WFUV public radio and speaking not five, but three different languages. That being said it still doesn’t feel right; a crucial part of myself is missing in the job descriptions — my f*** ups. And trust me, I have plenty.

In my resume under the title of WFUV host/reporter I write: Hosted daily “What’s What” podcast covering current events, culture, news and hot topic issues in the New York Metropolitan Area.

Here’s what’s missing. When I started hosting for WFUV, it was a nightmare. The “What’s What” podcast made its debut this past summer and the whole goal of it is to make news as conversational and accessible as possible. This was easier said than done. Creating the script for the first time seemed simple enough, but actually recording it was a whole other story. When I introduced my self, I couldn’t pronounce my own last name correctly and it was all downhill from there.

Although they were my words on paper, I could not get through a complete sentence without mess ing up. When I finally finished, I

sounded robotic and discon nected from the context of the news itself. I reported on a fun disco event at Lincoln Center with as much enthusiasm as read ing off a grocery list. I cringed when I listened back to it and still refuse to revisit that first episode. Nonetheless, it was a valuable experience; I real ized that I had to write in a way that suits my voice. It made me consider, “Would I really say something like that?” I learned to say my words with purpose. Journalists are taught to be ob jective, but I’ve learned to con nect to stories in this way and reflect the appropriate tones in my voice, rather than just read ing words from a script.

Here’s another example of one of my accomplishments from my resume, working at the Armory: Organized and hosted awards ceremonies at the 2022 New Balance Indoor Nationals.

This sounds more glamor ous than it actually was. The New Balance Indoor Nationals is one of the most prestigious track events that takes place at the Armory. It’s a three-day televised production where the fastest high schoolers gather from across the country for the chance to compete and win champion titles. It was my job to announce the awards, but there was a lot more to it than that.

What I would like to put on the resume is how I ran more than those kids that weekend, frantically going back and forth

from the podium to the timing room to retrieve the winning results five minutes before each awards ceremony. I’d like to write down how I had to smile and try to pronounce each un familiar name as I heard my two bosses curse each other out through my headset. And of course, the most glamorous part of the job was explaining to parents that their kids were not getting the top prize — a set of airpods — because they didn’t win first place. I know that these aren’t necessar ily failures, but they were defi nitely obstacles that I had to overcome. They speak more to how I can handle pressure than

Editorial | Fordham Dining

simply “Organized and Hosted Awards.”

I obviously can’t put these explanations in my resume, es pecially when I am confined to the standard one page limit. A portfolio is meant to showcase an applicant’s best work, but my failures are as informative as my successes, if not more. I have learned to be flexible and versatile, to think out of the box when things don’t go my way. I, like many others, am not a product of accomplishments alone.

I had to fall, f*** up and start over again to get to the onesentence descriptions I write on my resume.

Babylon is a Rare Glimmer of Green from Aramark

In the McShane Campus Center’s Marketplace, Fordham recently introduced a new microfarm display: Babylon. Babylon, a glass box housing a micro farm, also features a large standee that advertises the sustainabil ity, health and the generally net-positive eco-friendliness in the display.

According to Deming Yaun, the university’s dining con tract liaison, the greens grown within the Babylon display will be directly used in select foods from the Marketplace cafeteria.

The introduction of Babylon is not the only initiative in recent memory that suggests the uni versity is starting to promote healthier, more sustainable and greener eating habits among its students. An email from Ford ham Hospitality Services show cased “La Latina Cocina,” a limited-time Latin-based dish pop-up at both campuses and Vegan Pizza pop-ups also at both campuses. A sign at the front of the Marketplace advis es students to try fresh vegeta bles, fruits, water, beans, whole grains and seafood to curb Type 2 Diabetes and weight gain.

While the sentiment for health ier eating practices is well appre ciated, these promotions are

still a relatively small portion of the food served on campus (it isn’t easy to find fresh sea food on campus). This is largely because a near-total majority of food present on campus is serviced and provided by Ara mark.

According to Is It Bad For You?, an organization of Board Certified medical doctors and nutritionists, Aramark has “a long, checkered past with pro viding sub-par food” and its food “should be avoided as much as possible.” The site also suggests an alternative from Aramark: a homemade lunch.

The website goes through a number of incidents in which Aramark has shown negligence in clean food distribution (in cluding maggots found in food preparation for Michigan pris oners) and generally cutting corners for food safety, sug gesting that Aramark’s forprofit mindset may be actively unhealthy for students who are forced to consume these products.

Chances are, someone you know, be it a classmate or room mate, has been the victim of some form of food poisoning from on-campus meals.

Outside of meals prepared by Aramark or the small amounts

of healthy food promotions, the other alternative students can find are the processed and manufactured food products in stock at P.O.D. (or Provisions on Demand).

These products, like Amy’s Kitchen frozen meals, dry ra men, chips and snack foods, are notoriously unhealthy. There are not many options on cam pus available to students look ing to better their nutritional habits.

Overall, the quality of food on Fordham’s campus is lack ing in nutritional value or health benefits, despite the fact that Fordham advertised otherwise.

There are multiple avenues that the university can take to improve the quality of its food, the largest and most substan tial change being to cut ties with Aramark. There have al ready been a number of student movements and calls-to-action for the company’s removal, both at Fordham and at many other universities across the country.

Until Fordham cuts ties with the perpetually disappointing Aramark, the quality of food on this campus and Fordham din ing will continue to not meet the bare minimum of the nutri tional needs of its students.

Serving the Fordham University campus and community since 1918 COURTESY OF NICOLETA PAPAVASILAKIS/THE FORDHAM RAM Fordham Dining promotes healthy eating.
Page 6 September 28, 2022

Claims of a Far-Right Rise are Overexaggerated

In both Sweden and Italy, the emergence of far-right politi cal leaders has taken the two European nations by storm. Sweden’s far-right political party, the Democrats, have recently risen to take second place in the country’s elections, and have been described as having its roots in neo-Nazism. Meanwhile, Giorgia Meloni’s election as prime minister of Italy has drawn attention to the far-right roots of her party, the Brothers of Italy, and its ties to the Italian fascism of Benito Mussolini. While it may seem as though this trend of rightwing victory in Europe sug gests a shift to the political right globally, and particularly in the West, this is not necessarily the case when examining the poli tics of the last several years.

While Meloni’s victory in Italy could be seen as a tri umph for the far-right, sug gesting a trend in a swing to the right of politics, it simply seems to be an outlier in the larger political arena. Italy has a number of factors that make it more hospitable to right-wing

leadership, such as a strong tie to conservative religious val ues, and a struggling economy that many in the country blame on the country’s ties to the European Union, seeing globalism as a threat to Italy. However, it would be foolish to suggest that Meloni’s gov ernment will be in power for a long period of time, at least by American standards. As ob servers have noted, Italy has a long history of governmental instability. According to The Economist, “Italy will have its 70th government since the end of the second world war — on average, one every 13 months.”

Arguably, the global populist right’s largest recent victory came in 2016, with the election of Donald Trump as the U.S. president. At the time, this was also suggested as a global turn ing point, in which the far right had taken control of the po litical narrative and would only see more wins in the future. As it turns out, this was not the case, as Trump was defeated, with record turnout, in the 2020 presidential election, only serving a single term. In his first two years in office, Biden has pushed legislation that has

a more populist bend, but to the left instead of the right. Accord ing to Ross Douthat of the New York Times, Biden was able to flip Trump’s narrative into a victory for the left, disproving of the theory that the right wing is the dominant ideology in America. “So now comes Biden, in a sense, to simply scoop up elements of Trumpian popu lism and try the trick himself.”

The far-right wing also saw a defeat in France in April, when incumbent President Emmanuel Macron beat back a challenge from Marine Le Pen, a popular far-right figure, whose party had once engaged in Holocaust denial and cham pioned extreme immigration restrictions. This again showed people’s displeasure with the insurgent right, making the not-always-so-popular Macron the first French president to be reelected in 20 years. Accord ing to CNN, French voters were uneasy with Le Pen’s stances on the most important European issues of today, stating that, “A Le Pen presidency would have fundamentally changed France’s relationship with the European Union and the West, at a time when the bloc

and its allies rely on Paris to take a leading role in confront ing some of the world’s biggest challenges — most notably, the war in Ukraine.” Again, the global right had another oppor tunity to pick up a key victory, and yet their message did not resonate with the voters.

Since the Leave campaign’s victory in the Brexit referen dum in the U.K. in 2015, and Donald Trump’s election as U.S. president in 2016, there has been a narrative amongst political observers that the far right was becoming a dominant political force worldwide. How ever, victories for the global center to center left worldwide have disproved this theory. Not even including the prior exam ples, since then, former Israeli

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been forced from power, Justin Trudeau has won two elections in Canada and following the ousting of Boris Johnston, the U.K. Conservative Party faces daunting poll numbers. Perhaps increased political polarization has led to more people supporting parties or politicians on further opposite ends of the political spectrum. However, this does not suggest a dominant far right. Instead, it is clear that they have lost more than they have won, and vot ers have been proven to be un comfortable with their politics.

Peter McGowan, FCRH ’24, is a political science major from Rochester, N.Y.

People and Planet Over Profit — the Patagonia Way

The founder and owner of Patagonia, Yvon Chouinard, has given up his billionaire sta tus and is funneling all revenue from his company into a non profit dedicated to fighting cli mate change. Chouinard wrote a letter to customers explaining this decision with the headline “Earth is now our only share holder.” Such a claim can bring out the natural skepticism of consumers, many of whom are desperately trying to navigate the intentionally murky waters of ethical consumption. Is this yet another sneaky attempt to market capitalism and the extreme consumer culture of America as a positive thing? Al though Chouinard’s intentions are well founded, I don’t think it will initiate a move towards this approach by billionaires in the long term.

“Despite its immensity, the Earth’s resources are not in finite, and it’s clear we’ve ex ceeded its limits. But it’s also resilient. We can save our planet if we commit to it,” said Chouinard. Transitioning to this precedent-setting business model is Chouinard’s attempt to ensure that Patagonia’s mis sion and values remain the top priority, regardless of who is in charge. This new approach to billionaire philanthropy is an unconventional move from Patagonia, forcing for-profit companies to reevaluate how they can remain relevant to an increasingly socially-conscious demographic of consumers.

The precedent Patagonia has set will certainly spark a larger

conversation about other com panies’ responses to the climate crisis. This restructuring will make it more difficult for com panies to hide behind an am biguous model of social respon sibility; progress can be made if company leaders are willing to let go of some of their wealth and redistribute it towards a greater purpose.

Chouinard went through many possibilities for a new business model, trying to find a happy medium between re maining profitable and sus tained giving. Chouinard has been vocal about his discomfort with his “billionaire” status. “I didn’t want to be a business man. Now I could die tomor row and the company is going to continue doing the right thing for the next 50 years, and I don’t have to be around,” ex plained Chouinard.

The New York Times classi fied the founder as “an outsider who abhors excessive wealth” as Chouinard uncomfortably described his financial gains as Patagonia grew in popularity over the last five decades. The company has grown to be one of the most recognized for its commitment to its employees, its partners and its customers.

Chouinard is not interested in Patagonia conforming to be like its competitors and has re mained steadfast in building a company that is led by its values first and its profits second. In a way, Patagonia is an extension of Chouinard himself and his values.

Ownership of the new com pany will be split between the Patagonia Purpose Trust and the Holdfast Collective. The

Patagonia Purpose Trust will protect and promote the com pany’s mission by owning the voting stock of the company. The Holdfast Collective will “use every dollar received to fight the environmental crisis, protect nature and biodiversity and support thriving commu nities.” 98% of the company’s profits will be used to ensure that “Patagonia makes good on its commitment to run a so cially responsible business and give away its profits,” some thing that has never been a pri ority in federal legislation. With the birth of the Collective, Pa tagonia now has the non-profit status to be able to participate in political activism, in addition to advocating for social justice issues independently. All fund ing for both of these organiza tions will come from Patagonia.

Patagonia is a company that has consistently wrestled with its contributions to excessive consumption, an issue that seems to only accelerate every year. Patagonia famously had a campaign on Black Friday with the headline called “Don’t Buy This Jacket.” This advertise ment was an attempt to encour age conscious spending on one of the busiest shopping days of the year.

The company recognized that this advertisement could be interpreted as hypocritical, explaining that it is more ridic ulous to assume that a healthy economy can and needs to be sustained by buying more and more unnecessary goods. While this advertisement meant well, it wasn’t necessarily effective. The advertisement didn’t have much success in stopping peo

ple from buying in excess. Yes, the advertisement is compel ling and makes people think about the problems with Black Friday and the values of Patagonia.

This candid approach has aided in the company’s ability to have an honest dialogue with their customers about navigat ing American consumerism. But it’s not like the company closed all of their storefronts on Black Friday; the company simply wanted to start a larger dialogue about our willingness to spend without blinking an eye, not take more impactful action. It was effective in its shock value, giving the com pany brownie points with its customers for calling out this superficial holiday, but their sales were still very success ful, perhaps even more so with the help of that eye-catching advertisement. With the com pany’s past of focusing on ethi cal consumption and the recent restructuring of ownership, it prompts the question: How will this change in ownership impact other companies that claim to be just as transparent with customers?

It is no surprise that this type of business model was

created before any apparel or fashion sustainability legisla tion has been passed. Most fashion brands are not acutely interested in sustainability or fair labor practices, with com pany profits being the main priority. Although there are potential laws and regulations in the works, none are being established by self-made bil lionaires like Chouinard. Al though it is notable that he and his family have taken an altru istic approach to their fortunes, I doubt that we will see other billionaires donate all of their earnings for the common good. Although New York may have a Fashion Sustainabil ity Act on the horizon, which would hold apparel companies accountable for combating cli mate change, there needs to be comprehensive legislation en acted within this industry. It is not enough to hope that every billionaire suddenly wants to be rid of their ties to fame and for tune and will prioritize people and planet over profit.

Michela Fahy, FCRH ’23, is an English and humanitarian studies major and Italian mi nor from Cedar Grove, N.J.

COURTESY OF TWITTER Patagonia is one of the rare clothing companies with a conscience. COURTESY OF TWITTER Far-right victories in Sweden and Italy are not indicative of a larger trend.
OPINION
Page 7September 28, 2022

OPINION

Martha’s Vineyard Residents: Better Leaders than Gov. DeSantis

Governor Ron DeSantis’ recent action in Martha’s Vineyard was a ridiculous political stunt which did nothing to solve the migration crisis. The Florida governor paid for two flights to deliver migrants from San Antonio, Texas, to Martha’s Vineyard. Many of the migrants have told the media that they had been misled by a woman named Perla, who told them that they were going to be flown to Boston where they would receive help and work papers. Instead of ending up in a major city, they were flown to a small island dur ing the off season. The expecta tions of work and housing that “Perla” promised were nowhere

to be seen. The migrants had been tricked just to serve as pawns in DeSantis’ antics.

