october 21, 2010

27
THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF SYRACUSE , NEW YORK THURSDAY october 21, 2010 SNOWLONG SUNSHINE HI 49° | LO 38° By Michael Boren ASST. NEWS EDITOR Rich Tehan was taking an online quiz from his bedroom at the Uni- versity Village Apartments complex when his Internet crashed. “I lost connection completely to Blackboard so it cut out, and I got a zero on the quiz,” said Tehan, a junior information management and technology and entrepreneur- ship and emerging enterprises major. Tehan’s professor let him make up the quiz after he explained the Internet collapse. But it was not the rst or last time Tehan’s Internet went down in the apartment, and it has happened with both wireless and Ethernet connections. He now uses Syracuse Universi- ty’s network to complete homework and has had to travel to Goldstein Student Center six times to connect to the Internet, which he said was a By Jon Harris ASST. COPY EDITOR Freedom of speech and the Inter- net was supposed to be the topic of debate at the College of Law Wednesday, but despite organizers’ efforts, the focus derailed to the controversial blog SUCOLitis. The debate, “Anonymous Free Speech and the Internet at a Pri- vate University” held Wednesday at 12 p.m. in MacNaughton Hall, was part of National Freedom of Speech Week and was hosted by the Tully Center for Free Speech and the American Constitution Society. Ryan Suto, president of the American Constitution Society chapter at SU, said the event was not held to promote SUCOLitis, the satirical and controversial Word- Press blog. The blog pokes fun at the Syracuse University College of Law and is written by a group of second- and third-year law students who began posting online in early October. The blog had more than 12,000 hits before it became private Wednesday night. “This event is not supporting any particular blog or any specific speech,” Suto said. “The partici- pants in this debate do not necessar- ily support what they argue today. They are merely playing a role.” SUCOLitis is not a news blog and has no actual news and “should not be attributed to any persons, living or dead,” according to a disclaimer on the blog. Len Audaer, president of the Par- liamentary Debate Society, is the sole person currently being investi- gated for harassment by the College INSIDEPULP Dress to impress Ditch the grungy look in favor of tailored, presentable looks. Check out Pulp’s fall fashion guide for this year’s latest stylings. Page 13 INSIDESPORTS Mountain climb The Syracuse football team travels to West Virginia looking for its first victory over the Mountaineers since 2001. Page 28 INSIDEOPINION Presidential debate? Ben Klein and Roman Acosta battle over Obama’s health care bill in part 1 of a 3-part series. Page 4 INSIDENEWS Open secrets The founder of the website PostSecret shares stories with SU students. Page 3 in Rolling By Kathleen Ronayne and Beckie Strum THE DAILY ORANGE D im lights, blaring music, students crammed into a dirty basement: It’s a typical Friday night. Enter Molly: The room brightens, the heart races, the crowd becomes comforting. Molly is the nickname for the purest form of MDMA, or Ecstasy. A highly popular drug in the 1990s rave scene, MDMA, an amphetamine, is reemerging as a common party drug at Syracuse University. The limited research on the drug’s long-term effects, combined with the euphoric feeling it induces, has led some students to perceive it as a safer alternative to other hard drugs. “I know a lot of kids that say they don’t do drugs would do Molly,” said Casey Siegel, a sophomore fashion design major. Siegel said she heard about MDMA in high school and knew students who did it last semester. But this semester, she has witnessed an increase in the drug’s popularity among students, she said. MDMA usage was at its height in New York state in the 1990s, said Erin Mulvey, special agent and public information officer for the New York field division of the Drug Enforcement Agency. Recent investigations have shown the drug coming across the Canadian border and being marketed to college students as a “club drug,” she said. Pure MDMA reduces the serotonin in the brain. This induces happiness, but the user cannot tell if it is real or fake happiness, she said. But there is no way to tell if the pills or powder are pure MDMA unless they are tested. The ingredients are often mixed in unsanitary places like bathtubs and toilet bowls, Mulvey said. MDMA Use of Molly – the purest form of Ecstasy – growing on campus, becoming party staple 130 more UVA residents than last year overwhelm, crash Internet Panel debates student blog controversy photo illustration by brandon weight | staff photographer T he drink earned the nickname “liquid cocaine.” Four Loko tastes something like artificial fruit, and downing a can of the malt beverage is like down- ing a cup of coffee with three beers. Four Loko is one of the newest caffeinated alcoholic drinks to hit the market. It comes in tall-boy, 23-ounce cans with bright blue, green and yellow logos that adver- tise flavors like watermelon, raspberry, lemon-lime and lemonade. The beverage features doses of guarana and taurine, in addition to caffeine — more than enough to give drinkers a jolt of energy during their drinking SEE FOUR LOKO PAGE 17 drunk Energy SEE MOLLY PAGE 6 Smash hit on college campuses, Four Loko sparks criticism SEE LAW PAGE 7 SEE INTERNET PAGE 8 By Abram Brown | Staff Writer

