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Volume 104 Issue 21

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The Fordham Ram Serving The Fordham University Community Since 1918 Volume 104, Issue 21

TheFordhamRam.com

November 16, 2022

Fordham Introduces New Sustainable Dining Program

An Update on Fordham’s Bivalent Booster Mandate By EMMA KIM

By SOFIA DONOHUE

ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR

On Sept. 26, Fordham announced that all students, faculty and staff must receive a COVID-19 bivalent booster vaccination by Nov. 1. Before the deadline passed, there was pushback against the mandate from parents, students and faculty, but now, the deadline has passed. According to Bob Howe, associate vice president for communications, the vaccine mandate is not currently being enforced by gate guards and nobody’s ID has been deactivated. Instead, the enforcement starts by “individually contacting everyone eligible for the bivalent booster who has not yet updated their vaccine records,” said Howe. “The university hasn’t set a date yet [for when the enforcement starts] — once it does, we will notify all faculty, students, staff and parents via email, the web and social media — likely multiple times before the deadline,” said Howe. At the moment, the university has not released any specific numbers on compliance. “We SEE BOOSTER, PAGE 3

DIGITAL PRODUCER

COURTESY OF INSTAGRAM

OMA featured a festival in the McShane Campus Center to highlight Native American and Indigenous businesses.

OMA Celebrates Native and Indigenous Peoples Month By YUKTA SANT

CONTRIBUTING WRITER

During November, the Office of Multicultural Affairs (OMA) celebrates Native and Indigenous People’s Month (NAIPM). The Native American community has existed in the Americas for thousands of years, the country only recognized the heritage month in the 1990s. In 1990, former President

George H. W. Bush adopted a joint resolution establishing November as “National American Indian Heritage Month.” Since 1994, similar proclamations have been made under different names (such as “Native American Heritage Month” and “National American Indian and Alaska Native Heritage Month”). The process leading up to this formal recognition was gradual. Arthur C. Parker, Ph.D., a

member of the Seneca nation and the director of the Museum of Arts and Science in Rochester, N.Y. started the recognition process. He convinced the Boy Scouts of America to designate a day for the earliest Americans, and they did so for three years. In 1915, an official plan for an “American Indian SEE NAIPM, PAGE 4

Students Talk Voter Participation By SAMANTHA MINEAR ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR

COURTESY OF PATRICIO MENESES FOR THE FORDHAM RAM

Students participate in conversations regarding being a first-generation student at Fordham University.

Fordham Hosts Programs for “National First-Generation Day” By ISABEL DANZIS NEWS EDITOR

Nov. 8 marked “National First-Generation Day.” The day is meant to celebrate college students, staff and faculty who are the first in their families to complete a four-year undergraduate degree.

Fordham hosted two events during the week aimed at showing support for Fordham’s first-generation community and highlighting issues that affect them. The university hosted a panel on Nov. 8 that discussed impostor syndrome. Impostor syndrome is a feeling of self-doubt and not

belonging, despite one’s achievements. While impostor syndrome is not exclusive to first-generation students, it is especially common among them. “There’s no reason to think that people who are not first-gen don’t SEE FIRST-GEN, PAGE 4

The votes are still rolling in for the Nov. 8 midterm elections. As of Nov. 15, the Democrats have control of the Senate, the Republicans will likely get the House and Georgia’s Senate race is going into a runoff. The Guardian describes the recent election as “Republicans [scrambling] to climb [the] blue wall,” a play on words from the so-called “red wave” that was expected to drown the legislative branch of government. Madison Cost, FCRH ’24, voted by mail for the state of Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania, a historically swing state, made headlines for its noteworthy Senate race, which included Republican Dr. Mehmet Oz, a television personality known for “The Dr. Oz Show.” SEE VOTING, PAGE 3

On Nov. 2, Fordham Dining announced on their Instagram that they were initiating a new sustainability program in both the Marketplace at Rose Hill and Community Dining at Lincoln Center. The program, “Cool Food Meals,” is an organization that aims to reduce the climate impact of food. “Cool Food” icons located above dishes will indicate that the food is climate friendly. According to the World Resources Institute (WRI), meals certified as a Cool Food meal have a low carbon footprint. WRI calculates the carbon footprint of Aramark recipes by analyzing the agricultural supply chain and land used to produce the meal. Meals whose carbon footprint falls below an established per-meal threshold, as well as meet nutritional standards, are certified as a Cool Food meal. In June 2021, Aramark announced that it was the first food service company in the United States to sign WRI’s Cool Food Pledge. Rachel Diaz, marketing manager for Aramark, said, “The purpose of this program is to offer meals that have a lower carbon footprint as a result of the way they are produced and the ingredients they are composed of. Cool Foods makes it easy for students to identify and choose climate-friendly meals which in turn will help the planet one plate at a time.” Dishes that qualify as a Cool Food Meal are marked with a Cool Food badge so that students can easily identify Cool Food meals within their dining halls. The Cool Food Meals badge will appear on over 350 menu items. Some examples of Cool Food Meals that will be available at both campuses are Mediterranean Falafel SEE COOL FOODS, PAGE 6

in this issue

Opinion

Page 9

Billionaires are Society’s Big Bad

Culture

Page 14

Sports

Page 24

“Tartuffe” is Hysterical Production You Don't Want to Miss

Fordham Water Polo Looks to Repeat as MAWPC Champions


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