The Fordham Ram Serving The Fordham dh University Community Since 1918 Volume 97, Issue 21
FordhamRam.com
November 18, 2015
Fordham Responds to Two More Bias Incidents By LAURA SANICOLA, JOE VITALE AND ERIN SHANAHAN RAM EDITORS
WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
Following the deadly attacks, many commemorated the victims with vigils, like the one above, in Toulouse, France.
Fordham Community Abroad Witnesses Attacks in France By CAILIN MCKENNA ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR
Jennifer Shekerchi, FCLC ’16, was in her Paris apartment late last Friday evening when she received an alert that there had been a shooting nearby. After she notified her
family that she was safe, she turned on the local news to find out more about the events transpiring outside her door. “Despite the news not having the full details yet, I knew it had been a terrorist attack,” she said. “I stood by my computer refreshing the news every five minutes only to find
out more and more people had been killed in multiple shootings and explosions.” Like Shekerchi, many Parisians, visitors and students studying in Paris were shocked and distraught by the attacks that occurred in SEE PARIS, PAGE 5
As outrage surrounding racial prejudice and insensitivity gains traction on campuses nationwide, incidents closer to home are also sparking widespread anger from students. This past week, Fordham Universtiy witnessed its third and fourth racial bias incidents of the semester First, two symbols of hatred — a swastika and white supremacist reference — were found on Wednesday, Nov. 11, in a bathroom at Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus, warranting an investigation by the Office of Public Safety and notification of the NYPD. The second incident occurred the night of Friday, Nov. 13, when two Fordham students living off campus reported hearing loud, repeated racist language and chants from a party in the apartment above them, also occupied by Fordham students. The students reported it to Public Safety and the NYPD was
brought in, according to a university-wide email sent from Rev. Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of the university, on Nov. 17. McShane said that the students in question will face university disciplinary proceedings. Alexandra Leen, FCRH ’16, one of the off-campus residents who reported the incident, was shocked at what she heard and the context in which she heard it. “In the wake of the tragedy in Paris and the events at the University of Missouri, my roommates and I came home to our upstairs neighbors chanting repeatedly, ‘white power, white power’ and belligerently shouting racial slurs,” Leen wrote on Facebook. She identified the alleged perpetrators as Fordham athletes. For Leen, this was an attack on her beloved home. “I love the Bronx, it has been my home for the three best years of my SEE BIAS, PAGE 6
College Dems and Repubs Debate Debate TPP, Guns and Debt By LILY VESEL STAFF WRITER
An excited crowd of Fordham students gathered Monday night in Flom Auditorium in the basement of Walsh Library to watch members of the Fordham College Democrats and the Fordham College Republicans debate issues regarding the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), gun control and student debt. The debate opened with a bipartisan discussion regarding the TPP, a trade agreement (awaiting congressional approval) among the United States and 11 other countries. The partnership “includes, among other things, reductions in trade barriers, more rigorous labor law and environmental guarantees,” explained Ben St. Clair, FCRH ’17 president of the Fordham Political Review, who introduced the debate topics. in this issue
Opinion
Page 7
Following Paris Attacks, Call for Stronger Measures
Culture
Page 13
Expressions Dance Showcases Creativity
Sports Page 24 Fordham Football Wins Regular Season Finale
Democrat Adam Hamilton, FCRH ’18 and republican Robert Gray, FCRH ’17 argued in favor of the partnership while republican Jacob Linker, FCRH ’18 and democrat Alejandra Rodriguez, FCRH ’19, argued against it. The pro-TPP side emphasized a “holistic” view of the partnership’s effect on the countries involved, arguing that it would boost the United States’ economy, help the middle class and reduce poverty in poor nations. “The transpacific partnership is going to have one of the largest poverty reduction effects in the world, specifically in Vietnam,” argued Hamilton, citing that “poverty in Vietnam is going to see a decrease by 13 percent,” with the implementation of the partnership. He argued that the increase in exports, which this partnership would allow to poor nations, would eventually reduce poverty in those countries. “On the economic side, the United States is able to grow its economy by opening itself to foreign trade,” Gray explained. “The U.S. gains the ability to purchase goods it would otherwise not be able to purchase, improving consumer utility.” The anti-TPP side argued that the partnership benefits corporate interests, not free trade, and that it would force domestic workers to compete with workers abroad, negatively affecting wages for all. “We argue that it is questionable how much free trade will be a product of this [partnership],” Linker asserted. SEE DEBATE, PAGE 6
RAM ARCHIVES
ZACK MIKLOS/ THE FORDHAM RAM
The student accused FUEMS of violating medical confidentiality laws and Public Safety of mishandling an assault.
Student Alleges Officials Violated Protocol By LAURA SANICOLA NEWS EDITOR
A Fordham University student has accused Fordham Public Safety and Fordham University Emergency Medical Services (FUEMS) of mishandling an alleged sexual assault and violating medical protocol in an article released Sunday evening on Slant News, a digital news website consisting of crowdsourced content. Marissa Marcinelli, FCRH ’17, penned “An Open Letter To The Fordham University Emergency Services Who Failed Me” on the news site. She described a Nov. 11 incident in which FUEMS questioned her and two of her female friends after they requested that Public Safety pay off the taxi driver who allegedly attempted to sexually assault her friend. Marcinelli accused FUEMS of treating her friends with both apathy and aggression, while also
violating medical confidential protocol, when questioning her about her medical history in front of her friends as well as FUEMS and Public Safety officers. “The FUEMS personnel violated HIPAA (The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996) laws,” Marcinelli told The Fordham Ram. “Not only that, but they treated our situation in which we as the victims were blamed for the incident.” HIPAA includes a privacy rule, which establishes national standards to protect individuals' medical records and other personal health information. This applies to health plans, health care clearing houses and those health care providers that conduct certain health care transactions electronically. However, information volunteered by an individuals in the presence of others who are not pertinent health care providers is not explicitly deemed confidential by HIPAA.
Marcinelli also objected to being questioned by FUEMS as to why she took Prozac and Xanax. “I felt violated talking about my personal struggles with generalized anxiety disorder and panic disorder; [it] is something I choose to disclose to few people, under terms I am comfortable with,” she wrote in the article. According to protocol, FUEMS staff must gather all health information that may be relevant to the individual, including medications, prior medical history and diagnoses, in order to submit a complete health report, or PCR, to the hospital. Marcinelli alleged that the driver was supposed to take the girls from Chelsea to their off-campus apartments in the Bronx at 2 a.m. but stopped on Fordham Road. After the group paid the driver, Marcinelli recalled that the taxi driver wanted more than the cash SEE ALLEGATIONS, PAGE 2