It seems odd that the governor of a state that does not border Mexico is so interested in the southern border. There has been a large uptick in migrants travel ing from Venezuela, Cuba and Nicaragua who are allowed to stay in the country by claiming politi cal asylum. DeSantis is interested in this migration because it repre sents a culture war, and it can be exploited in order to be viewed more favorably among right-wing Americans.

Right-wing pundits have con structed a narrative that American towns on the southern border are overflowing and stretched thin by migrants from Latin America.

They argue that large liberal cit ies are removed from this issue, which explains their more wel coming position, and that liberal cities should try receiving some share of the migrants. While this argument might make sense in some ways, the intentions behind this mindset are not good. This narrative’s purpose is not to help the migrants that have arrived in America, but instead further di vide Americans on what should be done about the issue of immi gration. This has happened here in New York, with many migrants being bussed to the city from Texas, an occurrence that has been focused on by right-wing media as a liberal hypocrisy.

Some may wonder why the governor would group Martha’s

Vineyard into the same category as New York City. However, it begins to make sense once you look into who lives and vacations there. In the 2020 election, 77% of the island’s residents voted for President Joe Biden. Many fa mous Democrats vacation there in the summertime, including former President Barack Obama, who owns a house on the island. DeSantis saw this island as the perfect template for promoting his message of liberal elites be ing removed from the problems of the nation. He wanted the ar rival of the migrants to throw the island into confusion so the stunt could be used as an example of liberals’ hypocrisy. However, the citizens of Martha’s Vineyard stepped up. Officials on the island had no heads up about the mi grant’s arrival, but citizens came together and found 50 beds for migrants to sleep in and plenty of food for them to eat. Instead of the islanders coming off as the en titled rich liberals talked about on Fox News, they showed a gener ous community giving from the heart. In that moment, the citizens of Martha’s Vineyard displayed a crucial trait that DeSantis lacks: leadership. A good leader needs to care about the people under their watch. Once the migrants stepped onto the plane, they were DeSantis’ responsibility, and he immediately passed that responsibility to the residents of

Martha’s Vineyard.

When faced with a crisis, a good leader communicates and collaborates with other leaders. One way of doing this could have been contacting the federal gov ernment and other state leaders to work together to find shelter for the migrants. Instead, Desantis did not even pick up the phone. He only thought of this situation on one simple level: a political stunt he could exploit for his reelection campaign and possible 2024 pres idential run.

DeSantis is so absorbed in him self that he might not have even pondered what his own citizens would think about his antics. I’m sure many Floridians were pleased to learn that this whole affair cost them around $500,000. His mis treatment of the migrants may also strike a nerve with the many Cuban Americans voters who fled to Florida after the Cuban Revolution. Instead of being con cerned about serving the citizens of Florida, Desantis seems more worried about trying to outdo for mer president Donald Trump in his outspoken anti-immigration stunts. It is a sad day in America when average American citizens in Martha’s Vineyard show more leadership than a sitting governor.

Evan McManus, FCRH ’25, is a political science major from Dover, Mass.

Outdated U.S. News & World Report Does Students a Disservice

The U.S. News & World Report college ranking sys tem. You’ve probably heard of it. Your parents and tour guides may have referenced it while you dawdled around dif ferent colleges for visits — as long as it was a number worth bragging about.

Since 1983, the U.S. News & World Report has released a ranking of American colleges every year for students, fami lies and college administra tions to analyze. This system uses factors like graduation

and retention rates, social mo bility, undergraduate academic reputation, faculty, student test scores, financial aid resources, average alumni giving rate and how much debt gradu ates have. The ranking caused more buzz than usual this year when the report dropped Columbia University to spot number 18 from its previous spot at number two. One of Columbia’s own math profes sors questioned the accuracy of the report based on the date the university submitted its data.

This brings up an impor tant point: Colleges submit their own data. This fact raises

questions about the accuracy and helpfulness of the ranking system, two things which I ar gue are missing from the U.S. News & World Report.

I think a good place to start is the intended audience of the report. Obviously, it is in tended for students and their families, but are students re ally the main audience? Or do their wants and needs get lost in the fray?

One reason that I believe the report is no longer helpful is because it has lost sight of its goal to help students. When the rankings come out, all the buzz goes toward which school is at the top of the list.

So much attention goes to ward the schools at the top of the list, rather than simply celebrating the success of stu dents being accepted into and attending college in general. With student debt higher than ever, inconsistent job prospects within our current economic landscape and the increased cost of living, what college you attend should not matter as much as the fact that you have a degree.

By looking at any accep tance into college as a celebra tion, a ranking list starts to lose its relevance. In fact, a rank ing system alone is not a very helpful way of determining if a college is a good fit. Visit ing colleges, attending college promotional events hosted at your high school, speaking to

family members and friends about their college experiences and independent research are more personal and tailored ap proaches. Every student is dif ferent and has their own needs, so boiling down all of the col leges in America to a simple numbered list isn’t adequate.

This ranking system only shows that colleges feed into an elitist lens of higher educa tion. By ranking Ivy League schools at the top, the U.S. News & World Report seems to favor elite schools over more accessible and affordable ones. This pushes a message of privilege, where some colleges are more valuable than others because of their prestige and high price tag.

That sort of message is no longer relevant in a world where college is a virtual ne cessity that comes at a steep price. How does this kind of ranking make students at com munity colleges feel? Some students may see their school’s rankings (or lack of a ranking) and feel bad. This is absolutely the wrong takeaway. Attend ing college, no matter at what school, and earning a degree is a major life accomplishment.

College is largely about developing a successful pro fessional life. Part of that pro fessional life is having access to a good network of people and attending a college with a positive reputation for your resume. An argument can be

made that a ranking list allows students to know exactly which schools will offer them the best network or reputation.

In reality, though, this rank ing system does not necessar ily provide an advantage in the professional world.

If anything, the ranking sys tem most directly appeals to parents.

Parents may value a rank ing system more than students because college used to have a more untouchable place in so ciety.

Not everyone can attend col lege and graduating from col lege was seen as a jumpstart to a successful career. However, society has changed to a point where college is seen as more of a commonplace, given next step to a good paying job and stable adult life.

The U.S. News & World Report is a relic of a past American society where col lege rankings reflected the best of the best and provided for healthy competition among the nation’s brightest. The U.S. News & World Report must change to better reflect the needs of students applying to college.

This ranking system would do a disservice otherwise.

Sarah Kenny, FCRH ’24, is a political science major from Seattle, W.A.

Gov. DeSantis funded two flights to deliver migrants from San Antonio, Texas to Martha’s Vineyard in Massachusetts. COURTESY OF TWITTER
Page 8
The ranking dropped Columbia University to spot number 18. COURTESY OF PIA FISCHETTI/THE FORDHAM RAM September 28, 2022

You Shouldn’t Aspire To Be an Influencer

have to develop a product or find a niche audience you can connect with, grow that audi ence by partnering with other small businesses and maybe, once your store is big enough, you can cash out and sell to a huge retailer. (The influencer equivalent of this sort of suc cess would be getting their own reality TV show, a way to have a steadier stream of income with a greater chance of catapulting themselves into household-name status.)

the oversaturated influencer market on social media, say ing “The over-saturation and this push for everyone to be a creator seems disingenuous … It seems like a cash grab. It makes me feel very dispos able, which maybe I am.”

About a week ago, I started an inane Instagram account whose sole purpose is to make myself and my friends laugh. It has a humble fol lowing (though it is growing every day, thank you very much), and it brings me joy every time I see another fol lower join its ranks. I don’t want to say that I am an in fluencer (so please halt your eyerolls), but there is a unique kind of satisfaction to know that something I find funny is something other people find funny, too. In some small way, my content is welcoming other people with a sense of humor like me to share a slice of my worldview.

But no one should ever do this for a living.

I don’t mean to conflate my measly little account with so cial media influencers who have hundreds of thousands, sometimes millions, of de voted followers. But on the

micro level, let’s take a look at what influencing really is: It is a means of depersonalizing someone from an individual entity into a brand. On the macro level, it is the commod ification and commercializa tion of the self.

Influencers can be defined in a variety of ways, but the general consensus is that they are individuals with a sub stantial social media follow ing who use that presence to promote certain lifestyles or products. Right now, there are “between 3.2 million and 37.8 million influencers in the world [on] Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok.”

Influencing is capitalism at the most intimate level. In stead of relying on your art or a talent, like musicians and movie stars, to catapult you into fame your personality is the product being offered up for grabs. Influencers are a liv ing, breathing brand — there is no separation between the person and the product. To garner fame, influencers are

selling their hair styling tips, workout routines, what they are making their kids for dinner or whatever else their niche may be, and they are de-privatizing their lives for profit. It merges the personal life and the work life, blurring a distinction that our society is craving, as evidenced by the trend of “quiet quitting.”

In an age where the gov ernment and tech companies are infringing upon our right to privacy or just straight up stealing our private informa tion, influencers are openly forfeiting their right to pri vacy in exchange for fame and profit. On one hand, I think that it is unfathomable that somebody would be will ing to commodify themselves like that, to turn themselves into a business, to boil down their identity and what they stand for into a promo code consumers can use to get 10% off plant-based supplements. From a different perspective, though, isn’t influencing kind of like a small business? You

While influencing might have once been seen as an in consequential passion project or side hustle, some influenc ers have reported earning a six-figure salary. According to Vox, “‘Influencer’ is now one of the most desired ca reer paths for both children and adults.” The same article quotes a study that “found that 54 percent of Americans ages 13 to 38 would become an influencer if given the chance.” It’s easy to see why. Influencers are similar to en trepreneurs in that they have ultimate freedom to produce whatever content they want. They can create their own schedules and promote the causes and issues they care about.

But while influencing has undeniably increased in pop ularity and has clear incen tives, it shouldn’t be a legiti mate career path. Influencing is not a viable, sustainable way of life. Gen Z TikTok influenc ers have been saying that they feel burnt out by the demands that come with being a con tent creator, and that they are run down by the constant bullying they face in the com ments section. In an inter view for the New York Times, a young TikTok star said that “when creators do try to speak out on being bullied or burned out or not being treated as human, the comments all say, ‘You’re an influencer, get over it.’” Another lamented

A Harris Poll study asked 3,000 kids in the U.S. and U.K. what they would like to be when they grow up, having to choose between a profes sion as a teacher, a musician, a professional athlete, an as tronaut and a YouTube influ encer. Almost 30% of them chose to be an influencer.

This statistic makes me so sad and angry. Children should feel limitless. They should be dreaming about reaching the stars (literally) or teaching or studying some thing they are passionate about. They should be dream ing of a life bigger than their phone, of a career and liveli hood where success is not measured by how many likes they get.

Young influencers have said that they feel “tied to a static, inauthentic identity.” The al lure of influencer stardom is understandable, but nonethe less, it shouldn’t be something that children dream of.

While influencing has been somewhat legitimized in the past few years, it should never be thought of as a viable ca reer path — because it’s not. It commodifies your person ality, shallows out your iden tity and leaves you with fans begging for more water even when your well has run dry. And that is only if you’re so “lucky” to have a large follow ing.

We’re waging a war on many fronts in the hopes of retaining our privacy and a space for authenticity. And influencers are forfeiting.

Nicole Braun, FCRH ’24, is an English major from Saddle River, N.J.

A study found that “54 percent of Americans ages 13 to 38 would become an influencer if given the chance.”
OPINION
Page 9September 28, 2022

OPINION

Ukrainians Need Support with No-Strings-Attached

Providing Ukrainians in need with resources is important – but it needs to be done in a sensitive manner. The Lubetzky Family Foundation’s Global Democracy Ambassador Scholarship is one new program that tries to support Ukrainians, giving 10 displaced college-aged Ukrainians $30,000 each to attend a university in the U.S. and participate as “demo cratic ambassadors.” According to the website, there are two phases: the first supports students already pursuing a degree for the 202223 school year, and the second will support students expected to study abroad in the U.S. in 2023. Although this program is relatively new and little information is avail able on it, if its Ukrainian schol ars are given a platform it will be extremely effective in educating Americans about Ukraine and ben efiting the war-torn country.

This new program allows Americans to understand the many misconceptions about Ukraine

through Ukrainians’ perspec tives. For instance, many argue that Ukraine is already practically Russian because of the large Russian-speaking population. This mindset ignores the history of bans on the Ukrainian language during periods of Russian colonial occu pation. The fact that Ukrainian cul ture has been under attack for so long does not mean that those who were forced to adapt the Russian language for survival or relearn the art of pysanky making are any less Ukrainian.

In contrast, the continua tion of Ukrainian culture de spite Russification is proof of Ukrainians’ desire for self-deter mination. There are many more misconceptions about Ukraine, ranging from Ukraine being a political pawn of NATO to the common Russian propaganda that Ukraine is run by nazism. Howev er, by giving Ukrainians a platform to truly speak about their survival as a country despite systematic erasure from foreign influences, these misconceptions can be com bated.

Since the program has just begun, we cannot know what restrictions are placed on the 10 new “ambas sadors of democratic values.” This scholarship program has the poten tial to do more harm than good if the scholars are forced to equate America’s fight for “democracy” to Ukraine’s war. When speaking about the program, founder José Andrés said, “[Scholars] represent the Frontline of Freedom and can remind American students who are their roommates and classmates, that democracy is worth fighting for.”

Democracy is worth fighting for, but Ukraine’s democracy is notably different from America’s. America is a very imperialistic country, and the “fight for democracy” mindset has led the U.S. government to carry out many acts of violence in other countries. American involve ment in the Middle East, Vietnam and the Philippines are just a few examples of our sense of superior ity in the international community and the imperialistic practices we as a country continue to perpetuate.

It is important that we, as Americans, do not attempt to turn Ukraine into another political pawn. Ukraine is its own country, with just as interesting and valid a culture as America’s and just as important a history. We need to recognize this distinction and not invest in Ukraine for the sake of ex panding our influence in the East. Ukrainians are not a pawn for Western political powers. Ukraine deserves self-determination from both Russia and America.

