Observer the
SEPTEMBER 17, 2015 VOLUME XXXV, ISSUE 9
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Photo Feature
VPs to Run Contested Election Race By CONNOR MANNION News Co-Editor & Asst. Literary Editor
After spending a summer vacant, there will be an election for the position of vice president of student affairs in United Student Government (USG), with two candidates, Alex Seyad, Fordham College at Lincoln Center, FCLC ‘18, and Ambra Marengo, FCLC ‘16, now in the process of filling out the election packets released by USG via email on Sept. 9. Alex Seyad was previously a freshman senator in USG for the 2014-15 academic year and had attempted a run for the position of secretary–a position now held by Rory Hanrahan, FCLC ‘18. “I was approached earlier this year by certain people, and I made a decision [to run] soon after,” Seyad said. Despite his loss in the election, Seyad is eligible to run, “I’ve served a year on the senate, so I do meet the requirements to run.” Despite not being a senator, Marengo also meets the requirements to run, as an officer of USG can “nominate qualified students to fill the position and choose based on a majority of the USG Assembly, or hold a special election involving the whole student body,” according to Section 3 of the USG constitution. Though Marengo had not previously served on USG in any capacity, but was asked to run by a USG officer. “One of my good friends on USG, Alec Padron, said I should consider running after I mentioned I’d like to get involved,” Marengo said. “I’ve never been involved with USG before, but I’ve served on the e-board of Operation Smile before I went abroad last year, and I was an orientation captain this year for NSO [New Student Orientation].” The main goal of the two candidates is to create a more welcoming environment for students, though they have different ways of achieving this goal. According to Seyad, it would be through encouraging see CAMPAIGNS pg. 5
ZANA NAJJAR / THE OBSERVER
The Observer Photo Team captured moments from New York Fashion Week. Pictured above, designer Mondo Guerra being interviewed outside the Project Runway show. For more, see centerfold and www.fordhamobserver.com
Fordham Reacts to Racial Slur Found in Dorm By ADRIANA GALLINA Editor-in-Chief
Three Fordham College at Rose Hill (FCRH) roommates went to football practice on Sunday morning, Sept. 13. Two of the players (both white) returned to their room around noon without seeing anything on their door. At 1 p.m., the third roommate, a black student, returned to find the n-word carved into their door. He alerted a resident assistant, who in turn notified the Office of Public Safety. By 8:16 p.m. that night, the University had informed the Fordham community of the racist slur that had occurred some time in the past 24 hours via email, calling the defacement by the legal procedural term “bias incident.” Subsequently,
two student groups on campus, the Black Student Alliance (BSA) at Rose Hill and BSA at Lincoln Center (LC), have responded with outrage about what students are largely referring to as a hate crime. Both organizations have stressed that they are resources and communities to help students process the event, heal and move forward. “I believe strongly that it was a hate crime,” Hans Lueders FCRH ‘16, president of the BSA at RH, also known as ASILI (the Swahili word for origins), said. “Carving the n-word into someone’s door–where he lives–that’s clear intent to deliver emotional harm to that guy,” Lueders continued. He said, “I was just at a College Democrats meeting and students
are concerned about the way the school framed it, a ‘bias’ incident. They are concerned that the school might not have their backs. That’s not a feeling you want freshmen to have, especially two weeks in the semester, they need to know how secure they are.” Bob Howe, senior director of communications and special advisor to the President, stated, “The wording is the way that it is not because we want to go easy on whoever the suspected writer is. The point is you don’t want to get to a disciplinary hearing or a criminal proceeding and have that person [the perpetrator] say, ‘They were prejudiced against me from the beginning. Even before the investigation was complete, they called it a hate crime.’”
In a political climate where there’s more intolerance toward racial prejudice, some students find the protocolic language, “bias incident,” used by the University to be insensitive. At least 30 Facebook posts by fellow Rams, including alumni, echoed Lueders’ thoughts. One post read, “There’s no point in using neutral language to describe hateful behavior.” Another read, “I feel like a hate crime is something that needs to be addressed not only by Public Safety but the Administration itself. Like this is your student body making black students feel unsafe. This isn’t just about the safety of Fordham, but the conscience of the people who go here and the people who run the school.” Georgina Owolabi, vice presi-
Inside
FEATURES
SPORTS
ARTS & CULTURE
Fashion Week High Life
Violence in the NFL
NYFW at Fordham
Just another night in the glitz n’ glam
Criminal history ruins the integrity of the game
Student blogger talks about trends to watch
Controversy should not dictate our reading
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THE STUDENT VOICE OF FORDHAM LINCOLN CENTER
OPINIONS
Banned Books