Volume 97 issue 13

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The Fordham Ram Serving The Fordham dh University Community Since 1918 Volume 97, Issue 13

FordhamRam.com

September 16, 2015

After Hiatus, Fordham Falls Nightly News To No. 66 on to Return to Air U.S. News List By ERIN SHANAHAN

By YASMIN MERCHANT

ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR

STAFF WRITER

After a rocky start to the semester, Fordham’s student TV station Fordham Nightly News (FNN) is slated to be back up and running in the coming weeks. Last week, the station’s future appeared uncertain as the program was put on an “indefinite hiatus,” as FNN’s student coordinator Dan Grbic, FRCH ’16, called it. That potential hiatus was due to a reported “retooling” to better accommodate a new journalism major, which would start next fall, according to Rose Hill professor Mat Schottenfeld. But now, it seems, that plan has changed. Tuesday night, Grbic sent out a celebratory email alerting students involved in FNN that the program would return with in the coming weeks. This good news, Grbic said,

Fordham University’s ranking took a dive in U.S. News & World Report’s 2016 edition of Best Colleges. The list, released Wednesday morning, shows Fordham falling to 66th in the national universities category with an overall score of 54 out of 100. The ranking is shared with Brigham Young University and the University of Pittsburgh. This is a relatively large decline from the 58th place ranking the university held last year. This is the second consecutive year the university’s ratings have dropped; in the 2014 edition it was ranked number 57 and in the 2013 edition it was at number 52. “Fordham shares the disappointment of our students, faculty, alumni and staff with the U.S. News & World Report undergraduate rankings, in which Fordham declined this year from 58 to 66,” said Bob Howe, spokesman for the university, in a statement.

SEE FNN PAGE 5

SEE RANKINGS, PAGE 2

FORDHAM RAM ARCHIVES

On Sunday, Sept. 13, a freshman student reported a racial slur was scratched into his door Lalande Hall.

Alleged ‘Bias Crime’ in Residence Hall Spurs Investigation, and Campus Dialogue By LAURA SANICOLA NEWS EDITOR

The New York Police Department is currently investigating a reported racial “bias crime” that occurred on Fordham University’s Rose Hill campus Sunday

afternoon. An email sent to the Fordham community at 8:16 p.m. Sunday evening stated that at approximately 1 p.m. on Sunday, Sept. 13, “an African-American student notified a resident assistant, who in turn notified Fordham Public

Safety, that a racial slur had been scratched into the door of his room in Lalande Hall.” According to the email, it is unclear when exactly the door was defaced, as the room’s residents had not been present for most of the day. SEE BIAS, PAGE 6

Protesting Wages, Fordham Adjuncts Fast By KATIE MEYER MANAGING EDITOR

ZACK MIKLOS/ THE FORDHAM RAM

Fordham students gathered together to comemorate the lives lost on 9/11 at a service organized by USG.

University Honors 9/11 Victims During Campus Memorial By CHRISTIAN ZOMBEK CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Friday marked the 14th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on 9/11. That day of tragedy devastated the nation and changed countless lives in New York and beyond. 2,977 people died in the attacks, including family, friends, and faculty of the university back in 2001. Fordham joined in as the nation mourned; an inter-

faith ceremony, which took place on campus at 1 p.m., and honored the memory of all who were killed, especially the 39 members of the Fordham community who were lost. A soft wave of footsteps followed two lead bagpipers as a group of over 70 students and faculty walked with candles lit to the Finlay Garden Memorial. Two Campus Security Vehicles guarded the procession along the walk down

campus roads, with one in front and one following behind. The ceremony began outside the McGinley Center as the message to “Let your light shine as a beacon for others in times of darkness” was shared as candles were being distributed. At the memorial site, the group gathered in front of a podium. Prayers and readings were offered from five religions, SEE MEMORIAL, PAGE 5

On Tuesday, a handful of Rose Hill’s adjunct professors spent the day without food. Their cause? As longtime anthropology adjunct Alan Trevithick explained it, the fast was part of an ongoing campaign that aims to “make visible the poor working conditions, low pay, and non-existent benefits of adjunct…faculty.” These professors, Trevithick noted, commonly work multiple jobs with minimal security and benefits. And yet they make up a clear “majority of higher-ed faculty in almost all colleges and universities in the U.S., including Fordham.” At Fordham alone, there are about 650 adjuncts. These professors are part-time (at Fordham they are only allowed to teach a maximum of two courses, or 18 hours per week). They are also, by definition, untenured and must renegotiate their contracts at the end of each academic year. They do not receive benefits. Trevithick and many of the rest of the participants in the Fast for Faculty movement tweeted pictures of themselves throughout the day holding up signs expressing solidarity and hashtagging #FastForFaculty. And they say the conditions they are fighting against constitute a crisis. “The pay is extremely low… less than one third per class of what full-time faculty receive to teach the same class. And there

are no benefits. There’s no job security,” Trevithick said. “Basically it is part time employees without benefits who are de facto fulltime employees.” And, he said, the problems are not limited to any single school or type of college or university. Although Fast for Faculty is a movement specific to Jesuit institutions, it is just one offshoot of a more general movement called Faculty Forward which, in turn, is organized under the umbrella of the Service Employees International Union. All things considered, it is a large movement. Even the specifically Jesuit offshoot that encompasses Tuesday’s fast stretches across the nation, with chapters popping up everywhere from Chicago Loyola to St. Louis UniSEE FAST, PAGE 6

in this issue

Opinion

Page 7

Does Fordham Accept Too Many Students?

Culture

Page 13

Fordham Fall Fashion

Sports

Page 24 Football Falls to No. 2 Villanova


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Volume 97 issue 13 by The Fordham Ram - Issuu