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Page 1: October 21, 2010

T H E I N D E P E N D E N T S T U D E N T N E W S P A P E R O F S Y R A C U S E , N E W Y O R K

THURSDAYoctober 21, 2010

SNOWLONG SUNSHINEHI 49° | LO 38°

By Michael BorenASST. NEWS EDITOR

Rich Tehan was taking an online quiz from his bedroom at the Uni-versity Village Apartments complex when his Internet crashed.

“I lost connection completely to Blackboard so it cut out, and I got a zero on the quiz,” said Tehan, a junior information management and technology and entrepreneur-ship and emerging enterprises major.

Tehan’s professor let him make up the quiz after he explained the Internet collapse. But it was not the fi rst or last time Tehan’s Internet went down in the apartment, and it has happened with both wireless and Ethernet connections.

He now uses Syracuse Universi-ty’s network to complete homework and has had to travel to Goldstein Student Center six times to connect to the Internet, which he said was a

By Jon HarrisASST. COPY EDITOR

Freedom of speech and the Inter-net was supposed to be the topic of debate at the College of Law Wednesday, but despite organizers’ efforts, the focus derailed to the controversial blog SUCOLitis.

The debate, “Anonymous Free Speech and the Internet at a Pri-vate University” held Wednesday at 12 p.m. in MacNaughton Hall, was part of National Freedom of Speech Week and was hosted by the Tully Center for Free Speech and

the American Constitution Society.Ryan Suto, president of the

American Constitution Society chapter at SU, said the event was not held to promote SUCOLitis, the satirical and controversial Word-Press blog. The blog pokes fun at the Syracuse University College of Law and is written by a group of second- and third-year law students who began posting online in early October. The blog had more than 12,000 hits before it became private Wednesday night.

“This event is not supporting

any particular blog or any specifi c speech,” Suto said. “The partici-pants in this debate do not necessar-ily support what they argue today. They are merely playing a role.”

SUCOLitis is not a news blog and has no actual news and “should not be attributed to any persons, living or dead,” according to a disclaimer on the blog.

Len Audaer, president of the Par-liamentary Debate Society, is the sole person currently being investi-gated for harassment by the College

I N S I D E P U L P

Dress to impressDitch the grungy look in favor of tailored, presentable looks. Check out Pulp’s fall fashion guide for this year’s latest stylings. Page 13

I N S I D E S P O R T S

Mountain climbThe Syracuse football team travels to West Virginia looking for its fi rst victory over the Mountaineers since 2001. Page 28

I N S I D E O P I N I O N

Presidential debate?Ben Klein and Roman Acosta battle over Obama’s health care bill in part 1 of a 3-part series. Page 4

I N S I D E N E W S

Open secretsThe founder of the website PostSecret shares stories with SU students. Page 3

inRolling

By Kathleen Ronayne and Beckie StrumTHE DAILY ORANGE

Dim lights, blaring music, students crammed into a dirty basement: It’s a typical Friday night.

Enter Molly: The room brightens, the heart races, the crowd becomes comforting.

Molly is the nickname for the purest form of MDMA, or Ecstasy. A highly popular drug in the 1990s rave scene, MDMA, an amphetamine, is reemerging as a common party drug at Syracuse University. The limited research on the drug’s long-term effects, combined with the euphoric feeling it induces, has led some students to perceive it as a safer alternative to other hard drugs.

“I know a lot of kids that say they don’t do drugs would do Molly,” said Casey Siegel, a sophomore fashion design major.

Siegel said she heard about MDMA in high school and knew students who did it last semester. But this semester, she has witnessed an increase in the drug’s popularity among students, she said.

MDMA usage was at its height in New York state in the 1990s, said Erin Mulvey, special agent and public information offi cer for the New York fi eld division of the Drug Enforcement Agency. Recent investigations have shown the drug coming across the Canadian border and being marketed to college students as a “club drug,” she said.

