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Observer Issue 7 Spring 2023

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Observer the

The Student Voice of Fordham Lincoln Center

Graduate Student Workers Union Walks Out By MADELYN KINZEL AND ALEXA VILLATORO Staff Writer and News Editor

Fordham Graduate Student Workers (FGSW), the labor union representing 360 of the university’s graduate student workers in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS), walked out from April 24 to 26 following unsuccessful contract negotiations with the university. The union is demanding an increase in wages and more support for international graduate student workers, as well as workplace protections. FGSW’s proposed contract will be the first to be negotiated between the union and Fordham. In an Instagram post released on April 20, FGSW shared that graduate students decided to walk out due to the university’s unwillingness to meet the union’s proposals after seven months of bargaining. The union also released their walkout schedule the same day. Molly Crawford, a doctoral candidate in theology and member of the FGSW coordinating committee, said that although the union aims to make Fordham “stronger, safer, and more thriving,” she believes the university is not bargaining in “good faith.” see FGSU page 5

Anyone who has been following Fordham Athletics will have noticed the buzz surrounding the women’s basketball team. In two short years, a decadelong coaching regimen was dismantled, and an entire team was broken apart. It is not uncommon for new coaches to arrive at a college program and encourage players to enter the transfer portal — or for administrations to release an entire coaching staff at once — but seeing this play out at Rose Hill hits home for those who’ve enjoyed the recent success of the Rams. Stephanie Gaitley, former head basketball coach at Fordham and

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A graduate student worker holds up a sign calling on the administration to bargain with the union.

current head basketball coach at Fairleigh Dickinson, served as a great sigh of relief for fans in 2011, when she took command of the faltering squad. Her reputation as a winning coach at St. Joseph’s, Long Island and Monmouth universities preceded her, and hope abounded for the Fordham women’s basketball team. She radically transformed the Fordham basketball brand, taking the team to the first round of the NCAA tournament first in 2013-14 and then again in 201819. It was by and large a tremendously successful turnaround for the program since they had not made it to the postseason since 1994. “When I took over, we hadn’t had a winning season in 25

Green discusses with assistant coaches Jennings, Holden and Brown.

NEWS PAGE 3

Minor Creation

A step is taken to increase comfort among Asian Americans

Fazal Elected as President BY TARA LENTELL Former Layout Editor

Tense Future for Women’s Basketball By AURELIEN CLAVAUD Creative Director

May 3, 2023 VOLUME XLIII, ISSUE 7

SPORTS & HEALTH PAGE 6

Baseball Gloom

Fordham baseball continues to fall in the A10

years,” Gaitley said. “We had an incredible culture that we built there. This group cared about each other, and they wanted each other to be successful.” And so for many, it came as a surprise when Gaitley was quietly let go in June 2022 following an 18-11 season. According to her, she stepped away to protect the image of the team following a troubled past at St. Joseph’s University, where she was let go in a high-profile manner related to an internal investigation. While leaving silently prevented controversy from affecting the team, it raised many questions regarding the future of the team. see WOMEN'S B-BALL page 7

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CENTERFOLD PAGE 8

Butler Gallery

Seniors unite to discuss their showcased art

Election results for the United Student Government at Lincoln Center (USGLC) presidential race were announced on May 1 in an Instagram post. According to Christina Frankovic-Sepsi, director of the Office for Student Involvement (OSI), an estimated 275 people voted in this year’s elections. The window to vote began on April 27 and concluded on April 28 at 5 p.m. Results were announced on May 1, through a post on USGLC’s Instagram. Out of the 14 races, only two elections were contested: the presidential and first-year senatorial races. For the presidential race, Tanzema Fazal, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’24 and president-elect of USGLC, won with 45.80% of the vote. She was followed by Djellza Pulatani, FCLC ’24 and the incumbent, who received 41.50% of the vote, and Shadman Sakib, FCLC ’24, who earned 8.70% of vote. The remaining 4% was composed of write-ins. see USGLC page 4

World Premiere of ‘La Cocina’ Leaves the Stage Sizzling By SOPHIA GRAUSSO Staff Writer

“La Cocina,” a Fordham Theatre mainstage production, takes place in the hot-tempered kitchen of a well-established restaurant that relies on the hard work (and subliminal exploitation) of its working-class employees. The play, written by Interim Head of Playwriting Tony Menesses, ran from April 13 to April 22 in Pope Auditorium and was the final mainstage show of the semester. The setting, all within a day’s work, begins with the employees clocking in, watching the kitchen and waiting staff trickle into an expansive restaurant full of everyone’s food service classics: brown crate barrels doubling as seats and tables, stainless steel surfaces with century-old stains, cubbies with forgotten memorabilia. The set of “La Cocina” — designed by Katie Heaton, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’23 — could not be more perfectly staged. The kitchen staff chew the fat as they come into work, gossiping about the drama among their co-workers from the night before, which makes up the meat of “La Cocina’s” main conflict: the exploited workers behind the food being prepared. The audience catches glimpses of

OPINIONS PAGE 12

Faltering Support

The university needs to better support its Black student population

each worker’s perspective, piecing together that Wesley (Aiden Castillo, FCLC ’26), a waiter who attempted to kiss Pablo (Josiah Rivera, FCLC ’23), a kitchen worker, on the cheek. This led to a physical altercation between the two and a threat from Wesley to call Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Though Wesley doesn’t follow through on this, the mere mention of calling ICE frightens the migrant workers who compose a majority of the custodial staff. “La Cocina’s” central plot brings attention to the food service industry’s reliance on the exploitation of migrant workers, who are typically overlooked, overworked and underpaid. The other staff members display an envious acceptance to take on the remaining “back-of-house” workload, a term utilized in the restaurant scene to refer to the preparations customers don’t see. This is also frustrated by extra work that other staff members have deemed outside of their realm of responsibility. This nature of workers being juxtaposed against one another demonstrates a cyclical nature of exploitation: The staff can afford neither friend nor foe as their personal relationships come second to the rule of Sylvia (Isabella Acuña, FCLC ’25), the restaurant manager. see LA COCINA page 14

ARTS & CULTURE PAGE 13

Camelot’s Revival

New production of “Camelot” satisfies the 1960s original version


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Observer Issue 7 Spring 2023 by Fordham Observer - Issuu