Hence, Western support should

not be treated as an expansion of Western imperialism. America forces other countries, such as Ukraine, under its influence fi nancially. “With a monthly fiscal shortfall of $5 billion, Ukraine is heavily reliant on foreign financ ing from Western allies,” accord ing to Reuters. Given Ukraine’s economic losses, Ukraine will not be capable of paying its large debt towards the West anytime soon. Essentially, once Ukraine gains its independence, America will still have influence over Ukraine.

To provide Ukraine with the freedom that it deserves, Amer ica needs to provide support with a no-strings-attached mindset. A no-strings-attached mindset is the only way to fully support and encourage Ukraine’s right to self-determination, and it is also one America agreed upon in the Budapest Memorandum, which states “the United States of Amer ica reaffirm their commitment to seek immediate United Nations Security Council action to provide assistance to Ukraine…if Ukraine should become a victim of an act of aggression.” I would like to emphasize that it is still crucial that we send support and weap ons to Ukraine. In exchange for Ukraine’s third largest supply of nuclear weapons after the Soviet Union collapsed, America agreed to support Ukraine’s right to selfdetermination. We need to follow through on our treaties and provide unconditional support to Ukraine. So how likely is the scholarship program to respect Ukraine’s right to self-determination? Will it mere

ly continue America’s imperialistic practices? One way the program could be improved upon would be to directly fund schools in Ukraine. This direct focus on Ukrainian ed ucation would be more beneficial than having an indirect one, where Ukrainians are being educated in America. Overall, however, given the genuine effort the founders have put into Ukraine as well as the scholarship’s emphasis on return ing the Ukrainian scholars back to Ukraine, this program will likely give the support, financial assis tance and resources that citizens desperately need.

Right now, Ukrainians are fac ing horrors that many of us cannot comprehend. Ukrainians have been displaced, raped and murdered by the imperialistic mindset. Death, erasure and war are part of Ukrai nians’ everyday life. Ukrainians are strong and capable, but they are still in need of our support. Programs such as the Global Democracy Ambassador Scholarship pro vide the much needed financial and moral support that we, as Americans, owe to Ukraine, a country fighting for all of Europe’s stability right now.

We should continue to give to Ukraine without expecting any po litical influence or sway within the country in return and remember to let Ukrainians speak and act for themselves.

Sofika Levytsky, FCRH ’26, is undecided from Parsippany, N.J.

Celebrities and Their Get-Out-of-Jail Free Cards

Asking “do celebrities re ceive lighter sentences for the crimes they commit?” is like asking if the sky is blue. Short answer: yes. Time and time again, our justice system has catered to the rich and famous — who else would be able to afford the insanely high bail posted?

On Sept. 15, rapper and Bronx native Cardi B was on trial for a variety of charges: third-degree assault, seconddegree reckless endangerment and 10 other charges that were dismissed.

The rapper originally faced up to four years in prison for the indictments against her. Af ter taking the plea deal, Cardi B walked out with just 14 days of community service. 14 days of community service is drasti cally different from four years in prison.

The cherry on top was Cardi B’s post on Twitter after she received her sentence: this car ousel post includes pictures of Cardi B and her lawyer in court, walking into court and even a selfie, captioned “Puuuurrrrrr.”

Cardi B is not the only ex ample of a celebrity receiving a noticeably light sentence for a crime committed. How could

we forget the infamous college admissions scandal?

Felicity Huffman, a famous American actress, was one of the main celebrities involved in this criminal case after she paid $15,000 to have her daughter’s SAT answers corrected. The ac tress faced up to four months in prison, but after taking the plea deal, Huffman walked out with a significantly lighter sentence: 14 days in prison, a fine of $30,000 and 250 hours of com munity service. A $30,000 fine would be devastating for many families, but for celebrities like Huffman, it is just a drop in the ocean. In fact, Huffman’s fine is only two times what she will ingly paid for fraudulent SAT results.

Actress Lori Loughlin and her husband, fashion designer Mossimo Giannulli, were also involved in the college admis sions scandal. The couple paid $500,000 in bribes to ensure admission to the University of Southern California for their daughters, Olivia and Isabella. Loughlin’s role in the scandal was probably the most publi cized as a result of daughter Olivia Jade’s YouTube channel, where she vlogged her days at the university, complaining about having to attend college.

Loughlin ended up with a more intense sentence than

Huffman. Loughlin was sen tenced to two months in prison, a hefty fine of $150,000 and 100 hours of community service. Giannulli also received a sig nificant sentence. He faced five months in prison, a $250,000 fine and 250 hours of commu nity service.

Though the sentence was heftier than what other celeb rities involved in the same scandal faced, I am still not convinced that it was a just sentence. These couples com mitted crimes like money laun dering and mail fraud, and still, it seems they were able to buy their way out.

I would be remiss not to mention the infamous scandal of celebrity Martha Stewart. Stewart was charged with con spiracy, obstruction, security fraud (which was eventually dismissed) and two counts of lying to federal investigators in 2004. Stewart walked out with not just the minimal sentence — a $30,000 fine, five months in prison and five months of house arrest — but also a stron ger fan base, starting the slogan “Save Martha” and seeing an in crease in her company’s stock. Somehow, this trial seemed to result in a positive outcome for Stewart’s million-dollar com pany. Stewart gained popularity and wealth from her trial. She

also seemed to maintain her aura of innocence throughout the entirety of the trial, despite all the evidence against her.

While reflecting on these ce lebrity cases, there is one aspect that sticks out to me the most: the money.

Each and every one of these criminal celebrities was not only able to pay the expen sive fines they faced, but also had the opportunity to get the best lawyers. Cardi B was de fended by Drew Findling, who is literally known as the “#BillionDollarLawyer.” There is clearly a trend of celebrities getting off easier, or even ben efiting from the trial itself, as in Stewarts’s case.

Do celebrities think of certain crimes as acceptable to commit because they can buy their way out? The history of celebrity crime seems to point toward “yes.”

The crimes committed by ce lebrities often involve the pur suit of more money and pres tige, and yet somehow they can always afford to buy their way out. Ironic.

Money might not be able to buy happiness, but how much longer are we going to allow celebrities to buy get-out-ofjail-free cards?

Eden Cottone, FCRH ’26, is a journalism major from Wilmington, Del.

On Sept. 15, famous rapper and Bronx native Cardi B went on trial. The Global Democracy Ambassador Scholarship tries to support Ukrainians. COURTESY OF TWITTER
Page 10
COURTESY OF TWITTER
September 28, 2022

Senior Pursues Environmental Research

Research can be a challeng ing yet rewarding part of any STEM student’s academic jour ney. This past spring, Catherine Froehlich, FCRH ’23, decided on a research topic that allows her to combine her areas of in terest within the field of biology.

The objective of Froehlich’s research is to determine how pollution and urbanization im pact soil microbial communi ties. The idea for this topic came to fruition with the help of her mentor.

“We were brainstorming dif ferent topics and I liked the idea of this one because I enjoy the ecology side of biology but also the molecular and genetics side, and so it’s kind of a combina tion of the two,” said Froehlich.

Regarding the fieldwork in volved, Froehlich has chosen to investigate the soil microbes in three distinct categories of sites: urban, suburban and rural, or ex-urban. “We take soil sam ples from each of these types of locations and then we pull out the DNA, analyze it and send it off for sequencing,” Froehlich explained. Specifically, within each site she is collecting sam ples from riparian areas, which are located near a water source.

Froehlich described the purpose

of this fieldwork as two-fold. “We’re trying to see if any pol lution in the water has an effect on the soil microbes,” she said, “and also if it being an urban area affects the soil microbes.”

Though still in the early stag es of her research, some of the field and lab work required for the project has already begun.

“Over the summer we went to the Botanical Gardens and we collected soil samples from the Thain Family Forest,” said Froehlich. “Then we went into the lab and performed DNA ex traction to get the DNA out of the soil.” She hopes to complete the majority of the fieldwork this fall, which entails visiting six additional sites including Van Cortlandt Park, the Calder Center and Fahnestock State Park.

Froehlich has yet to gather findings as she is waiting until all of the samples have been collected before sending them off for sequencing. She is also waiting to hear back about the research grant she applied for earlier this semester, which would provide extra funding for her project. In the mean time, Froehlich is hard at work on other aspects of her research venture. “We’re trying to test out our fieldwork techniques and make sure everything is going smoothly for all of our other sites that we plan to visit,” she said.

Froehlich admitted that it can be difficult finding the time to focus on her research. On top of having to handle the demand ing course load of a STEM stu dent, she is also the president of University Choir and the vice president and co-founder of Dance Co-op, Fordham’s allinclusive dance group.

“I’m only taking three classes this semester, which has been a nice change from my 21-credit semesters in the past,” said Froehlich. “But I still feel like it’s a lot being a club leader of two different clubs because I’m not only in the club, but I also have to run it.”

Nonetheless, Froehlich remains optimistic in her endeavors. “Luckily,” she said, “my men tor is very flexible and so I can basically conduct my re search at whatever time works for me.” With that said, she is hoping to find the time to com plete some more fieldwork in the near future.

If daunting coursework, fre quent extracurriculars and a loom ing research project weren’t enough, Froehlich is also on track to graduate a semester ear ly, forcing her to think about life after Fordham.

“I probably want to attend grad school and get another degree, but I don’t really know what I would want it to be in,”

said Froehlich when discuss ing her plans after graduation.

“So I’m kind of holding off and seeing if I can get a job in the field like a lab technician or just helping out with research in some way.”

In terms of which field she wants to specialize in, Froehlich is keeping her options open.

“Two years ago I worked for the New York State Department of Health as a contact tracer and that was a cool experience, so I

feel like public health could be in my future,” Froehlich said. “I also was considering something like genetic counseling,” she added, “which is when you help patients see their genetic risks for certain diseases.”

Whichever career path she chooses to pursue, Froehlich will surely approach it with the same determined attitude and strong work ethic that she ap plies to her research project and all other endeavors.

“Cobra Kai” Season 5 Packs Its Biggest Punch Yet

*Spoiler Warning*

The season four finale of Netflix’s “Cobra Kai” showed the culmination of the bet that set the stage for the future of ka rate in the California Valley. So, in the recently-released season five, it would be expected that all this dojo madness would be behind the senseis.

But, apparently the one thing men are better at than honoring bets is holding on to decadeslong rivalries.

Before I get into this season, I’ll give a slight spoiler warning. I’ll try my best to not reveal too much of the newest season, but since season four came out in December 2021, that and every thing before it is fair game.

To recap the intense season four finale, Daniel LaRusso’s (Ralph Macchio) Miyagi-Do and Johnny Lawrence’s (William Zabka) Eagle Fang fought hard at the 51st All-Valley Karate Tourna ment to keep their dojos alive against the ferocious Cobra Kai, led by John Kreese (Martin Kove) and the newest of the returning senseis, Terry Silver (Thomas Ian Griffith). Miyagi-Do’s Eli Moskowitz (Jacob Bertrand) de feated Cobra Kai’s Robby Keene (Tanner Buchanan), but Cobra Kai’s Tory Nichols (Peyton List) de feated Miyagi-Do’s Sam LaRusso (Mary Mouser) in the finals, lead ing to an unfortunate Cobra Kai tournament win. Tory later

discovers that her and the team’s win was inevitable, as she finds Silver paying the referee after the tournament, so per the bet placed by the senseis, Myagi-Do and Ea gle Fang had to shut down. Basi cally, it’s a mess.

And so, we carry this mess into season five: Miguel Diaz (Xolo Maridueña) in Mexico searching for his father, Johnny and Robby trying to be a family, Daniel and Sam unwilling to let go of Miyagi-Do, Tory battling with her guilt and all of them wondering, “What do we do now?”

The answer: grow. Season five intensely focuses on character growth and, to spotlight a few, Zabka, List and Maridueña gave their best performance to show their characters’ evolutions.

Johnny has spent the major ity of the series trying to right the wrongs of his selfish past, and while his way may not be con ventional, his effort is undeniable. In season five, he works to mend his relationship with Robby while also finding a new family with the Diaz’s. Zabka performs ex cellently, showcasing a different, more nurturing side of a charac ter that has often been viewed as the villain. But that doesn’t mean comedy went out the window — we can always count on Zabka to keep the laughs rolling during the most intense scenes, what would “Cobra Kai” be without Johnny making a sarcastic drunk com ment while getting beat up by multiple karate masters?

On the other hand, everything

Tory has done has been for oth ers — every accomplishment, ev ery chore, every fight. When she won the All-Valley, it symbolized that she was the best at something, not because she needed to be but because she wanted to be. But unfortunately, the paid-off referee shattered the confidence she had in herself. With this, Tory learns from the mistakes she’s made and tries to fix them, hoping to

prove that she is no longer a self ish girl with a knack for getting into fights, but rather that she is a young woman who wants to do the right thing but just doesn’t know how. Tory’s actions are mis understood by other characters, and she is a perfect example of how there is good and bad in all of us, but it is what you do with it that makes the difference. Where Johnny’s story treads more lightly,

Tory’s is dark and emotional, and I can only applaud List for her gutwrenching performance.

The more heartfelt scenes ex cel in the hands of Maridueña. He has always been a talent in this series, but this season truly dem onstrates his improvement as an actor. This season brings back the Miguel we saw at the beginning of the series — the insecure new kid who just wants to prove himself. When Miguel finally gets to break down, Maridueña shines, blending the Miguel we first knew with the young man he has grown into.

Real talk: I had never seen “Cobra Kai” prior to the Sept. 9 release of season five. So, as one does, I spent around two weeks binging the whole series. Watch ing that many episodes in a row produces an unfathomable amount of emotions, but the one I felt the most at the end of this season was confliction. I would love to see another season in the future, however if this is where the series ends, I would be content. I would feel relief knowing that these kids are done with this worthless fight that started well before they were born. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: They have grown. Every character in this show had a beau tifully executed arc filled with tri als, tribulations and redemptions. So, if creators Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg decided to end it here, they end it with the knowledge that they gave these characters the best outcome they could have gotten, and that is all any fan could hope for.

COURTESY OF INSTAGRAM “Cobra Kai” pushes its characters to new depths in its latest s eason. Froehlich conducts microbiological research on soil samples. COURTESY OF PIA FISCHETTI/ THE FORDHAM RAM Kid Catherine Froehlich,
CULTURE Page 11September 28, 2022
Who’s That
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FCRH ’23

Classics Club Visits the Met Chroma Exhibit

Fordham’s Classics club made a trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on Sunday, Sept. 25. They went in order to see the new Met Chroma exhibit. The exhibit,

officially called “Chroma: Ancient Sculpture in Color,” includes recreations of classic Greek and Roman sculptures in color. Before the excursion, I had the opportunity to inter view club president Samantha Armacost, FCRH ’24, and

vice president Madison Ryan, FCRH ’23, about the exhibit.