Pure MDMA reduces the serotonin in the brain. This induces happiness, but the user cannot tell if it is real or fake happiness, she said. But there is no way to tell if the pills or powder are pure MDMA unless they are tested. The ingredients are often mixed in unsanitary places like bathtubs and toilet bowls, Mulvey said. MDMA

Use of Molly – the purest form of Ecstasy – growing on campus, becoming party staple

130 more UVA residents than last year overwhelm, crash Internet

Panel debates student blog controversy

photo illustration by brandon weight | staff photographer

The drink earned the nickname “liquid cocaine.”

Four Loko tastes something like artifi cial fruit, and downing a can of the malt beverage is like down-

ing a cup of coffee with three beers.Four Loko is one of the newest caffeinated alcoholic

drinks to hit the market. It comes in tall-boy, 23-ounce cans with bright blue, green and yellow logos that adver-tise fl avors like watermelon, raspberry, lemon-lime and lemonade. The beverage features doses of guarana and taurine, in addition to caffeine — more than enough to give drinkers a jolt of energy during their drinking

SEE FOUR LOKO PAGE 17drunkEnergy

SEE MOLLY PAGE 6Smash hit on college campuses, Four Loko sparks criticism

SEE LAW PAGE 7SEE INTERNET PAGE 8

B y A b r a m B r o w n | S t a f f W r i t e r

Page 2: October 21, 2010

S TA R T T H U R SDA Y N E W S @ D A I L Y O R A N G E . C O M2 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

W E AT H E RTODAY FRIDAY SATURDAY

H49| L37 H57| L45H49| L38

M O N D AY

N E W S

In their honor The Remembrance and Lockerbie Scholars will lay roses at the exact time of the Pan Am Flight 103 crash on Fri-day at 2:03 p.m.

P U L P

Hell’s kitchenAdvanced cooking class students feel the heat by ignoring basic kitchen safety.

S P O R T S

Back down to MorgantownCheck dailyorange.com this weekend and in Monday’s edition for all the cov-erage of SU vs. WVU as our beat writ-ers make the trek to the Mountaineer State.

U . S . S P O R T S N E W Scompiled by jon harris | asst. copy editor

Yankees beat Rangers, stay aliveThe New York Yankees beat the Texas Rang-ers 7-2 Wednesday night in Game 5 of the American League Championship Series, according to ESPN.com. The Yankees, the defending World Series champions, avoided elimination and trimmed the Rangers lead in the series to 3-2. Yankees pitcher C.C. Sabathia scattered two runs over six innings with seven strikeouts. Nick Swisher, Curtis Granderson and Robinson Cano all homered for the Yankees. Game 6 of the ALCS returns to Texas on Friday as the Yankees try to even the series, according to ESPN.com.

Giants win, push Phillies to brinkThe San Francisco Giants defeated the Phila-delphia Phillies 6-5 Wednesday night to take a commanding 3-1 National League Champi-onship Series lead, according to ESPN.com. Game 5 will be held Thursday night as Phillies’ ace Roy Halladay faces off againt back-to-back Cy Young Award winner Tim Lincecum.

MLS Commissioner Don GarberWhat: Garber will present a lecture about the future of soccer in AmericaWhere: Kittredge Auditorium, HBCWhen: Thursday, 7 p.m. How much: Free

DanceWorks auditionsWhat: Auditions for DanceWorks, the biggest sports club on campusWhere: Women’s BuildingWhen: Saturday, 8:30 a.m.How much: Free

The Daily Orange is published weekdays during the Syracuse University academic year by The Daily Orange Corp., 744 Ostrom Ave., Syracuse, NY 13210. All contents Copyright 2010 by The Daily Orange Corp. and may not be reprinted with-out the expressed written permission of the editor in chief. The Daily Orange is distributed on and around campus with the first two copies compli-mentary. Each additional copy costs $1. The Daily Orange is in no way a subsidy or associated with Syracuse University.

All contents © 2010 The Daily Orange Corporation

C O R R E C T I O N S

U P C O M I N G E V E N T S

In a Sept. 20 article titled, “PostSecret creator, Frank Warren, to present on campus,” the student group that brought Common to campus last spring was incorrectly stated. The Muslim Students’ Association and the Student African-American Society collaborated to bring Common to campus. The Daily Orange regrets this error.

