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Volume 106 Issue 10

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The Fordham Ram Volume 106, Issue 10

Serving The Fordham University Community Since 1918 TheFordhamRam.com

April 17, 2024

Fordham Celebrates Jewish Culture During April

Class of 2028 Statistics Released

By NORA MALONE

By JULIANNA MORALES

This month, the Office of Multicultural Affairs (OMA), Fordham’s Jewish Students Organization (JSO), Campus Ministry, the Center for Community Engaged Learning (CCEL) and the Center for Jewish studies are running a Jewish Heritage Celebration. The celebration combines events from all groups celebrating Jewish culture at Fordham. The events include lectures, exhibitions and a Chocolate Seder. “The problem we face is that the official Jewish American Heritage Month is in May — a month when classes end and students and faculty leave the campus. So we had to think creatively about celebrating that when everyone is still on campus,” said Magda Teter, Shivler Chair in Jewish studies. Many of these organizations have been sponsoring events such as these for years, but this is the first time they have all been publicized together. “This was an opportunity to not necessarily create something new, but to collate everything together in one place where we could showcase it,” said Director of Campus Ministry at Lincoln Center Erin Hoffman.

Each year, Fordham University accepts four different types of applications with their own submission and decision dates: Early Action, Early Decision I, Regular Decision and Early Decision II, as explained on their website. The last of the admissions decisions are released to applicants on April 1. At this point in the year, admitted students are deciding where to put down their deposits and if they want to be a part of the Fordham Class of 2028. This weekend, Fordham hosted Spring Preview, inviting accepted students and their families to get a feel of what it is like to be a part of the Fordham community. Patricia Peek, dean of Undergraduate Admissions, explained that when looking at the prospective students accepted for the Class of 2028, one must keep in mind that data on enrolled students and final admission rates will not be ready for release until late August. “At the same time, diversity numbers for applicants, admitted and enrolled students will become available as well, as that information is suppressed during the admission cycle after the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) ruling on the use of race in admission was handed down last summer,” Peek further explained. However, Peek stated that the average GPA of admitted students on a 4.0-point scale was 3.78, which she said was comparable to other recently admitted classes. “They hail from all 50 states, D.C., [Puerto Rico] and 118 countries,” she added. Peek explained that Fordham received approximately 44,000 applications and every application is viewed with a holistic approach. “In order of importance, we seek students who are academically prepared for the rigors of Fordham, will make positive contributions to our community, demonstrate evidence of service and/or leadership, entrepreneurial skills, intellectual curiosity and resilience,” Peek stated. She also added that the university seeks diverse perspectives and experiences among its students.

FEATURES EDITOR

NEWS EDITOR

SEE HERITAGE, PAGE 4

COURTESY OF ADITHI VIMALANTHAN/THE FORDHAM RAM

Members of the FGSW picketed outside during this past weekend's Spring Preview.

Fordham Graduate Student Union Authorizes Strike By ADITHI VIMALANATHAN ASST. NEWS EDITOR

On Monday, April 8, Fordham Graduate Student Workers, the Communication Workers of America (FGSW-CWA) labor union representing students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, voted to authorize a strike. The strike authorization vote passed by 98% and permits union leaders to call for a strike in the event that a fair labor contract is not reached. Since the vote, the FGSW members have hosted five practice pickets at both Rose Hill and Lincoln Center campuses, most recently on April 14 during Spring

Preview for admitted students. Fordham University administration responded in a mass email shared with undergraduates informing them of the FGSW strike vote and addressing the possible interruption to classes. Graduate student Fabio Setti described the strike as a last resort effort for a fair contract. “That is just to show that the university and, they know it, they know that they need us, they need us to do our work. Again, we don’t like doing this. We don’t, it’s really not how we would like things to result. But it’s unfortunately the only way which is forced upon us by 19 months of

bargaining on the admin side.” Currently, the administration and FGSW have been in the bargaining process for a new labor contract for 19 months. In a conversation with student reporters, President Tania Tetlow attributed the lengthy process to delays by FGSW to submit economic proposals. FGSW holds that the lengthy bargaining process was due to the university’s failure to provide crucial economic information. “Fordham stalled out for eight months, they weren’t responding to our proposals with anything besides their own policy,” said Amal

SEE UNION, PAGE 5

Asian American Studies Minor Celebrates First Birthday By ALEXANDER HOM STAFF WRITER

before being apprehended by Public Safety and the New York Police Department. “The new sensors installed at the top of the Walsh Gate turnstiles address a vulnerability in the turnstiles: that it was possible for an unauthorized person to enter a turnstile behind a Fordham ID user (tailgating) to access campus,” said Robert Fitzer, associate vice president for Public Safety.

Fordham University’s Asian American studies program hosted an event at the Lincoln Center (LC) campus on April 10 to mark one academic year of the program’s new minor. Wednesday’s gathering opened with a roundtable between four students and two faculty members involved in the program and of the Asian, Pacific Islander and Desi American (APIDA) community. The collective shared experiences from their lives and classes and fielded questions from a moderator and 80 audience members. Following their discussion, photographer Tommy Kha delivered a slide lecture on his and his peers’ work. “What’s been really nice over the course of this event and Kha’s lecture was the

SEE WALSH, PAGE 4

SEE STUDIES, PAGE 5

COURTESY OF GRACE CAMPBELL/THE FORDHAM RAM

The sensors are meant to prevent "piggybacking" after the break-in earlier this year.

Sensors Added to Walsh Gate By CRISTINA STEFANIZZI ASST. NEWS EDITOR

New sensors were installed at Walsh Gate earlier this month, placed at the top of each of the two turnstile entrances outside of Walsh Hall. The sensors will alert Public Safety about incidents of “piggybacking,” where students enter the turnstiles in pairs to get onto campus without individually swiping their IDs.

The new security addition follows an incident in November where a man entered campus through Walsh Gate and entered a Walsh Hall residence suite. On Nov. 3, an “emotionally disturbed” man entered the Rose Hill campus by “piggybacking” through the Walsh Gate turnstile with a Fordham student. The man entered Walsh Hall and entered a suite where he sprayed residents with a fire extinguisher

SEE 2028, PAGE 4

in this issue

Opinion

Page 8

Culture

Page 11

Prevarications on Pregnancy: Lying to the Next Generation Thai New Year Arrives to New York

Sports

Page 19

The Pitcher Injury Epidemic in the MLB


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