The first question I asked was why they chose to attend the Met’s Chroma exhibit. Both Ar macost and Ryan agreed that, with it being the first club trip of the semester, it was the per

fect opportunity to expose new members to something the classics club is all about: the appreciation of Greek and Ro man culture.

Armacost said, “The idea of sculptures and paintings are interesting, something of common interest for the club’s demographic. It’s a classics focused exhibit and it would expose them to more than the blank marble statues they’re used to seeing.” It was clear both e-board members are passionate about their club and are dedicated to sharing their passions, using this ex perience to create intrigue and desire to learn more about the cultural aspect of the classics.

When asked how the exhibit shifts our perception of an cient Rome and Greece, both made it clear that it would create more of an apprecia tion for the artists at the time.

“People already admire the life-like sculpting, but when adding the color accuracy on top of that, it amplifies the skills of those artists, which is pretty cool,” said Ryan.

Armacost added, “We don’t truly see the talent of the art ists until you’re physically in front of it. Although the white marble look is beautiful in it self, when the color is added it completely changes the vibe and gives a new perception on

Studying Abroad| London, England

ancient Greek and Roman art. The statues without color have god-like appearances, but with the paint it humanizes them, shifting from an unrealistic physical standard to a more re latable one. That, I think, truly shows the skill level.”

The club presidents were ab solutely correct when it came to what people would get out of this trip. After having gone to the Met and visiting the Greek and Roman exhibit countless times beforehand, the new Chroma exhibit was a breath of fresh air. I, along with other members and visi tors, stood in awe at each new piece, just imagining the talent it takes to create something so detailed and lifelike at such an old time. The smallest details of the skin tones, the patterns on a vase or even drops of blood on a boxer, were unbe lievable to witness in person standing besides the typical plain white marble. The Met did an amazing job with the replications, all thanks to the Aretê Foundation/Betsy and Ed Cohen.

If you have an interest in Greek and Roman culture or simply just like visiting mu seums, I highly recommend stopping by the Chroma ex hibit. It’ll help you see ancient sculptures and their creators in a new light.

The Value of Unplanned Experiences Abroad

When the Fordham London Centre announced that the lib eral arts weekend trip would be to Lille, France, I did not know what to expect. The small city in northern France was unfamiliar to me, but my excitement grew with the an ticipation of exploring a new place with a group of new friends. As we pulled into the train station of this French city, I knew that we were gear ing up to have an incredible, fun-filled weekend in a gor geous, Parisian-lookalike city.

Immersed in French cul ture, I was able to learn more about sustainability efforts in Europe, which is a more popu lar movement here than in the United States. I tried tradition al dishes from northern France and Belgium such as carbon nade flamande, a beef and beer stew. I strolled the idyllic streets of Lille, window shop ping and absorbing the pictur esque views. However, by far, the best experience I had dur ing the trip was paddle board ing one morning.

Let me set the scene for you. Myself and a group of four oth er intrepid travelers bundled up to brave the cloudy, 55-degree morning dedicated to water sports. We steeled our nerves over the potential of falling

overboard into the chilly drink and climbed aboard. As we waded farther down the canal, our worries seemed to be for nothing. On shaky legs and with crossed fingers, we were all able to stand up and paddle down the tranquil waterway. The quiet streets flowed past us as we took in the morning.

Then, when all seemed to be going swimmingly, the flood gates opened. In the span it took to cross underneath one side of a bridge to the other, it had started to pour. We all stood in the rainstorm, ex changing stunned looks about what to do and questioning our decision to not wear a rain jacket. We quickly made our way back to the bridge in a vain attempt to not get any more wet. As we crouched on our boards together, waiting out Mother Nature, the faint echoes of a song start to re verberate through the space. I glanced behind me to find one of my friends, standing in the pouring rain, singing “It’s Raining Men” as if it was a sunny day on the beach.

At this point all I, and every one else being serenaded by Bradley, could do was laugh.

Sometimes traveling does not always go as planned, but, in my experience, that makes for an even better story to tell when you get back. The cherry on top of the whole adventure

was successfully making it back to the dock without any one taking a dive into the water.

As we made our way back to the hotel after this laughtersoaked adventure, I could not help but reflect on the saying of valuing experiences more than things. Through this ex perience and others that I have been privileged enough to have, I find that I agree with this colloquialism more and more. Here are some other experiences that have become treasured memories since the start of this semester: going out dancing with people who have become close friends, spectating a football match, see ing my first queer revisioning of Shakespeare’s works, trying my first traditional Sunday roast, touring the Harry Potter stu dios and watching the Queen’s funeral in Hyde Park.

Traveling requires a lot of flexibility which is not a quality that comes naturally for me (think more along the lines of making to-do lists for my to-do lists). However, sometimes things do not go as planned, no matter how many to-do lists you write. Weather happens, flights get canceled, you miss your exit on the train and watch as your destination whizzes past you. It’s easy to focus on all the things that went wrong, but I think it makes it more fun and memorable if

you find something to laugh at or at least smile about. I now have a great story to tell about the time I went paddle board ing in France in a downpour

and I hope, by the end of this experience, I have many more just like that one to tell. I just have to remember to pack an umbrella next time.

Keeping an open mind to new experiences can help create great memories. The Met’s new exhibit uses technology and archaeology to reimagine classic, ancient statues in color. COURTESY OF INSTAGRAM
COURTESY OF INSTAGRAM
CULTUREPage 12 September 28, 2022

Trying Off-Campus Boba at the New “Dragon Tea”

Boba tea has become extreme ly popular in the U.S., with the tapioca-filled drink shops seem ing to pop up on every street cor ner in New York. At this point, everyone has had or at least heard of the novelty beverage. It is truly an acquired taste, and opinions range anywhere from distaste for the texture of the pearls to the group that absolute ly loves it. There are only a few boba places near Fordham in the Bronx, and while we do have a boba spot on campus in the McShane Campus Center base ment, I ventured out to try a new business that just opened over by 187th Street called Dragon Tea.

Dragon Tea opened on Aug. 21 and is a part of a New Yorkbased chain. Their menu fea tures Taiwanese milk tea, bubble tea, taro milk tea, coffee and a range of other tasteful creations. Their five most popular drinks include strawberry honey lem onade, bubble milk tea, brown sugar boba with bubbles, taro fresh milk and passion fruit jas mine green tea.

The interior of the boba shop itself is open and modern, with slick silver walls, white coun tertops and grand opening flags still blowing outside to signify the new establishment. When we visited the shop, the patio doors were all open and it was a great spot to enjoy a drink while en joying the nice weather, even

though you were inside.

You place your order on a re motely operated screen when you first walk in instead of put ting it with a person. Instead of feeling impersonal or too robot ic, it was immensely convenient to order on the computer. We were able to place orders quickly with no hassle, and you can even order boba from the store online so it is ready when you get there and can avoid the wait.

To keep it simple, I got the brown sugar boba with 50% sug ar instead of the normal level as it is a pretty popular flavor (and my own personal favorite). I was pleasantly surprised at how re freshing the ratio of sweetness to milk there was in the drink. I am not a huge fan of overly sweet drinks, so the 50% sugar was the perfect level of sweetness. How ever, if you have a sweet tooth, I’d recommend going for the full 100%. It also contained the per fect amount of tapioca pearls, not too overwhelming but also not sparse. And the pearls themselves were just as chewy as I hoped they would be without having a starchy or sticky consistency.

Overall, the price came out to be about $6.50. However, I sub stituted out normal milk in my boba for oat milk, a modification I did not know you could do until I came here, so the price for an unmodified drink would be less. Not only is that cheaper than our school’s boba, but I think Dragon Tea is better-quality boba than Dagger John’s. While conve

nient, there is spectacular boba right outside campus gates. The high-tech ordering system also makes the purchase even more exciting. It is only a 10 minute walk from the Walsh turnstile, which might be a shorter commute than Dagger John’s, depending where on campus you are com ing from. Next time you are crav ing boba, I definitely recommend venturing off campus and stopping

here for your tea fix.

Fordham students are fortu nate for the endless number of dining options we have right out side our campus gates. As mem bers of the Bronx community, it is important to journey out and support the small businesses that surround us, especially after all the struggles that many restau rants faced with COVID-19 and following guidelines while still

trying to make business.

Next time you are looking for something other than campus food, I challenge you to go out and try a nearby restaurant you have not been to before. You’ll find that good food is no further than a couple of blocks away from your dorm. At the very least, be sure to give Dragon Tea a try for some great refreshments at reasonable prices.

Met’s “Water Memories” Showcases Indigenous Cultures

The Metropolitan Museum of Art (the Met) in New York City is home to many of the world’s most impressive artworks and creations developed throughout history. In June 2022, the Met opened a new exhibit titled “Water Memories.” This show case highlights the significance of water and the role it plays in the Indigenious societies of America. This exhibit shares pieces from Native American culture, histor ic, contemporary and modern art.

The exhibit itself has a cool and calm atmosphere. Upon entering the exhibit, viewers are greeted by paintings de picting beaches and shorelines as well as a display of ceramic whale teeth in the very center of the room serving as the fo cal point. The exhibit consists of two rooms branching off from each other. Both modern and historic art blends together throughout the display. The ce ramics represent a key aspect of Indigenous culture in the north east coast of North America: the whaling industry.

In the period these pieces represent, water was not just es sential for food and water but for trade and commerce as well. The Shinnecock tribe in Long

Island, like others, had built an industry on whaling, using the Atlantic Ocean to do so. This portion of the exhibit shows how water was utilized by in digenous peoples to create busi nesses and maintain a flourish ing community.

Moving through the exhibit, several authentic pieces such as baskets, jugs and bowls from various indigenous tribes are on display, each decorated with intricate pictures that vary from each tribe. These pieces each held similar purposes relating to water and its use as a resource within these communities. In addition to these pieces, repli cas of certain indigenous carv ings were also on display. In fact, controversy was noted for two replica carvings of whales on display. Many argued that the replicas were appropriation of these cultures in the time of their making.

The part of this exhibit that piqued my personal interest was the miniature canoe models. Of course, water was useful for traveling just as much as it was for trade. These canoes were often made in Native American communities as toys for boys to play with. The canoes were structured slightly differently depending on the group from which they originated.

And lastly, arguably the most enchanting of the display, was the more modern “Water Memory” print by Cara Romero. This picture shows two Pueblo corn dancers both sinking and rising in the ocean. It represents the disasters that ensued both natu rally and from man made dams, specifically the construction of the Parker Dam that caused flooding in many indigenous homes in southern California. Both beautiful and eerie, this

picture sheds light on how the human manipulation of bodies of water can be both a blessing and a curse.

This exhibit shows an impres sive array of art. The pieces I have mentioned are the center of the exhibit and easily por trayed the purpose of the dis play. I found it fascinating and brilliant how the traditional pieces were blended with mod ern art. It helped move this ex hibit throughout time, and it

showed how these historical practices still have an impact in the modern world.

I also thought it was creative to center this exhibit on a spe cific element. Using water, a simple necessity, to guide view ers through the history of Native Americans was a unique aspect of this exhibit. When walking through the Met, each section is categorized based on time pe riod, culture or artist. This was the only exhibit I had experi enced that pulled from a specific element needed in the society to explain the rest of their culture. I thought that this had contributed greatly to the rest of the American Wing as well.

In total, I would give this ex hibit a four-star rating. I found it incredibly unique and inter esting. However, it is almost hidden inside the Museum. I can see viewers overlooking the display. There were other exhib its that were more impressive, but I am grateful I saw this one. The art was not only beautiful, but it also taught me something new and the blend of artwork was fascinating. If you are go ing to the Met, I would recom mend stopping by this exhibit, especially if you are someone who takes interest in American history. This exhibit provides an excellent perspective.

The Met’s new exhibit explores Indigenous cultures influenced by water. COURTESY OF CLAIRE KRIEGER FOR THE FORDHAM RAM Dragon Tea on East 187th Street provides better quality boba for a more affordable price than Dagger John’s. COURTESY
CULTURE Page 13September 28, 2022
OF ISABELLA DEROSA FOR THE FORDHAM RAM
Bronx Business Highlight | Dragon Tea

On Wednesdays, We Go to the Botans

You can’t say you attended Fordham University without vis iting the New York Botanical Gardens (NYBG). Commonly known by many students as “the botans,” this 250-acre garden is filled with vibrant plants, flowers and art exhibits. It is also home to popular seasonal events such as the winter holiday train show and Fall-O-Ween. The best part? It’s located directly across from the Rose Hill campus’ front gates, at 2900 Southern Boulevard. Also, all current Fordham students gain free entry to the gardens with a valid student ID.

One of the Botanical Gardens’ most popular seasonal events is currently in full swing. Every Wednesday from June 1 to Oct. 26, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., the NYBG farmers market is open and ready for visitors. This isn’t just any farmers market we’re talking about — the NYBG farm ers market was voted one of the top 10 in NYC by TimeOut New York. It features some of the best produce vendors and specialty food purveyors in the area, and it isn’t something you want to miss.

Last week, I visited the NYBG farmers market for the very first

time as part of an event with the Fordham Health and Wellness club.

I wasn’t sure what to expect, es pecially since I hadn’t heard of it before. Still, I had no doubt that the Botanical Gardens would perform — and I certainly wasn’t let down.

I approached the line of stands both hungry and thirsty — the best state to enter a farmers market in.

There’s no need to grab breakfast before visiting the NYBG farm ers market when you can choose from a variety of fresh, hot break fast burritos once you’re there. I bought a bottle of fresh-squeezed lemonade with a splash of wa termelon and found myself re peatedly visiting a bagel vendor.

Growing up in New Jersey has led me to become quite uncom promising when choosing a good

bagel, but even I was pleasantly surprised by what the farmers mar ket had to offer.

A comprehensive list of the mar ket’s vendors can be found on the NYBG website, but I’ll outline a few that caught my eye. Wave Hill Breads, based in Norwalk, Conn., specializes in a wide range of whole grain artisan breads and pastries. You can’t fully enjoy bread without oil, so you can make your way over to Arlotta Food Studio, a New York based company that offers infused organic olive oils with either garlic, red pepper, lemon or blood orange. Afterwards, you should make a visit to Anthi’s Greek Specialties, where you can choose from a va riety of delicious, authentic Greek dishes such as tzatziki and moussa ka. The farmers market also offers

cuisine from True Food of Nyack, which sells a wide variety of meals such as salads and burritos — all locally made, of course.