Page 3: October 21, 2010

n e w s pa g e 3the daily orange

t h u r s d ayoctober 21, 2010

By Heather WentzStaff Writer

Students may want to rethink their majors after a recent survey con-ducted by PayScale.com ranked majors from least to most satisfying based on the careers the majors led to.

The survey showed the least sat-isfying major to be psychology, with 26 percent of psychology degree holders responding they are “satis-fied” or “very satisfied” with their career paths. On the other hand, chemical engineering and manage-ment information systems tied for most satisfying, with 54 percent of

chemical engineering and manage-ment information systems majors saying they are “very satisfied” or “satisfied.”

Psychology and chemical engi-neering professors and students at Syracuse University said they understand why the poll listed their fields as least and most satisfying, but some said they were surprised.

The data from the national sur-vey was collected between April and June and included 10,800 work-ers who completed their bachelor’s degrees between 1999 and 2010. The survey was done as part of The Wall Street Journal’s Paths to Profes-

sions project, which looked at jobs that are satisfying, well paid and have growth potential.

A bachelor’s degree in psychol-ogy does not prepare students for any specific job right out of col-lege, which could contribute to the results of the study, said Kate Carey, professor of psychology at SU.

“Most psych majors know that unless they are going to make a career out of it, they could go into personnel, human services, both of which do not pay well,” Carey said. “Or they could go into advertising, law, a wide variety of things.”

After college, students could go

to graduate school or medical school if they wish to pursue a career in psychology, but most do not go this path, Carey said.

“I’m a little surprised that people are dissatisfied with it, because most people take psych because they love psych,” Carey said. “But being confronted with those wide-open choices after they graduate can be anxiety provoking.”

There are approximately 500 psychology majors at SU, making it one of the most popular majors on campus, said Jennifer Bragg, undergraduate secretary for the

danielle parhizkaran | asst. photo editorfrank warren, creator of the popular blog PostSecret, talks about how running a blog of anony-mous secrets has helped him deal with his own secrets on Wednesday in Goldstein auditorium.

PostSecret creator spills secrets

Leader of US bid for World Cup to speak

poll places psychology as least satisfying college major

World volunteer organization to recruit students

By Allison GuggenheimerStaff Writer

Soccer and the United States have a hesitant relationship. Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber is trying to change that.

Garber, a member of the commit-tee to get the 2022 World Cup bid for the United States, will be speaking in Kittredge Aud it or iu m on Thurs-day at 7 p.m. about why the growth of soccer in the

United States is important and how it can be achieved.

More children play soccer than any other sport, yet it has failed to join the ranks of popular profes-sional sports, said Rick Burton, a professor of sport management. Burton, who has known Garber for more than 20 years, said he chose to ask Garber to speak to students this fall, because the World Cup bid decision falls in December.

“I thought that given that this is the year that the World Cup decision will be made as to which countries will host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup, and that decision gets made in December, that this would be a great time to have him on campus,” Burton said.

Burton and Garber met when they worked together for the NFL. Garber spent most of his time with the NFL dealing with the interna-tional division. He also handled business development, taking care of television and marketing for the league.

Garber became the second com-missioner of MLS in 1999. He has been attempting to get soccer on the same level in America as it is globally and has emphasized creat-ing stadiums that aren’t shared with other sports to help the MLS create a more distinct identity. He has secured the organization fis-cally by adding 15 new investors. By 2012, he will have added nine new teams to the league.

The United States will be com-peting with Australia, Japan, Qatar and South Korea for the 2022 World Cup. Garber is joined on the Bid Committee Board of Directors by a group that includes former President Bill Clinton, U.S. soccer

By Devon BraunsteinContributinG Writer

Volunteering in an orphanage or animal conservation park is a typi-cal part of the itinerary for those traveling with International Stu-dent Volunteers, Inc.

“It gives students such an insight into the struggles of people that you wouldn’t normally hear about,” said Rhys Davies, an international campus representative for ISV. “It’s a fantastic opportunity to come and do some volunteer work.”

Representatives from ISV, a non-profit volunteer organization, will speak with Syracuse University stu-dents about volunteer opportunities abroad Thursday. ISV sends more than 4,000 students from more than 800 universities abroad each year for one month of volunteer work and outdoor activities.

The meetings will be held in Room 304A in Schine Student Cen-ter and will start at 9:20 a.m., run-ning every half-hour until 6 p.m. Davies and Cara Cioni, a national recruiter, will host information ses-sions about the program and how to get involved.

