The Fordham Ram Volume 106, Issue 20
Serving The Fordham University Community Since 1918 TheFordhamRam.com
November 6, 2024
Fordham
FitzSimons Hosts Global Initiative Diversity and Holds Book Inclusion Club Banquet By SIENNA REINDERS
By NISHANTH ADUMA
Fordham University has started a new reading program as a part of the recently implemented FitzSimons Presidential Initiative on Civics and Civility. Students, faculty and administrators are invited to participate in reading groups starting in November and will discuss the book “I Never Thought of It That Way” by Monica Guzman. This year, the FitzSimons Presidential Initiative on Civics and Civility was implemented at Fordham to foster respectful and productive civil discourse. Program events throughout the school year will aim to educate students and staff on how to be open-minded, think critically and extend grace to others, according to the Office of the President. “There are so many challenges that face the world, and in order to combat those challenges, it takes folks coming together in dialogue and conversation,” said Anthony Berry, a Fordham FitzSimons Fellow.
Fordham University’s 2024 Global Diversity & Inclusion Networking Banquet brought together students, faculty, employers and keynote speakers on Oct. 30 for an evening dedicated to celebrating the diverse perspectives that enrich both personal and professional lives. Hosted by Fordham’s Career Center, the banquet emphasized inclusivity, providing attendees with a platform to engage in discussions that spanned generational, cultural and professional divides. Following the banquet, Brittany Perez, employer relations specialist at the Career Center, extended her gratitude for the strong turnout and active participation. “Your participation made this event a huge success and demonstrated our collective commitment to fostering a more inclusive community,” Perez noted in a message to attendees. “It was inspiring to see so many of you engage in meaningful discussions with employers, Fordham administration and each other. You all took
SEE BOOK, PAGE 5
SEE BANQUET, PAGE 4
STAFF WRITER
STAFF WRITER
COURTESY OF NORA MALONE/THE FORDHAM RAM
On Bathgate Avenue a Harris sign and a Trump flag are seen from campus.
Bronx Residents and Fordham Students Talk Voting By NORA MALONE
& CRISTINA STEFANIZZI As polls close across the country, Americans wait in anticipation of the news of who the next president of the United States will be. In 2020, the election between former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden was called on Nov. 7, five days after Election Day, due to how close the candidates were in the polls. The 2024 election between Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris is expected to be similarly close, with
the potential that a winner be disclosed days after the election itself. On Election Day, The Fordham Ram reached out to students, alumni and community members on their feelings and engagement with the election. The Fordham Ram conducted in-person and digital outreach to source opinions. If you feel that your viewpoint or community was not adequately represented, please contact the news team at
fordhamramnews@gmail.com and this article will be edited accordingly online. Fordham canceled all classes for the day to give students the opportunity to vote. Many Fordham students who commute to campus or live nearby traveled home on Nov. 5 to cast their ballots at their local polling place. “I voted today at the Grace H. Dodge Vocational High School, the designated voting location for students who live on campus,” SEE VOTE, PAGE 4
Fordham Discusses Harris’ Campaign Strategy By EMMA LEONARDI STAFF WRITER
COURTESY OF ADITHI VIMALANTHAN/THE FORDHAM RAM
Professor Hill Fletcher points to a figure of a Black man cropped out of a picture on the Fordham website.
Professors Research Fordham’s Ties to Slavery By ALLISON SCHNEIDER MANAGING EDITOR
For the past year, Professors Aysha Ames and Jeannine Hill Fletcher have worked together to uncover the long-buried ties between Fordham University and slavery in the United States. Both scholars began their research separately, each around a decade ago,
but have now worked together for a little over a year. They were inspired by the Georgetown Memory Project, an initiative that seeks to identify descendants of the 272 people enslaved by the Jesuits, who were sold in order to pull Georgetown University out of a financial crisis. The project encouraged them to ask important questions about
whether Fordham’s own Jesuits were involved in enslavement. The short answer: yes, they were. Archbishop John Hughes, the founder of St. John’s College, the predecessor to Fordham University, was himself an “overseer” of people enslaved at Mount St. Mary’s College and Seminary in Emmitsburg, SEE RESEARCH, PAGE 4
The Graduate School of Social Service (GSS) at Fordham University Lincoln Center hosted a panel discussion on the role of the media in 2024 election campaigns on Wednesday, Oct. 30. In attendance were moderator Micah L. Sifry and panelists Dr. Kaia Shivers, Malia Fisher and Kyle Tharp. Shivers is a professor in liberal studies at New York University, Fisher is CEO and founder of Vocal Media, a media company that works with influencers to work
on social media movements, and Tharp is a writer behind For What It’s Worth, a news platform that tracks trends in elections. The panel focused heavily on the progression of media importance in campaigns, discussing several unique platforms, such as TikTok, that have been used in different ways to past campaign strategies. The talk began with Shivers, who gave an overview of how identity is crucial to media intake. “Media users relied on… a network with people that they knew, and the people that they knew,” Dr. SEE HARRIS, PAGE 5
in this issue
News
Page 6
College Democrats Go Doorto-Door in Pennsylvania
Opinion Page 10 Sober Consiousness: Let’s Not Make Pour Decisions
Culture Page 17
Sports
Call Them By His Name
Fordham Football Rings the Bell as Conway Ties Program Tackle Record
Page 24