If you’re not particularly hungry while visiting the farmers market, that’s okay! There’s more than enough stands for you to visit that aren’t food-related. I recommend heading over to Myriad Mirage, which offers unique, handcrafted jewelry and artwork made by art ist Ginamarie Engels. You can also visit Ash Hopper Soap, a family business based in Hudson Valley, N.Y. that sells handcrafted soap made with sustainably-sourced ingredients. Some weeks, there’s even a clothing stand offering unique, beautiful blouses and accessories to browse through.

Freshly Made Juices, a juice and

smoothie business, was founded by two women from the Bronx. On the topic of the Bronx, Boogie Down Bronx Honey brings 100% pure, natural and raw honey straight to the NYBG farmers mar ket. One of my favorite parts about the farmers market is how it can help benefit local businesses.

As a Fordham student, I find it crucial to use my four years here in a way that positively impacts the local community around me. Although I feel like Fordham is my home, it’s necessary to acknowl edge that in my four years on cam pus and in the Bronx, I am existing in someone else’s home. Respect ing and giving back to the beautiful, vibrant Bronx community can be displayed in many different forms. Although the NYBG farmers mar ket shouldn’t be the only way to support local businesses in the sur rounding Fordham community, it’s certainly a great place to start.

The NYBG farmers market is a great way to kick off the fall season while eating healthy and support ing local small businesses. Perhaps you’ll pass by on an early morning garden jog, or you’ll take a trip with your friends to explore the area. Whatever the reason may be, if you find yourself near the botans this fall, visiting the farm ers market is a must.

“Rings of Power” Pales in Comparison to the Book

On Sept. 1, 2022, Amazon dropped a new show “The Lord of The Rings: Rings of Power.” To be honest, up until the release of the show, I had almost no idea what it was about. As a matter of fact, two episodes into the show, I still had no idea what the show was about. However, now I’m five episodes in and I kinda sorta know what it’s about, so I’m here to give you a quick rundown of the show so far.

Amazon stated that the show had the most viewers for a Prime Video premiere. This is significant seeing the scale and reach of other shows on the Prime roster such as “The Boys.” However, these rat ings do not reflect the qual ity of the first two episodes. This popularity can mostly be attributed to the mas sive fanbase that “Lord of the Rings” already has. That, combined with the fact that the last “Lord of the Rings” proj ect was “The Hobbit” which was released in 2012, means that fans were left without any content for over 10 years.

Before we get any further with this I have something I would like to admit. Yes, I am a nerd. Yes, I read the books. But no, I will not be letting my love for the books seep into my opinions of the show. For anyone wondering, there are so many changes from the books that I would have to write a whole article just on them, and, to be honest, most of the

changes the show makes are really significant and I frankly don’t like them. There are even changes made from the original movie series, which surprised me. At the end of the day, this is a show that was made in a different format. It should be expected from the jump that not everything will be able to transfer over and with that ex pectation, I believe you should expect a different experience to come with it.

Now onto the show itself.

Like I said before, the good rat ings of the first two episodes are not a reflection of the episode’s quality at all. In my opinion, the first two episodes are terrible. Why you may ask?

They are terrible because it felt more like a task to get through them than something I actually wanted to do. The episodes are slow paced to start off with.

You spend a good amount of time just meeting characters and getting accustomed to the different areas that they inhabit. In addition, you follow dif ferent story lines that seem to be happening at the same time, in a style reminiscent of “Game of Thrones.” There is not a single main character but actually around three to four.

The worst storyline of this bunch would have to be the hobbits. Hobbits are just little people who live in traveling communities for those that don’t know. Listen, I love my man Frodo Baggins as much as the next guy, but this story line consists of us

following hobbits as they live their lives, and it becomes pret ty clear quickly that their lives are boring. They take care of each other, make food, play around and so on and so forth. This is all nice but I turned the show on for some fantasy, not to watch people do the same thing I do everyday just in the woods and on the television screen. The storyline is so bad that I fell asleep every single time that they changed to it, and I wish I was lying. It is prob ably the sole reason that it took me two weeks to get through the first two episodes. In ad dition, I had to get to episode three before I got some payoff for all of my rewatching.

However, once I did get past the first two, I watched the next three episodes in three hours. These last three episodes have really got me into the series as a whole and stopped me from dropping it completely. All of a sudden, the bleak storylines became interesting. There is one with an elf, Galadrial, that ends up stranded in the middle of the ocean by the end of epi sode one. Now I’m not going to spoil too much but let’s just say that by episode three she has fi nally made it to land and where she arrives is quite interesting. The new power dynamics along with the potential implications that this storyline would have on the rest of the world made this quickly become my favor ite storyline. It finally began to feel like the character’s actions meant something in the grand scheme of things.

Another interesting storyline that develops in episode three is between the elf, Elron and the dwarf, Durin. This storyline deals with themes of friendship, fatherhood, legacy and eventual loyalty with questions arising of who you should be loyal to and when you should be loyal to them. All scenes with these characters got me to think more about my relationships in my personal life. I’m not say ing that the show has turned into Dr. Phil, but it brings up inter esting arguments.

Furthermore, the visuals in this show are absolutely stun ning. You can see why this is the most expensive Amazon Prime show just simply from the sets. This is not a CGIheavy show as you can see that many of the sets are actu ally fully built out, which helps with immersing the audience into the show. The detail put into little things as well, like

the character outfits, cities and even statues, are noticed and appreciated, especially by book readers who can spot the easter eggs hidden in plain sight.

In closing, it is becoming a good show. The reality of it is that the whole show does really pale in comparison to the book which it was alleg edly based on. I say alleg edly because the show dras tically changes most of the plot lines to the point that they are almost unrecogniz able compared to the book. For the rest of my life I will wonder why they decided to change a great story like that when they could have just stuck to it and everyone would have loved it. But, for what it is, “The Lord of The Rings: Rings of Power” is an enjoyable show once you get past the first two episodes, and I would recommend that you check it out.

COURTESY OF TWITTER “Rings of Power” premiered on Amazon this past month. COURTESY OF AVA CARREIRO/THE FORDHAM RAM The New York Botanical Gardens (NYBG) is a staple to Fordham students and New York residents alike.
CULTUREPage 14 September 28, 2022

CULTURE

Corporate Cinema: Is There No Alternative?

Whatever happened to the movies? It’s a ridiculous question at first glance (they’re still making these things last I checked), but I ask it in all seriousness. Up until the on set of the pandemic, going to see a film was something akin to a religious ritual for many, and movie theaters punctuated

many a rainy day and offered a brief respite from the back to school advertisement induced dread. But the pandemic marked a rapid shift in mov iegoing trends. Now, theaters feel emptier than a Baptist church on a Sunday afternoon during the NFL season. Sure, a light scattering of dedicated acolytes and poindexters still permeate the pews, but they’re a sorry sight compared to the

Just ask the Department of Justice. In 2020, they declared the Paramount Decrees — a set of guidelines established by the 1948 Supreme Court decision U.S. v. Paramount Pictures, which found the vertical integration practices of old Hollywood studios to be monopolistic and in viola tion of the Sherman Antitrust Act — were outdated and that those business practices could never be recreated in the age of digital streaming. They were wrong, of course, and they severely underesti mated how greedy large enter tainment conglomerates can be. The Paramount Decrees were important because they separated the studios from the distribution of their films. Theaters and distributors had a larger say in what movies they could play and how long they could play them for. But, as of 2020, studios have regained control of distribu tion through streaming. Don’t

want to potentially lose money on a film? Just throw it on our exclusive streaming service that only plays our movies, now available at the low price of $29.99 a month! Such is the logic of the Jordan Belfort worshipping Wharton School graduates who inex plicably decided to make a quick buck off of an industry they really couldn’t care less about.

The current state of American cinema is worse and even more monopolistic than it was in the early 20th century. At least back then people had the choice of seeing a Hawks or Hitchcock film. Today, audiences get all of the corporate greed and none of the timeless studio-produced pictures that defined that pe riod of film history. And all this isn’t to say that there aren’t any quality films that are still being made today.

On the contrary, this year’s “Everything Everywhere All At Once” and “Nope” prove that audacious and origi nal blockbusters aren’t ex tinct, and new works from auteurs like Bong Joon-ho and Damien Chazelle are on their way too. But these types of films aren’t the ones that are being prioritized by stu dios. According to the list on IMDB, 8 of the 10 highest grossing films of the 2010s are Disney releases, with the other two being Universal films. Each of those films are sequels or reboots. By contrast,

the highest grossing films of previous decades showcase a greater degree of originality and a lesser amount of stu dio dominance. I’m not say ing that the top 10 highest grossing movies should ide ally consist of foreign or art house films.

But the current trends in mov iegoing are worrying nonethe less, as the original, imagi native films that Hollywood became known for making in the first place are being shelved in favor of easy cash grabs. And the worst part? We’re all complicit. After all, why pay $15 for a ticket to a movie you might not even like when you can watch the new est Spider-Man movie right from the comfort of your own home?

The great critic Pauline Kael, in her piece “Why Are Movies So Bad?” noticed the seeds of this corporate cin ema being sown before her very eyes. “In all probabil ity, it will get worse, not bet ter,” she wrote in 1980. She would likely fall to her knees and weep if she could see just how right she was. But things aren’t entirely hope less. After all, money talks. So next time you’re thinking of going to the theater, buy a ticket to a movie you’ve never heard of before. The best films aren’t the ones you want to see; they’re the ones you didn’t even know you needed to see.

“Six of Crows” Fosters Strong Character Bonds

“A gambler, a convict, a way ward son, a lost Grisha, a Suli girl who has become a killer, a boy from the Barrel who had become something worse.”

“Six of Crows,” is a spinoff duology of the “Shadow & Bone” trilogy, both set in the same fan tasy world, the “Grishaverse.” However, the duology can be perfectly understood on its own, following a differ ent province in the world. At times, the places and regions of the world Leigh Bardugo introduced were a bit hard to follow at times, especially since they came with their own history and side-plots. However, I thought that the author’s world-building was subtle and soundproof. I found that I could really picture each country, and the cities within, as their own entities.

For those who have read “Shadow & Bone,” the cameos from that trilogy only made my own reading experience that much better. Bardugo’s world is steeped in history, one that spans so many places and times that it was honestly insane to read about. The influences of

tsarist Russia on Ravka, mod ern China and Mongolia for Shu Han, as well as Scandinavian provinces to create Fjerda, all felt well-researched. And re lating these fantastic places to places we know of today was a great way to immerse the read er in a brand-new world.

Immediately, I could tell that “Six of Crows” would be ac tion-packed. There was hardly any grace time where the novel would slow down to where I became bored. However, it is important to note that the nov el did not feel too fast-paced or drawn out either. When one conflict was resolved, another would immediately spring up, each issue arising part of some greater intricate plot that was only revealed at the end of book one.

Beyond the worldbuilding and plot of “Six of Crows,” I can un doubtedly say that my favorite part was the characters.

Following a band of six di verse characters, Bardugo imme diately establishes backstories for each that seem completely unrelated. For example, it seems like Nina Zenik, one of the mag ical Grisha of this world, would never associate with Mattias Helvar, a Fjerdan witch-hunter that hates all Grisha. Nor would

Wylan Van Eck, a wealthy no ble’s son, become friends with Jesper Fahey, a brash pick pocket; Inej Ghafa, known as the “Wraith,” feared by all; or Kaz Brekker, also known as “Dirtyhands.”

Brekker is the head of a street gang called the Dregs, hired to perform a heist. A Grisha named Bo Yul-Bayur is imprisoned in the notoriously guarded Fjerdan Ice Court for the creation of a drug that am plifies Grisha abilities. Kaz is aware of the frightening impos sibility of the heist, choosing to get his group together to travel to Fjerda, break out Yul-Bayur, and collect his check.

This group was incred ibly exciting to read about be cause of what they brought to the table. Bardugo made sure to differentiate them clearly, with separate personalities and backgrounds that made them all stand out. I can genuinely say that I loved all the char acters she introduced. It just makes the stakes of the novel higher when you care about the characters — and trust me, the stakes were already high.

A sucker for the found fam ily trope, I also loved the bonds Bardugo created between the characters. They weren’t only full congregation. And when the congregation does decide to show up, it’s only ever for familiar holiday services — CGI filled Marvel blockbust ers, yet another “Jurassic World” sequel, “so bad it’s good” guilty pleasures and the like. Indeed, the highest grossing movies these days lack any sort of longevity, eternally doomed to become streaming service footnotes or bargain bin DVD rubbish. So how did we get here?

romantic, and it was refresh ing to see genuine friendships in a genre which does not al ways prioritize them. For one, Inej and Nina’s bond was so great to read, especially know ing that they were the only two women in their mostly male crew, in a male-dominated world. They stuck together in a way that spoke of mutual respect

and honesty, their friendship developing into something re ally sweet and wholesome.

All in all, I appreciated how Bardugo did not sacrifice her world-building for charac ters and vice versa in “Six of Crows,” remarkably delivering a fantastic blend that only served to make me immediately reach for book two.

“Everything Everywhere All At Once” proves original film is not yet extinct. COURTESY Bardugo’s “Six of Crows” is a spinoff of the “Shadow & Bone” trilogy. COURTESY OF TWITTER
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Student Athlete Column: Anoesis: Zoning Out to Zone In

Back in high school, I subscribed myself to dictionary.com’s “Word of the Day.” Call me a nerd, but I loved learning new ways to express my thoughts and the world around me. I liked looking at the root of words and the genealogy of where they came from. I probably also had a little bit of a know-it-all mentality of “Hey, look at this new, fancy word I know.” Regardless, I looked forward to checking my email for this “Word of the Day.”

One of those words I came across was anoesis. Anoesis is a state of mind consisting of pure sensation or emotion without cognitive con tent. By my definition, I would say anoesis is basically like zoning out — something I do a lot of, especially when I’m running. It may seem con tradictory to the sport, especially when running a workout or race where strategic thinking seems es sential to good performance. But I fell in love with running and got my best results through this state of anoesis.