ISV was founded in 1983, when it started sending students to Austra-lia. The organization has now sent 18,000 students abroad to seven dif-ferent areas, including Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Costa Rica, Ecuador, the Dominican Republic and Eastern Europe. A trip to South Africa was added this year.

“You return to wherever you are from, knowing that you have done something really significant,” Davies said.

ISV has spots for approximately 50 students for each country, Davies said. The application process is very

“The CreaTion of a SoCCer naTion in ameriCa”where: Kittredge auditoriumwhen: today, 7 p.m. How much: free

By Elora TocciaSSt. CoPy editor

Students’ voices shook as they voiced their deepest secrets.

Confessing attempted suicides, battles with depression, losing par-ents to cancer and personal sexual activity to an auditorium full of strangers, they bore all to a full audi-ence.

The point of Frank Warren’s shar-ing exercise was this: You are not alone.

PostSecret creator Warren shared his “PostSecret Live” presentation to a sold-out Goldstein Auditorium Wednesday night. Telling stories of humor, hope, despair and strength, Warren discussed the countless secrets he has read since the PostSe-cret project started in November 2004. The PostSecret Project allows anyone

to mail Warren postcards with their personal secrets written on them.

“I believe we all keep our secrets in a box, and each day we decide what to do with that box,” Warren said. “Often we bury the box like a coffin, but when we share it, that can be the most liberating thing in the world.”

Warren talked about the history of PostSecret and the personal struggles his project helped him face. He said he received a postcard with a photo of a door with holes in it that read, “The holes are from when my mother tried to knock down my door so she could continue beating me.” Warren uploaded that postcard on the Post-Secret website and received about a dozen other postcards from people who faced similar situations.

“Those postcards helped me rec-ognize and deal with the fact that

I had that same door in my child-hood,” Warren said. “The courage those people showed in sharing their secrets helped me face my own.”

Warren has received almost every imaginable secret. The most common secret he gets is “I pee in the shower,” but he has also received revenge post-cards and ripped up suicide notes in envelopes. He said he has read secrets on In-N-Out Burger bags, seashells and sonograms.

“At the core of every secret I get, there is a kernel of truth that we can learn from and grow from,” he said.

Warren said he started PostSecret by walking around Washington, D.C., and approaching passersby.

“I would go up to people and say, ‘Hi, my name is Frank and I collect secrets,’” Warren said. He paused. “It

see secret page 12

see garber page 8 see majors page 7

see volunteer page 8

Page 4: October 21, 2010

O P I N I O N @ D A I L Y O R A N G E . C O M4 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

POINT

HALFWAY

part 1 of 3

Passing of health care bill positive first step in creating coverage plan

As Obama reaches 2-year mark, election promises testedHealth care plan infringes on personal

liberties, creates financial problems

W ith the passing of health care reform on March 23, 30 million Americans who were previously

uninsured will now be given health care. After months of debate and increased pres-sure on President Barack Obama to deliver on his reform promises, the fi nal health care bill, although not ideal, is a start to revamp the health care system in America.

The bill ensures that insurance companies will be more closely monitored and will no longer be able to refuse coverage due to pre-existing conditions. In addition, insur-ance companies will be required to cover preventative measures, such as vaccines, and young Americans will be able to stay on their parent’s health care plan until they are 26 years old.

For the fi rst time in the history of America, unemployed and low income Americans will be able to get health care coverage. Hospitals will not be able to turn away patients without coverage, ensuring every American is given at least a minimum of health care benefi ts by the government.

Most Americans will not be affected by this legislation. Nearly 60 percent of Americans are covered by their employers. This will not change. Taxes will only be raised for those citizens who make more than $200,000 a year. Citizens will be required to have health insur-ance, just as drivers are required to have car insurance.

In his presidential acceptance speech, Obama said, “Now is the time to fi nally keep the promise of affordable, accessible health care for every single American.” And with the passing of the health care reform bill, Obama kept his promise.

The fi nal version of the bill was undoubt-edly a compromise. With such strong and unwavering resistance from the Republicans, compromises were necessary. The fi nal bill does not include the government-run public option, there are complications about whether abortions will be covered, and illegal immi-grants will not be given coverage.

The fact remains, however, that legislation has been passed, and at least we have a start-ing point. In 1863, Abraham Lincoln passed the Emancipation Proclamation and signed the subsequent Civil War amendments, and

yet social change for African Americans did not occur.

