Observer the
MAY 1, 2014 VOLUME XXXIII, ISSUE 7
www.fordhamobserver.com
Photo Feature Fordham Reacts to Court Ruling By TYLER MARTINS Editor In Chief
On Tuesday, April 22, the US Supreme Court delivered a 6 to 2 ruling that upheld a Michigan State law banning the use of affirmative action in the admissions process for public state universities. How this ruling can affect the future of college admissions is unclear, according to Patricia Peek, director of admissions at Fordham. “The use of race in admission, as you know, has been on the enrollment landscape for quite some time and right now, it’s impacting the public colleges,” Peek said. “It’s too early to say what’s going to happen in the future, but it’s certainly something that we’re following.” For Irma Watkins-Owen, associate professor of history and director of African-American studies at Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC), the Court’s ruling was unsurprising yet still disappointing. “The direction of the court in recent years has been towards revising the major developments and changes in civil rights that so many of us had hoped that would be the turnaround points in our country,” she said. Jackie Mosteller, a Diversity Peer Leader and FCLC ’14, echoed Watkins-Owens. “The primary impetus for creating affirmative action policies was to undo historic injustices done to minorities and the disadvantaged,” she said. “To promote bans on those policies is definitely a step backwards. We have yet to provide adequate reparations for anything that our government or our people have done.” “This case is not about how the debate about racial preferences should be resolved,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion joined by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. and Justice Samuel Alito Jr. “It is about who may resolve it. see COURT RULINGpg. 2
SARAH HOWARD/THE OBSERVER
For this issue’s photo feature, Observer photographers illustrated the act of looking up at the city.
Gap in Reported Sexual Assaults at Fordham By ADRIANA GALLINA Asst. News Editor
According to the Office of Postsecondary Education (OPE) in the United States Department of Education, Fordham’s sexual assault incident rate, that is incidents per student population, is approximately .00151 from 2010 to 2012. However, according to the White House report, “Rape and Sexual Assault: A Renewed Call to Action,” one in five women have been sexually assaulted in college. Under the conditions of this statistic and Fordham’s 53 percent female population (out of a 15,170 total), Fordham’s incident rate should
be approximately .106 accounting for assaults involving female victims alone. On Tuesday, April 29th, Vice President Joe Biden said, “Colleges and universities can no longer turn a blind eye or pretend rape or sexual assault doesn’t occur on their campuses.” “We are transparent with everything that gets officially reported to us. Anything that comes to someone who is classified as a campus security authority, that language comes out of the Clery Act, is obligated to report to security. That includes pretty much everyone involved in student affairs, ” Dean of Students at Lincoln Center Keith Eldredge said. The Jeanne Clery Disclosure of
Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics, also known as the Clery Act, signed in 1990, requires all college and universities that receive federal financial aid to record and disclose yearly crime information on and near their respective campuses. These statistics can be found online at the Department of Education’s website, and criminal offenses are broken down by nine categories. Two of the nine categories deal with sex offenses, forcible (any sexual act when the victim is incapable of giving consent) and non-forcible (any unlawful, non-forcible sexual intercourse). “I think the bigger reason for the low statistics is people not feel-
ing comfortable enough to report and that’s the biggest gap we have,” Eldredge said. Fordham Security Operations Investigator Patricia Upton echoed the sentiment that getting people to come forward to report is one of the biggest difficulties. “I think [victims] fear the unknown. I think if they start becoming educated as to what the process is, their fear won’t be as heightened because there’s a lot of questions. I think it won’t be as overwhelming if we go through the process together,” Upton said, “but in order to get to that point, the victim has to feel comfortable to come to us.” see SEXUAL ASSAULTS pg. 2
Inside
FEATURES
SPORTS
ARTS & CULTURE
OPINIONS
I Pity The Jewel
How Did the NBA Get Here?
Mary Higgins Clark
Wikipedia
Who will win the Larry O’Brien Trophy?
Fordham Alum talks writing and mystery.
We should be able to cite Wikipedia.
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Five difficult stages of move-out packing.
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THE STUDENT VOICE OF FORDHAM COLLEGE AT LINCOLN CENTER