It’s refreshing, almost euphoric, to have the freedom to put my mind on pause for a moment of time. On runs, I would abandon my thoughts to the crunching of leaves beneath my feet, how fresh the air felt on chillier mornings or how the trees diffused sun rays onto my face. Even during my most successful races, I wouldn’t necessarily be thinking, “I have to get to the finish line as

soon as I can,” although that was the goal. It’s actually hard to recount what was going through my head on those good days, mostly because I don’t think much was going on up there. I know what I wasn’t doing: overthinking. Instead of worrying if I started a race too fast, I remember enjoying the synchronized feeling between my legs and arms. Instead of being overwhelmed by the mon strous hill I was running up, I re member being satisfied with how my feet felt, pushing off the surface, bringing me closer to the top. Prob ably the best thing I wasn’t thinking about was breathing. When I get anxious, it doesn’t seem like there’s enough air to fill my lungs. And when I’m anxious while running, that feeling is multiplied by 100 and I begin to hyperventilate. But when I don’t fixate on any of that, I can for get the discomfort and quietly honor the rhythm of my breath.

I guess in a way, I have to zone out in order to zone in. But maybe I’m not approaching it correctly. Maybe if I put more effort into thinking, I’d be a better runner. But some thing that definitely doesn’t work is thinking too much. Running is a sport that triggers a fight-or-flight response. Cortisol and adrena line levels, hormones responsible for stress, rise in the bloodstream. Thinking about this stress is a recipe for disaster. It’s like trying to move in quicksand: the more you squirm, the deeper you sink. So, for now, I’ll continue to slip into anoesis.

The Paradox of the College Football Transfer Portal

College football has entered com pletely uncharted territory in recent years, entering a thick fog of uncer tainty amidst a plethora of recent rule changes. Players now have a newfound ability to receive com pensation under new NIL rules, the conference realignment and its lack of regard for geographic practical ity now means that the University of Southern California (USC) and Ohio State are oddly going to be in the same conference and a completely new postseason format has arrived with the advent of the College Football Playoff.

However, despite all these radi cal changes, potentially the most impactful has been the emergence of the “transfer portal.” This portal is a new mechanism that has made it simpler and more advantageous for athletes to transfer between schools, as there are no longer eli gibility restrictions that often dis suaded players from transferring in the past. While its long-term effects are largely shrouded in mystery, the transfer portal has inarguably had an immediate impact on college football due to the drastic uptick in the amount of players transferring between schools it has caused.

With this increase in players transferring, many want to focus on the “bluebloods” of the game get ting significantly better by adding huge stars to their rosters through the portal. However, the trans fer portal has significantly aided mid-major schools by creating an avenue through which they can ac quire significant talent. Therein lies the paradox of the transfer portal: it has widened the gap between the top teams and the rest of the field, yet it has inversely created more parity within the sport by allowing smaller schools to get the players needed to compete with larger pro grams.

unpolished youngsters. The trans fer portal has essentially eliminated this rebuilding process. After losing their 2021 starting running back in Brian Robinson Jr. to the NFL, the University of Alabama was able to immediately restock their then de pleted running back core with highly productive, touted and experienced transfer Jahmyr Gibbs.

After losing phenomenal wide receiver Drake London to the first round of the NFL Draft, USC was able to replace him with Jordan Addison: the winner of college football’s best receiver award the previous year.

When the University of Mississippi lost their team leader in Matt Corral, they patched that hole immediately with two former top 100 recruits in Jaxson Dart and Zach Evans. These top teams are able to take their al ready loaded rosters and simply fill in any potential holes with other teams’ superstars that they ac quired through the transfer portal. This constant ability to continue adding highly talented, game-ready players to already strong rosters ensures that the leading teams in the country not only stay above the competition, but in actuality, deep en the talent gap.

However, while that gap widens, others close due to the transfer por tal. Oftentimes, highly talented re cruits who simply did not pan out at larger schools look to transfer into smaller programs where they could essentially be a “big fish in a little pond” or salvage their careers via a fresh start. The conception of the transfer portal has made this move exponentially easier, leading to a significant uptick in the amount of highly talented yet underutilized players heading to smaller pro grams. Thus, smaller schools are now more readily able to compete with more traditional powers.

Athletes of the Week

The women’s soccer team has started to turn their season around. Last Sun day they drew against a tough George Washington University side and pulled out a win over George Mason University this past weekend. Freshman Natalie Velde scored the game-tying goal against the Colonials and the game winner against the Patriots this past weekend to push the Rams to 3-6-1 this year.

The first element of this para doxical equation that requires examination is the portal’s widen ing of the gap between the high, mid and low majors. Typically, teams go through somewhat of a rebuild after losing some of their top players, suffering losses here and there as they look to develop

Appalachian State University was able to win in one of the most hostile environments in college football, knocking off the Texas A&M University Aggies on the road due to the performance of former Clemson University quarterback Chase Brice who transferred into the Mountaineer’s program af ter struggling to find playing time with the Tigers. Marshall similarly

found themselves more able to compete against college football’s elite, knocking off the University of Notre Dame with huge games from transfers in Henry Colombi (former Texas Tech University quarterback) and Khalan Laborn (former Florida State University running back). These smaller programs were not only able to compete but actually beat top teams in the nation be cause they now had the talent to somewhat level the playing field.

More traditionally average pro grams have also benefited greatly from this new flow of talent, now being able to have phenomenal seasons at a more consistent rate. A prime example of this assertion is none other than the University of Washington Huskies. The tradition ally above-average Huskies are off to a wildly impressive 4-0 start, includ ing a rout of a preseason top-15 team in Michigan State University due to the transfers they obtained in the portal. Their new star quarterback Micheal Penix Jr. came to them from Indiana University, while solid start ers in Wayne Taulapapa and Cam Bright provided additional immedi ate contributions and consistency to the team despite donning colors oth er than the purple and gold the year prior. Even going back to last year, the Bearcats of the University of Cincinnati (a program that histori cally has been average) were able to make an unforgettable run to the College Football Playoff due to the transfers they acquired through the portal: their workhorse running back. Jerome Ford was an ex-Ala bama back, while one of their more favored wideouts in Micheal Young Jr. was an ex-Notre Dame receiver. It is examples such as these that best illustrate that portal’s potential to elevate teams to the next level.

So if the transfer portal both wid ens and closes the talent gap at the same time, what do we as college football fans have on our hands? The answer is this: a confusing paradox sure to continue to shape the landscape of college football for years to come.

Varsity Calendar

Despite the Rams dropping the ball in the closing moments, graduate student Fotis Kokosioulis had an other-worldly game: 13 catches for 320 total yards and four touchdowns in the 59-52 loss. The four touchdowns ties a school record that was set by set by Javarus Dudley in 2003 and matched two other times before Sunday. The 320 yards receiv ing broke both the Fordham and Patriot League single game receiving record. Kokosioulis broke the Patriot League re cord which has stood since 1991.

Each week, The Fordham Ram’s Sports section honors two athletes for their on-field performances as their “Athletes of the Week.”

HOME

AWAY

Women’s Tennis Softball

Volleyball

Men’s Soccer

Thursday Sept. 29 Wednesday Sept. 28 Friday Sept. 30 Saturday Oct. 1

Monday Oct. 3 Sunday Oct. 2 Tuesday Oct. 4

Water Polo

Women’s Soccer Football

Fotis Kokosioulis Senior Football NICOLETA PAPAVASILAKIS/THE FORDHAM RAM Running is more than just a passion, it is a lifestyle.
Page 16
September 28, 2022SPORTS
Massachusetts 7 p.m. Wagner 7:30 p.m. Georgetown 1 p.m. Army & Rider 10 a.m./12:30 p.m. ITA Regional Championships TBA Rhode Island 1 p.m. Loyola Chicago 7 p.m. ITA Regional Championships TBA St. Joseph’s 7 p.m.

So Long Big Z

There’s something to be said about the act of “letting go.” Human beings typically struggle with en ding an era that has been fruitful. It’s hard to do, especially when the future is uncertain. Boston hockey faced this experience last week when ex-captain Zdeno Chara signed a one-day contract with the club and officially retired a Bruin. Chara’s farewell symbolizes the end of an era that won’t be forgotten, and serves as a prelude to more inevitab le goodbyes.

Chara became a member of the Boston Bruins in 2006. The de fenseman signed a five-year, $37.5 million contract and became the captain that same season. ”Big Z” was a critical part of the Bruins’ rise towards contention. Chara, Patrice Bergeron, David Krejci, Tim Thomas and others formed the nucleus of the 2011 club that went on to win the Stanley Cup. Chara collected 44 points during the season and led the squad in plus-minus. His presence

as a physical two-way player ser ved the Bruins well and opened the ice for others like Bergeron to skate freely and score. That famed group of Bruins went on to reach the Stanley Cup in 2013 and 2019, but were never able to replicate the success of ’11.

Regardless of the number of championship banners Chara and co. were able to collect, the team’s prime years are held in high es teem by fans. Chara left the Bruins in 2020 to pursue an opportunity with the Washington Capitals, and played one final season on Long Island with the Islanders last year. However, he will always be remembered as a Bruin. In many ways, Chara changed Boston’s cul ture and allowed for them to beco me contenders.

By the time he reached Boston, the Czech product was already an established NHL force. Having

someone of Chara’s capabilities on the roster helped turn a struggling bunch into a confident unit. In a recent Boston Globe article, for mer Bruin Tom Fitzgerald stated, “That organization flipped the day it signed him. It literally flipped.”

Chara’s exit signals the end is near for the Bruins’ current lea ders. Bergeron flirted with retire ment last season. Tuuka Rask called it a day in the middle of last year’s campaign. David Krejci may only be back for the final year after his brief hiatus. The future is uncer tain, and while Bruins fans may be scared to let go of “what was,” there’s truly no harm in celebrating what was an incredible chapter of the club’s history.

So long, Big Z. Thank you for always leaving everything on the ice. Your grit, tenacity, toughness and loyalty embodied the very best of Bruins hockey.

Has the Giants’ Culture Been Restored?

The last two weeks for New York Giants fans have been nothing short of exciting after completing back-to-back second half come back wins in weeks one and two. Their recent success marks the first time the G-Men have exceeded an above .500 record in the regular season since 2016. Still, one ele ment of their identity which plays a vital role in their amelioration has yet to be revealed: whether or not they possess culture.

Culture is best defined as the shared beliefs, behaviors or social environment connected with a par ticular aspect of society. Within the realm of sports, each fan base deliv ers enthusiasm to their beloved cast of characters dependent on the ef fort their team exerts, and vice ver sa. When both parties are mutually satisfied in this facet, trust is earned and culture is present.

After New York’s 21-20 win over the Tennessee Titans on opening day, Giants fans came out from their caves of misery to celebrate the highly anticipated kickoff of the Brian Daboll era. The former Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator turned Giants head coach has em braced his role in the locker room as a cheerleader, considering the em phatic celebration dance with his new squad after the win. Reflect ing on former Giants head coach

Joe Judge’s tame demeanor in the locker room throughout the 202122 season left players and fans with a bitter taste in their mouths. How ever, last Sunday’s thrilling victory over the Carolina Panthers coupled with Daboll’s joviality displayed in week one has assured that the coaching staff and the players share a common goal: winning.

For the players on the Giants to maintain this impactful relation ship with Daboll, they must de liver over the course of the ensuing weeks. For starting running back Saquon Barkley, this task will be a tough one considering the impres sive 317 rushing yards he’s record ed on the season thus far. Through his first three starts, Barkley has totaled over half as many rush ing yards then he did throughout 13 games played a season prior.

Questions were raised about how Barkely would fare in week three against a stout Dallas Cowboys de fense ranked sixth in yards allowed per-game, but he answered the call with 81 yards rushing and a touch down. Although the Giants came up short on Monday night against Dallas to fall to 2-1, New York was in the game until the very end.

Barkley and Daboll’s remarkable efforts have galvanized a commu nity branded as losers to appear confident in securing a playoff spot. Any time a sudden strike of electricity proves beneficial for a football club,

fans romanticize about the success they once experienced when times were different. Prior to last year’s Super Bowl run, the Cincinnati Bengals had failed to win a playoff game since the 1990 postseason. After winning their division and clinching a playoff berth before the conclusion of last year’s season, Cincinnati fans likened the success of Joe Burrow and Jamar Chase to the glory of Boomer Esiason and Mike Barber during their respective dominance. Some 30 years later, superstars returned to Cincinnati and more importantly their sense of identity and culture.

Each and every tormented Bengal fanatic came out to let their team know that culture had been re stored. Flashes of Eli Manning and Tom Coughlin in 2007 and 2011’s postseason run in the last two weeks provide a similar glimpse of hope for the Giants. The last six seasons left Big Blue adherents open to the idea of hopping on the Bill’s Mafia band wagon, but their rallied passion for the Daboll era along with Barkley’s new look have diminished such impulsions. If blue bleeders on the field and in the crowd operate as a hive mind, then nothing can pre vent this community from becom ing rich in culture.

Culture in sports is what forces a fan to leave their 12:00 Mass early just to take part in supporting their beloved team unconditionally.

Varsity Scores & Stats

Football Fordham 52 Ohio 59

Golf MacDonald Cup Day 1 10th/11 teams

Day 2 11th/11 teams

Men’s Soccer Fordham 3 St. Bonaventure 0

Fordham 1 Rutgers 1 Volleyball Fordham 0 Dayton 3 Fordham 1 Dayton 3

Women’s Tennis

West Point Invitational

Fordham NTS

Women’s Soccer Fordham 2

George Mason 1

Softball Fordham 0 Bridgeport 0

Fordham 0

Fairfield 2

Water Polo Fordham 8 USC 17

Fordham 12 UC Irvine 13

Fordham 5 RV Santa Clara 10

Fordham 18 Pomona-Pitzer 11

News & Notes

For three games this year, Fordham Football will be broadcasted live via SNY at Jack Coffey Field. So far, SNY has broadcasted one of those games, which was against the University of Albany during Homecoming weekend. The next two games will be Oct. 15 versus Stony Brook University and Nov. 12 against Lafayette.

Fordham Women’s Basketball Unveils 2022-23 Regular Season Schedule

After recently dropping their non-conference schedule, Fordham Women’s Basketball released their regular season schedule, which kicks off on New Year’s Day against Davidson. Fordham will then face Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) on Jan. 4, the University of Dayton on Jan. 8 and George Washington University on Jan. 11. Other matchups include games against Duquesne University and the University of Massachusetts (UMass) on the 14th and 18th, respec tively. January rounds out with two more matchups with St. Joseph’s University on the 22nd and St. Louis University on the 28th. After starting off February against St. Bonaventure University on the 1st, the Rams will square off against Loyola University Chicago, UMass and La Salle University on the 4th, 8th and 16th. The season ends with the final three games against George Mason University on the 19th, Senior Day versus the University of Rhode Island on the 22nd and a final away game against Davidson.

