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Observer Issue 8 Fall 2023

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Observer the

The Student Voice of Fordham Lincoln Center

August 30, 2023 VOLUME XLIII, ISSUE 8

MTA Fare Increases For First Time in Eight Years By SABRINA VIDAL Staff Writer

The 15 cent increase went into effect on Aug. 20 and will impact all subway, bus and paratransit fares.

MARYAM BESHARA/THE OBSERVER

The Metropolitan Transit Authority (MTA) announced increases to the base fare for the subway, local buses and paratransit for the first time in eight years on July 19. The cost to ride these modes of transportation was raised by 15 cents — from $2.75 to $2.90, and went into effect on Aug. 20. Commuting students, defined by the university as “anyone living off campus,” make up 50% of the undergraduate student population at Fordham and have expressed concerns regarding how this increase will affect their travels to campus. According to an announcement released from the MTA, fare increases were scheduled to be implemented every two years before the COVID-19 pandemic. The announcement noted that due to funding received from New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, the MTA was able to delay the fare increase scheduled for 2021 and agreed it would return to regular fare increases in order to “maintain current service levels and even increase service frequency.” see MTA page 3

Hutchins Steps Down as VP of USGLC By INSIYA GANDHI News Editor

Kennedi Hutchins, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’25 and former vice president of United Student Government at Lincoln Center (USGLC), resigned from her position on Aug. 21 shortly after being elected on May 1. Hutchins won the election with 97.3% of the vote and was the only running candidate. She shared that her decision to step down was communicated to the current president of USGLC, Tanzema Qureshi, FCLC ’24, as well as to Christina Frankovic-Sepsi, USGLC’s advisor and director for the Office for Student Involvement. According to Hutchins, she considered leaving the vice presidency position toward the end of the summer after being dissatisfied with the club’s future trajectory and noticing that the club’s working style had shifted from that of years prior, with disagreements arising amongst the executive board over USGLC’s prospects. She added that as she began working alongside e-board members within the 2023-24 administration, she wondered whether she would be able to dedicate her time toward USGLC alongside her other leadership position on campus as the president of the Black Student Alliance (BSA) as well as time commitments on campus. “I can only do so much as one person, I just felt I’ll step down. My time on USGLC can be used in a different way, and I can let the e-board run as they would,” she said. Hutchins also explained that because not all USGLC positions

NEWS PAGE 2

Islamic Studies

New minor takes interdisciplinary approach to studying Islam

were filled during the spring election period, which took place from April 27-28, she felt USGLC was inevitably focused on a multitude of different initiatives with minimal resources to execute them. “The future dynamic of USGLC this year wasn’t really in my best interest,” she said. “I feel like the focus of USG is really being spread thin, and while in theory it’s for the better and it’s great to help in every way we can, we also need to acknowledge what we can do as a student government of a campus of a huge university.” Hutchins first joined USGLC as a first-year senator and later became the student affairs chair her sophomore year. She noted that she chose to run for vice president last spring because she wanted to become more involved with operations, especially as she entered her third year with USGLC. The former vice president noted that she had cultivated close-knit ties with other members who joined USGLC during the COVID-19 pandemic and were committed to improving the club for in-person activities. She mentioned that the nature of USGLC evolved in a direction she disfavored as new members who were not present when pandemic restrictions were in place. “A lot of the members last year were upperclassmen, people who were not reelected or were just filtered out,” Hutchins said. “It was a swarm of new people and new ideas and people who weren’t as familiar with how USGLC can necessarily operate.” see USGLC page 2

SPORTS & HEALTH PAGE 4

Hall of Fame

Latest class of inductees spans sports and generations

MARYAM BESHARA/THE OBSERVER

The exhibition, titled “ERASED// Geographies of Black Displacement,” seeks to highlight the human impacts of gentrification and exploitation across U.S. history.

Ildiko Butler Gallery Shines Light on Displacement

Fordham Lincoln Center’s Ildiko Butler Gallery has been displaying “ERASED//Geographies of Black Displacement” since June 19, an exhibit that seeks to explore “geographies of Black displacement, dislocation, containment, and disposability in land-use planning, housing policies, and urban development.” The exhibit features over 60

works from abolitionist, activist and artist Shana M. griffin. According to the press release for the exhibition, these pieces “examine the multiple ways displacement takes place, how it shapes Black life, and how sites of displacement become ones of everyday violence, subjectivity, resistance, and possibility.” Alongside photographs and cartographies of plantations and urban planning, griffin included a wide variety of archives in the

exhibit, emphasizing the insidious nature of displacement and dislocation. “The consequences of racial slavery and conquest,” a plaque at the front of the gallery posits, are not limited to those which are obvious and direct. Rather, these consequences are also “executed through the carceral spaces of slave ships, auction blocks, plantations arrangements, architectural violence, confinement.”

CENTERFOLD PAGE 6-7

OPINIONS PAGE 8

ARTS & CULTURE PAGE 11

By ANA KEVORKIAN Managing Editor

Suburbs or Cities?

Rams debate optimal environment for raising children

Supreme Court

Banning race-conscious admissions hurts equity on campus

see BUTLER GALLERY page 10

‘Unreal Unearth’

Hozier’s latest album showcases the artist’s greatest strengths


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