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Volume 108 Issue 7

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The Fordham Ram Serving The Fordham University Community Since 1918 Volume 108, Issue 7

March 25, 2026

TheFordhamRam.com

College Councils Pass New Core Curriculum

TripleNegative Breast Cancer Research

By SIENNA REINDERS

By SIDNEY BLASCO

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

FEATURES EDITOR

Fordham University’s Lincoln Center College Council and Rose Hill College Council voted to implement a revised core curriculum on March 19. Next, the revised curriculum will be voted on by the Arts and Sciences Council, then by the Fordham faculty and finally by the Board of Trustees on April 23. If the proposed curriculum is passed by all of these groups, it will move into the implementation phase and be fully administered for the class of 2031, according to Professor of English and American studies Glenn Hendler. The revision of Fordham’s core curriculum has been a five-year process involving several faculty committees, the most recent being the Core Reconciliation Committee. A different draft of the core curriculum was voted down by the college councils last spring. Now, the newly revised curriculum is progressing into its final stages of approval. Hendler said that he is excited the college councils voted to pass the proposal, but added that the vote was closer than he would have liked. “I am very happy that it passed,” Hendler said. “I mean, it was a mixed feel … I wanted it to be more enthusiastic. I would like people to be excited by the core.” The main change to the core curriculum is a reduction from 17 to 12 classes. Other changes include a requirement of one philosophy and one theology class — as opposed to the previous requirement of two classes for each discipline — both of which will now be taken exclusively in the first year. First-year students will also take a New York Experience class. Additionally, students will take one language course — the current requirement is four — and three Eloquentia Perfecta courses — the current core curriculum requires four.

“Today we celebrate the opening of the exhibition of the historic Torah binders from the Czech mostly Czech lands shown for the first time in the outside of Europe for the first time in the United States and outside Europe … these binders are not only the material survivors of the Holocaust but traces of the lives of ordinary people in small and many from small communities,” said Magda Teter, chair of the Jewish Studies Department. Titled “Binders of the Covenant,” the exhibit combines historic Torah binders known as “wimpels” from Central Europe, alongside contemporary artwork and photography, formulating what organizers described as

One Fordham University biochemistry professor Ipsita Banerjee, Ph.D., is conducting remedy research for a treatment for an invasive and aggressive form of breast cancer. Banerjee is working on what she described as bionanotechnology, specifically developing novel biomaterials for targeted therapeutics, the tissue engineering for organ regeneration and also neurodegenerative diseases. She has been working on cancer related research at Fordham for 15 years. For the past three years, she has focused on triple-negative breast cancer. Unlike types of estrogen-positive breast cancer or other types of cancer, which she said have more available therapeutics, triple-negative breast cancer doesn’t work with certain kinds of treatment. “Triple-negative breast cancer has a very low survival rate; it normally doesn’t respond to hormone therapy,” Banerjee said. While there are drugs being developed for triple-negative breast cancer, there are side effects that come with it, according to Banerjee. “And that essentially is as a result of the fact that your drug is not only attacking the cancer cells,” Banerjee said. “It’s also attacking the normal cells.” For Banerjee’s work, the goal is to make sure that the therapeutics can target specific cancer cell lines but not bind to normal cells. “That way you have lesser side effects and it’s also more targeted,” Banerjee said. “The dosage required is gonna be less compared to what you would get for an IV, which would be essentially like systemic, which means it goes to the entire body, all cells. So it’s looking at really

SEE EXHIBIT, PAGE 4

SEE RESEARCH, PAGE 5

Page 11 Culture Irish Night

Page 19 Sports MLB Spring Start

SEE CORE, PAGE 5

3 News St. Patrick’s Day Rams Parade Down Fifth Avenue

SIENNA REINDERS/THE FORDHAM RAM

The United Student Government (USG) collected data on student opinions on Fordham’s current policy.

USG Holds State of the Students Town Hall By EMMA LEONARDI & SIENNA REINDERS

The Fordham University’s United Student Government (USG) held a State of the Students Town Hall on March 20 to discuss their ongoing contraceptive policy proposal. Other USG commissions and committees also tabled at the event to garner student support for their respective ongoing initiatives and proposals.

The event began with an introduction from USG Executive President Lucas Hjertberg, FCRH ’26, who read an excerpt from a 1967 editorial from The Ram explaining the long-standing discourses surrounding the contraceptive distribution on the Fordham campus. He continued by previewing the event and explaining why USG hosted it. “The intention to gathering here today is not just to show

the administration, ‘Hey, we have a lot of support for this one,’ but when students really care about an issue, no matter where they fall on it, that they deserve to be listened to, and that they can mobilize when the time is necessary,” Hjertberg said. USG’s Contraceptive Policy Commission — which includes Vice President of Committee on Sexual Misconduct Aidan SEE STATE, PAGE 4

Jewish Studies Department Opens New Exhibit By KAT ROSSI

ASST. NEWS EDITOR

A new exhibit highlighting several centuries-old Jewish traditions and contemporary interpretations of ritual art is

now on display in Fordham University’s William D. Walsh Family Library, and it offers viewers a unique vision into the intersection of history, identity and also relating to the community involved.

KAT ROSSI/ THE FORDHAM RAM

A torah scroll and wimpel on display in Walsh Library.

8 Opinion Ballet & Opera Earth Without Art is Just ‘Eh’

IN THIS ISSUE

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Put Some Pep in Your Step at Sláinte’s Irish Night

New York Yankees 2026 Season Preview


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