Fordham Golf Takes Part in MacDonald Cup

Another weekend of Fordham Golf has come and gone. The Rams made the trip to New Haven, Conn. to compete in the MacDonald Cup hosted by Yale University. It wasn’t an ideal finish for the Rams, who placed 11th out of 11 programs, but there were still some positive ta keaways to come out of Fordham’s third outing of the fall season.

Day one at the Course at Yale saw senior John Kryscio shoot a season low even-par 70 in the first round of the 36 hole contest.

Kryscio would later shoot a 76 in his second round of day one. The senior led the charge for the Rams at the completion of day one with five birdies, sitting in a tie for 31st place heading into day two.

Fordham also had two more gol fers finish their first 36 holes with five birdies. Sophomore Jake Mrva and senior Andreas Aivazoglou both birdied four holes in round one and an additional hole in their second round of play.

To conclude Saturday’s compe tition, senior Nicholas Manning wrapped up his first two rounds in

40th place shooting four-over in both rounds on Saturday while et ching four birdies to his scorecard.

Despite a lower finish as a team on Sunday, Manning and Kryscio had big career weekends in New Haven. Manning matched his sea son-low even-par score of 70 in the first round on Sunday, birdieing three consecutive holes and fi nishing t-30 for the weekend which was the highest placement by any Fordham golfer in the competition.

Manning finished play shooting a career-best 218 in three-round play, which is six strokes better

than his previous 224 score in the 2019 MacDonald Cup. Kryscio also set a new career-best in threeround play as the senior shot a 222 erasing his former career-low sco re of 223 at the UConn Invitational back in 2019. The Fordham senior finished the weekend in a tie for 45th place.

Fordham will have extensive time off from tournament play to hopefully reset. The Rams are set to return to the links on Oct. 21 as they make the trip to Bethle hem, Pa. to compete in the two day event, the Lehigh Invitational.

Fordham Football’s New Broadcast Partner The Rams fell at the MacDonald Cup. COURTESY OF FORDHAM ATHLETICS After a long career, Zdeno Chara is officially walking away from the NHL. COURTESY OF TWITTER
Page 17SPORTS
September 28, 2022

Fordham Volleyball

It’s been nearly three weeks since Fordham Volleyball has picked up a win. After start ing the year on a promising 6-2 run, the Rams have run into some tough competition. Two weekends ago, the Rams trav eled to New Haven, Conn. for the Yale Invitational where they were swept by Sacred Heart University before falling to two elite programs in Yale Univer sity and Villanova University.

Dropping three straight on the road while only grabbing two sets throughout the tourna ment forced the Rams to more or less hit the reset button as they began conference play back at the Rose Hill Gymnasi um this past weekend. Standing in their way were the four-time running Atlantic 10 champions, the University of Dayton Flyers.

On Friday, the Rams were swept in decisive fashion while posting some of their worst of fensive numbers of the year. The poor stats can partially be attributed to an abysmal third set, in which the Rams were only able to manufacture 10 points, but it was nevertheless an alarming start to conference play. Fordham played very well in sets one and two, but some timely runs for the Flyers capped off demoralizing sets for the Rams. In Saturday’s game two of the two contests against the Flyers from Rose Hill, the Rams showed some real heart and grabbed the sec ond set. This would prove to be the sole set win of the weekend for Fordham.

Despite all the comforts of

Opens Atlantic 10 Play

Women’s Tennis Begins Season at Army West Point

home, A-10 competition could not have begun on a more chal lenging note. The Dayton Flyers have posted a 169-14 record in A-10 play over the last 13 sea sons, and this undeniably tal ented current team is poised for another outstanding year. The Flyer starting frontline boasts both Amelia Moore at 6’5” and Alayna Yates at 6’6”.

For context, Moore and Yates are the only two players in all of A-10 volleyball who are listed above 6’4”. Yet, accord ing to Fordham’s head coach Ian Choi, their height is not the only thing the Flyers have go ing for them, “They [Dayton] are relentlessly aggressive,” said Choi ahead of Saturday’s loss. Choi also touched on the Flyers ability to bounce back from “momentum-losing” plays such as service errors and tickytack violations.

There is a long road ahead of the Rams with plenty of op portunities to right the ship in A-10 play, but it will not be an easy couple of months. The A-10 is loaded with talent in

cluding the premier programs of Dayton, Virginia Commonwealth University and Saint Louis Uni versity. In the midst of this los ing streak, Choi has reminded his group that this year will be an “emotional rollercoaster” but it’s about how you finish, not how you start. As evidence, Choi cited last year’s campaign when the Rams barely eked their way in the A-10 tournament before fighting their way to the title match.

From here on out, the Rams will only face in-conference opponents barring any sort of NCAA tournament run. None of these matches will be guar anteed wins or anything close to such but the Rams surely possess the explosiveness and experience to go toe-to-toe with anyone in the A-10. Fordham’s journey will continue this weekend in Chicago where they will face off against the new est member of the A-10, Loyola University Chicago. It’ll be two matches from Gentile Arena, Friday at 8 p.m. eastern and Saturday at 1 p.m. eastern.

Over the weekend, Fordham’s women’s tennis team began play at the Army West Point Invitational. This is the first match since the Rams lost in the Atlantic 10 championship in the 2021-22 season and the first time they competed in this event since 2018. As the new season commenced, the experi enced graduate students shined and performed the strongest. The team is comprised of eight women, allowing each to have the opportunity in this tourna ment to compete against ath letes from other colleges across New York and beyond.

The format of this invita tional included five different flights, with singles matches taking place in a winner moves on, double elimination, brack et-style process. Fordham had players participating in A-D Flights in the singles matches. Fordham had multiple differ ent wins in this tournament, notable ones including gradu ate student Lindsay Hung win ning in the consolation finals match in A Flight 8-6 against a Lize-Alet Morkel of Fairfield University. This was a big vic tory and is a promising sign for continued wins, with Hung be ing a key player as the season begins to unfold. Unfortunate ly, the other players in A Flight did not find as much success today, as junior Avery Aude and senior Valeriya Deminova lost their first two matches in tough competitions.

The other graduate student on the team, Carlota Casasampere Escoda, also performed well in B

Flight with victories against oppo nents from Syracuse University, Sacred Heart University and the University of Massachusetts. She reached the semifinals, making her one of the highest performing players on the team. This fell just short of the highest performing player in 2018’s West Point Invi tational when former Ram Arina Taluyenko advanced to the finals. Another strong performance came from sophomore Eleni Fasoula, who had three wins in the B Flight consolation bracket.

Freshman Sofie Siem and sophomore Lorraine Bergmann saw action when they competed in C Flight against Cornell Uni versity and Fairfield University opponents. Siem was eliminated in the first round, while Berg mann defeated her first oppo nent before losing in the round of 16 to Julia Kelly of Army. Lastly, D Flight consisted of ju nior Rachelle Yang, who was in jured in her second match. The severity of the injury and her status for next week’s matches is unknown..

Overall, Fordham finished with some solid victories but struggled in the first round, with players going 2-6 overall in their respective first-round matches.

This led to much of the tournament for Fordham be ing played in the consolation bracket. However, a stronger start could benefit the Rams greatly as they look to get over the first hump.

This coming weekend, they will have another chance to show their skills at the Inter collegiate Tennis Association (ITA) Regional Champion ships in Princeton, N.J.

Roger Federer Announces Retirement From Tennis After Storied Career

As the serve return flew into the net and dropped to the grass, a young Swiss man did the same. Roger Federer had just done the improbable, win ning Wimbledon at age 21, the first major title of his young career. That victory sparked a nearly two-decade long run of dominance for Federer that resulted in 20 Grand Slam ti tles. Made famous by his strik ing one-handed backhand and elegant playstyle and described by tennis legend John McEnroe as the “most beautiful player” he had ever seen, Federer dom inated the competition while maintaining humility and class.

So when Federer announced last Thursday that he would be retiring from professional ten nis, the sport undoubtedly lost one of its greatest, on and off the court.

“Tennis has treated me more generously than I ever would have dreamed, and now I must recognize when it is time to end my competitive career,” Federer said in a social media post. At 41 years old, the Swiss great has undergone multiple knee procedures in recent years and has accumulated 24

years of wear and tear on the court.

“As many of you know, the past three years have present ed me with challenges in the form of injuries and surgeries. I’ve worked hard to return to full competitive form. But I also know my body’s capaci ties and limits, and its mes sage to me lately has been clear,” Federer said.

Understandably, the news of Federer’s retirement did not come as a shock. However, that did not stop the plethora of praise from some of his great est rivals, including Novak Djokovic.

“Your career has set the tone for what it means to achieve excellence and lead

with integrity and poise. It’s an honor to know you on and off the court, and for many more years to come,” Djokovic wrote on Instagram.

There was perhaps no one who knew Federer better on and off the court, however, than his greatest rival and best friend Rafael Nadal. The two treated the tennis world to decades of intense, top of the line matches going headto-head on the biggest stages. Battles such as the 2008 Wim bledon final, which saw Nadal outlast Federer in a five-set classic at the height of the Swiss’ career, will undoubt edly go down in history. Al though they were always pitted as bitter rivals, in recent years,

their admiration and respect for each other has become clear. “Dear Roger, my friend and rival, I wish this day would never have come,” Nadal put simply on Instagram. “It’s a sad day for me personally and for sports people around the world.”

The era of “The Big Three” (Federer, Nadal, Djokovic) has entertained tennis fans for de cades. Although two out of the three are still actively play ing, Federer’s retirement serves as a reminder that it can’t last forever. In the last season, ten nis fans have already seen the emergence of exciting new play ers such as Americans Frances Tiafoe and Taylor Fritz as well as Spaniard Carlos Alcaraz and

Russian Daniil Medvedev. This comes at the same time as Nadal has shown signs of his age, as he was forced to withdraw from his semi-finals match this year at Wimbledon. While Djokovic has remained dominant, ques tions still loom over his vaccina tion status that may continue to hamper his ability to compete in major tournaments.

Amidst all the emotion, ten nis fans were treated to seeing Federer take the court one final time. Federer announced with in his retirement that his last match would be at the Laver Cup, one which saw him pair with Nadal against Americans Frances Tiafoe and Jack Sock. Predictably, Federer and Nad al put up a tremendous fight, falling just short 6-4, 6-7 (2), 9-11. The score and outcome of the match meant nothing, however, as immediately after the last point the two tennis icons embraced. What ensued was a celebration. Surrounded by a packed London crowd, and among the company of friends, family and formal ri vals, Federer grabbed the mic and bid farewell to the ten nis world. “It’s been a perfect journey,” he said. “I would do it all over again.”

Senior Aria De La Rosa times up the kill versus Dayton on Saturday. COURTESY OF TWITTER After 20 Grand Slam titles, Roger Federer retires as one of the greatest tennis players of all time. COURTESY OF FORDHAM ATHLETICS
September 28, 2022Page 18 SPORTS

Overtime: In Defense of Aaron Long

There may not be a more villain ized figure in all of American soccer right now than New York Red Bulls and United States Men’s National Team (USMNT) center back Aaron Long.

Long, who started in the team’s disappointing 2-0 loss to Japan on Thursday, consistently finds him self as the target of criticism and negativity by American fans online.

While his play in a United States jersey hasn’t been great recently, Long has been turned into some what of a scapegoat by the fans.

When the entire USMNT squad is playing poorly, it is interesting to examine why Long is public enemy number one.

For USMNT supporters, Long is the perfect target. He is a 29-yearold lifetime MLS player whose prospects of playing in Europe have slowly faded away.

A player once targeted by West Ham United in the Premier League, Long tore his Achilles in May 2021, forcing him to miss almost an en tire year of action. Before the injury, Long was a locked-in starter for the USMNT.

He appeared 14 times for the US in 2019 and started in the Gold Cup final that same year against Mexico.

The injury caused him to fade off of many fans’ radars, especially

when young prospects in Europe like Chris Richards, Erik PalmerBrown and Mark McKenzie began to see consistent playing time over seas.

So when Long returned to the USMNT fold immediately follow ing his recovery in March of this year, many fans assumed he would be a depth piece to compliment the team’s rising stars.

That’s what he was at first, com ing on as a late substitute against Panama and Mexico in that March window.

But when regular center back Miles Robinson went down with a similar Achilles tear in May, a starting position opened up for the foreseeable future. As of now, it seems like Long is head coach Gregg Berhalter’s choice to fill that void.

To many USMNT fans, this de cision is blasphemous. How can

Long, who applies his trade in MLS, keep players like Richards, Palmer-Brown and McKenzie on the bench?

For one, the USMNT center back pool is not as deep as people think it is, especially when players like John Brooks seem to be perma nently exiled from the program.

Palmer-Brown hasn’t impressed when he’s appeared in a USMNT shirt, nor has McKenzie.

As for Richards, he probably de serves a chance to start alongside Zimmerman, but he missed this current window due to injury.

The same can be said of Celtic’s Cameron Carter-Vickers, who also had to pull out of the squad at the last minute. The best quality is availability, and Long is one of a few capable center backs that are available right now.

Even with that being said, Long’s play for the USMNT admittedly

Men’s Soccer Beats Bonnies, Ties Rutgers

Fordham Men’s Soccer had a successful week, tallying a win against St. Bonaventure University followed by drawing with Rutgers University.

After going on a three-game streak of tying opponents, the Rams needed a shakeup to hope fully get back to winning ways.

In the first half against the Bonnies, the Rams led in shots 9-3. However, they couldn’t find the back of the net. Even with their five corners, the Rams did not score off a set piece in this matchup like they have so often this season.

What started off as a scoreless first half turned into an all-out attack from the Rams to take the lead.

In the 50th minute, senior midfielder Savvas Christoforou threaded a pass to senior Adrian Valentine who then found gradu ate student Ben Shepherd at the center of the box. The midfielder promptly took a shot in the bottom left corner, scoring the Rams’ first goal of the night.

The second goal, in the 76th minute, came as a result of a pen alty kick issued on a breakaway run from junior Florian Deletioglu, who was tripped in the box by St. Bonaventure goalkeeper Nicolas Pucci. Graduate student Jack Sluys stepped up to the challenge, netting his first goal of the season.

Just one minute later, the Rams tallied their third goal of the night, as a result of another Deletioglu breakaway.

Deletioglu found the foot of sophomore Jed Dixon who squeaked the ball just under the

crossbar to net his first career goal as a Ram.

The Rams managed to pick up their first win since Sept. 6 against Manhattan College, with the final score being 3-0.

After that big win, the Rams traveled to Piscataway, N.J. for a non-conference game against Rutgers.

The Scarlet Knights were un beaten through their previous six games, and the Rams had quite the match ahead of them.

While no goals were scored in the first half, Rutgers kept Fordham on their toes. Out shooting the Rams 7-2, senior goalkeeper Callum James had his work cut out for him.

He recorded two saves in the first half, which was critical in keeping the score 0-0. This game also marked James’ first start in net for the season, taking over for the usual starter, graduate student Demetri Skoumbakis.

In the second half, there was an immediate change of pace. Rut gers scored their first goal in the 49th minute when Jackson Temple

broke down the left sideline and fed the ball through to Pablo Avila who was sitting in the perfect position on the back post. It was Avila’s sec ond goal of the season.

While Fordham was outshot again in the second half, one of their shots found the back of the net courtesy of graduate student Daniel Espeleta.

He slotted a shot it into the upper right corner, equalizing the score and getting his first of the season.

Neither team was able to break the equalizer as James shut down the last attempt from the Scarlet Knights and recorded six saves in the contest.

The Rams struggled offensively against the Big 10 team, with only one shot on goal in the match from Espeleta.

Looking to improve their re cord, the Rams now will take on the University of Massachusetts on Saturday at 7 p.m. for another Atlantic 10 matchup.

The game will be played at Jack Coffey Field with the Rams cel ebrating Alumni Day, and can be streamed on ESPN+.

has not been great as of late. But neither has the entire team.

It’s not like Long was the only one playing poorly against Japan on Thursday. Tyler Adams and Weston McKennie made numerous mistakes in the midfield.

Gio Reyna struggled to find his way into the game. Sam Vines looked out of place at left back. To single out Long after as poor of a performance we saw Thursday from the entire squad is irrespon sible. In addition, the system that Berhalter currently employs does not play to the strengths of his team, and that applies to Long as well.

Berhalter wants him to be the “speed” next to the slower but stronger Zimmerman. That’s fine, but it’s what the USMNT tries to do in possession of the ball that be comes problematic.

Long is not a ball playing center

back, yet he has to be in Berhalter’s style of play.

With the midfield as absent as they were on Thursday, both Long and Zimmerman were forced to make uncomfortable passes in tight windows, leading to numerous giveaways from both.

If Long and Zimmerman are to be the starting center back duo, the midfield has to be more active than they were against Japan or the entire USMNT tactical system will fail.

There isn’t a single fan that is clamoring for Long to start at the World Cup in Qatar. Even his big gest supporters recognize his short comings.

But to USMNT fans, Long rep resents someone who is “holding the program back.” He is an older player who is theoretically blocking younger, more exciting talent from shining on the national stage. He represents the perceived favoritism that Gregg Berhalter shows MLS players like Cristian Roldan and Jordan Morris.

While these things aren’t neces sarily true, Long has become a sym bol for the anti-MLS portion of the USMNT fanbase.

Unless he contributes a signature moment at the World Cup, expect Aaron Long to remain the current scapegoat of American soccer for the foreseeable future.

Women’s Soccer Victorious Over George Mason

Over the past week, the Fordham women’s soccer team continued their Atlantic 10 conference play as they went on the road to face George Mason University.

Fordham didn’t get off to a great start and conceded a goal within five minutes, giving the hosts the lead.

George Mason had a corner with Milan Pierre-Jerome whip ping the ball into the box, find ing the head of Zoe Vidaurre who put the ball into the back of the net to give the Patriots a 1-0 lead.

Fordham found an equalizer in the 31st minute courtesy of junior defender Marissa Krenn. Krenn went on a long run from her position and took a shot from 20 yards that went into the top left corner of the George Mason goal.

This not only leveled the score at 1-1, but it was also Krenn’s first goal of her career. The teams then went into the half time break tied at one with still a lot to play for.

As the second half started, the score remained level as neither

team was able to find the break through goal. However, in the 62nd minute, Fordham grabbed the lead courtesy of freshman forward Natalie Velde.

The goal started with sopho more midfielder Ryann Lucas who played a cross to senior forward Kristen Cocozza.

Cocozza then passed it to Velde, who put the ball into the back of the net to give the Rams the lead and score her teamleading third goal of the season.

Fordham then defended for the following 28 minutes to hold onto the lead for a 2-1 win on the road. Junior goalkeeper Maria O’Sullivan had two saves for the Rams to secure the win.

With this result, Fordham’s overall record is 3-6-1 while im proving their A-10 conference record to 2-0-1.

The Rams will play two A-10 conference games this week. The first one has them traveling on the road to visit St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia this Thursday night at 7 p.m..

Then, the Rams return home on Sunday for Alumni Day as they host the University of Rhode Island Rams at 1 p.m.. Both of these matches can be viewed on ESPN+.

COURTESY OF FORDHAM ATHLETICS Women’s Soccer has slowly improved as conference play heats up. COURTESY OF FORDHAM ATHLETICS Men’s Soccer has continued to put up solid outings.
September 28, 2022 SPORTS Page 19

Fordham Water Polo suffered a setback in their inaugural appear ance at the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation (MPSF) Invitational, dropping three out of four and los ing both of their matches against teams ranked in the national top 20 poll.

Head coach Brian Bacharach circled the MPSF invite as the big gest test for Fordham this season, featuring all of the top 10 teams nationally and 14 of the top 20 teams per the Collegiate Water Polo Association’s national poll.

#16 Fordham, bumped up one spot from their #17 preseason ranking, was the lowest nationally ranked team at the tournament and the only East Coast team to appear.

Action kicked off on Friday with Fordham’s toughest matchup of the entire weekend, facing #5 University of Southern California (USC). USC won decisively, de feating Fordham 17-8.

Sophomore Luca Silvestri had a hat trick, but Fordham was unable to keep up with USC’s offense.

Fordham would play two more

Water Polo Struggles at MPSF Invitational

games on Saturday, getting the day started against #13 University of California-Irvine.

Fordham held a 3-2 lead at the end of the first quarter but surren dered it by halftime, trailing 5-4.

Fordham took a 12-8 lead in the fourth quarter, thanks in large part to a six-goal third quarter, but al lowed five unanswered goals in the final minutes as UC Irvine snuck away with the 13-12 win.

Silvestri notched his second straight hat trick while freshman Balazs Berenyi tallied three goals of his own. With the loss, Fordham falls to 1-5 against nationally ranked opponents.

Things didn’t get much better in

the second game of the day, with the Rams falling to Santa Clara University in a low scoring 10-5 af fair.

Fordham took a 4-2 lead into half, but surrendered eight straight goals in the second half while mus tering only one of their own.

Silvestri led the Rams in scoring, once again, with two goals as the Rams dropped their third straight.

Fordham salvaged an 18-11 win over Pomona-Pitzer, but not be fore a power outage at Stanford University delayed the game for two hours. Once the power re turned, Fordham’s offense did as well, jumping out to an 11-1 lead and cruising to victory.

Berenyi and junior Christos Loupakis netted hat tricks while Silvestri closed out an impres sive 10 goal weekend with an other multi-goal performance.

The weekend was a disappoint ing one for a Fordham team that prides itself on being able to com pete against the league’s best. They looked outmatched against the #5 USC Trojans.

On the contrast, they played very well for three quarters or so against #13 UC Irvine, but their fourth quarter collapse in an extremely winnable game makes it a painful one.

Their loss to a Santa Clara team that received votes but is currently

unranked was eye-opening as well, as the normally explosive Fordham offense managed just five goals, their lowest tally since September of last year when they suffered a 6-5 loss to the very same Santa Clara.

Finishing games has been a prob lem for the Rams. If you take a look at their losses against University of Pacific, Princeton and UC Irvine, three top 20 teams, Fordham was either ahead or in striking distance heading into the fourth quarter.

Fordham entered the tourna ment as the third lowest ranked team in the pool, but 1-3 still feels like a major let down.

Between the collapse of the UC Irvine game and the fact that Fordham played the only two teams that were unranked at the tournament, the Rams should return home with a sour taste in their mouths. Before the invita tional began, Bacharach said, “If we can win a few games out there, then we should be in that [top 10-15] conversation. If not, then we’ve got work to do.”

As October lingers, it appears Fordham may indeed have some work to do.

Football Falls to Ohio in Thriller For First Loss

Heading into their Saturday matchup against Ohio University, Fordham was 2-10 all-time against Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) opponents, with their most recent win coming in 2015 against Army.

For Fordham, a Football Cham pionship Subdivision (FCS) school, Saturday’s trip to Athens, Ohio rep resented a chance to add another win to this list.

The Rams were outclassed last season in their two matchups against FBS teams (the University of Nebraska and Florida Atlantic University), so a positive showing would display real progress from a year ago.

Progress is an understatement, as Fordham took Ohio all the way down to the wire, eventually fall ing to the Bobcats 59-52. Behind another superb outing from se nior quarterback Tim DeMorat and an unreal game from senior receiver Fotis Kokosioulis, the of fense showed they could deliver against an FBS opponent. While the defense once again struggled and the final score ultimately didn’t go their way, the Rams made a statement about their intentions this season as Patriot League play begins next week.

While DeMorat delivered once again, Kokosioulis was the story of this game for Fordham. He caught 13 passes for 320 yards and four touchdowns, an insane performance from the Park Ridge, Ill., native. His 320 yards broke a Patriot League record, and his four touchdowns tied a Fordham school record. For his efforts, Kokosioulis was named FedEx Ground FCS and Patriot League Offensive Player of Week.

Fordham started off slowly in Athens, falling behind 14-0 af ter a quarter of play. The offense

barely saw the ball in the first quarter, with an eight minute scoring drive from Ohio taking up most of the period. That opening drive from the Bobcats would be the longest of the day, as the runand-gun offenses of both teams soon took over.

The Rams got on the board early in the second quarter thanks to a 33-yard touchdown from DeMorat to Kokosioulis. Ohio responded with a field goal, but Fordham answered right back with another scoring bomb from the aforementioned duo, this one for 74 yards.

After a nine-yard touchdown to senior receiver Dequece Carter got the Rams within three with under two minutes to go in the half, Ohio quarterback Kurtis Rourke led a perfect two-minute drill down the field. With six sec onds to go, Rourke hit receiver Jacoby Jones in the endzone to make it a 31-21 game in favor of Ohio heading into halftime.

Down against a very tough op ponent, Fordham’s offense came out on fire in the second half. On the Rams opening possession of the half, DeMorat once again found Kokosioulis for another long touchdown to get Fordham within three. The Rams special teams unit faltered on the en suing kickoff though, allowing Ohio’s Keegan Wilburn to take it 98 yards to the house. Back down 10, the Fordham offense kept things rolling immediately, with DeMorat finding MJ Wright for a 25-yard score to once again cut the lead back down to three.

The Fordham defense was fi nally able to get a stop, forcing a turnover-on-downs from Ohio in Rams territory. Sophomore run ning back Julius Loughridge then gave the Rams their first lead of the day with a two-yard score to make it 42-38. Another stop from

Fordham gave the Rams the ball right back, allowing DeMorat to find Kokosioulis for a huge 84yard touchdown. With a 49-38 lead, Fordham’s offense scored a touchdown on four consecutive possessions in the third quarter.

The Rams outscored Ohio 28-7 in the third quarter, but things began to falter for Fordham down the stretch. A Rourke touchdown to Tyler Foster got Ohio within three early in the fourth.

Fordham responded with a field goal from junior Brandon Peskin to go back up six. On the ensuing Ohio possession, the Bobcats drove all the way down to the Fordham 11-yard-line. On fourth-and-two, sophomore Matt Jaworski forced a fumble to keep Ohio from taking the lead with six minutes and 24 seconds to go.

But after their explosive third quarter, Fordham’s offense stag nated late in the fourth in large part due to penalties. A false start backed the Rams up on their next drive, and they were forced to punt the ball back to Ohio. With the ball and looking for the gamewinning score, Ohio fell victim to another fumble. This time, fresh man Peter Chaloub came up big for the Fordham defense, strip ping the ball away from Rourke to give the Rams the ball back in Ohio territory.

Up 52-46 with just three min utes and 19 seconds to go at the Ohio 36-yard-line, just a few more yards for Fordham would put them in field goal range. That would have put the Rams up nine and iced the game. Instead, Fordham went backwards, with a holding penalty and a personal foul knocking them all the way back to their own 49. The Rams were forced to punt, giving Ohio another chance to take the lead.

This time, the Bobcats did not falter, driving 67 yards down the

field to take a 53-52 lead thanks to a Jones touchdown catch from Rourke. Fordham got the ball back with 52 seconds to go, but two more penalties forced them back deep into their own territory.

On the last play of the game from their own 40-yard-line, Fordham fumbled a lateral attempt, allow ing the Bobcats to scoop-andscore with no time remaining, ce menting their 59-52 victory.

It’s hard to blame the offense af ter they put up 52 points, but un disciplined play down the stretch cost the Rams. The defense came up with two huge turnovers in the fourth quarter, but the offense could not capitalize. DeMorat fin ished the day with 503 yards pass ing and six touchdowns, another outstanding day from the senior who continues to lead the entire FCS in yardage and touchdowns.

Last year, we saw DeMorat falter against higher quality opponents

Florida Atlantic University and College of the Holy Cross, but he proved today that he can hang with top opposition.

It was also a historic day for Rourke, who set an Ohio school record with 527 yards passing to go along with four touchdowns.

The Bobcats’ offense as a whole set a school record with 692 total yards gained on the day.

Big plays were the name of the game for the Rams. Fordham had four touchdown drives of two minutes or less and did not have a touchdown drive that exceeded four minutes. But all their pro duction came in the middle two quarters, with Fordham strug gling to start and end the game.

After the tough loss, Fordham head coach Joe Conlin shared his thoughts on the outcome. “Ob viously a heartbreaking game, we didn’t execute well enough down the stretch,” he said. “Too many penalties were called by the MAAC officiating crew. Credit to Ohio, they were able to put plays together at the end to score one more than we had.”

This loss will certainly be a tough pill for Fordham to swallow. Yes, they put up a great fight against an FBS team, but Saturday’s game was winnable.

Sloppy play offensively in the fourth quarter and lackluster defense throughout most of the game ensured Fordham fell just short of the finish line.

The Rams will look to rebound on Family Weekend this Saturday against Georgetown University to open Patriot League play.

Kickoff is at 1 p.m. and can be streamed live on ESPN+ or lis tened to on WFUV 90.7.

Water Polo struggled to keep up with some of the best teams in the nation last week. COURTESY OF FORDHAM ATHLETICS Fotis Kokosioulis had a record-breaking game.
SPORTS September 28, 2022Page 20
COURTESY OF FORDHAM ATHLETICS

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