What the Emancipation Proclamation did do, though, was lay the groundwork for the future. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was able to create change in the 1960s due to the post-Civil War legislation that had been passed a century earlier. The health care bill enables progressive reforms to be made in the future, to further improve our health care system.

Before Obama signed the bill into law, uni-versal health care was an impossible dream. Now with legislation on the books, the govern-ment can con-tinue to improve on our health care system and work to create a more comprehensive coverage plan.

Nearly every democratic nation in the world has already adopted universal health care, and yet for some reason, America has resisted in following suit. Universal health care puts the onus on the government to pro-tect its citizens and ensure safety.

The passing of health care reform is Obama’s greatest political victory to date. Americans who previously could not get insurance coverage or risked being turned away at a hospital are now protected by our government. The government has a duty to protect its citizens, and with the passing of health care reform, Obama has done just that.

Ben Klein is a junior political science and magazine journalism major. His column appears

weekly, and he can be reached at [email protected].

B E N K L E I N

rhetoric meets reality

T he hype of President Barack Obama’s promised change is starting to fade throughout America. People want

solutions, not change. And as the November midterm elections roll around, it will be interesting to see if the Democrats can keep the majority in the House of Representatives and the Senate.

As Obama’s ratings continue to decline, more and more Americans are unhappy with the way the direction of the country is heading. The way Obama sought to help our economy and address an important issue was to attack health care by reinventing the way Americans go about obtaining it.

Health care reform seemed like a great idea, and with the Democrats controlling the House and the Senate, the bill was rushed through and fi nally passed. Before anyone had the chance to actually look at the over 2,000-

page proposal.It seemed as

if Obama helped solve one of the biggest problems facing America. But looking back, many are begin-ning to realize Obama’s health care bill was simply not good enough.

Instead of addressing the problem, it will require every

American to obtain health care. If not, that person is required to pay some sort of fee. As Americans stress over the rising unemploy-ment rate, many have started to look at the health care bill as a step back instead of a step forward.

When the bill entered the House and the Senate, it received virtually no bipartisan sup-port from the Republicans. The only reason it passed was because of the Democrats’ super majority.

It’s interesting how a president who claims to want to reach out to the other side is OK with passing a bill that had only one party’s support. Many believed the only reason no Republicans voted for the bill was because

they wanted to hinder Obama in any way pos-sible, but it’s deeper than that — the bill just isn’t good.

By no means does this bill fi x the problem it sought out to address: to increase America’s access to health care by creating more choices, thus decreasing health care costs. Instead the bill looks to infringe on our liberties in that it requires everyone to have health care.

By 2014, most Americans will be required to have health insurance or pay a fi ne, taking away American’s freedom of choice. The Con-gressional Budget Offi ce reports that by 2019, the uninsured will decrease by 32 million, thus adding a predicted 18 million Americans to be covered under Medicaid. Medicaid is a welfare program, funded and administered by both the federal- and state-level governments.

The increase of Medicaid-insured citizens would overwhelm an already underperform-ing program. Moreover, the federal govern-ment promises to cover all of Medicaid’s increasing benefi ts costs over the years, and the states will cover the added administration costs, causing more state budget cuts and more fi nancial worry.

As Obama looks to expand the govern-ment’s role through intervention in the econ-omy and our everyday choices, Americans are starting to take a step back and rethink how much faith we have in our government. Although this bill aims to cut the national debt and supply people with jobs in the future, people want results now.

Without the majority, mediocre bills with limited bipartisan support, like Obama’s health care bill, will not cut it. Currently, the health care bill sits in the hands of the Supreme Court, which will decide if it’s even constitutional. This has Democrats going into the November elections saying, “Oops.”

Roman Acosta is a junior political science and philosophy major. His column appears weekly,

and he can be reached at [email protected].

R O M A N A C O S TA

hella deadly

Page 5: October 21, 2010

opi n ionsi d e a s

pa g e 5the daily orange

Student group looks to recruit members to attend rally

t h u r s d ayoctober 21. 2010

M idterms are upon us. For most people, this is a time of great stress. We

are crammed into the library like sardines, hunched over our comput-ers and twitching. We spend more time searching for a table than we actually spend doing work, and the printer is bound to break down on at least seventeen different occasions throughout the evening. All in all, midterms are no one’s ideal scenario.

But after giving this matter some thought, I’ve realized that the middle of the semester is actually not a hor-rible time; rather, it is a time of hope and second chances. You’ve made it halfway through, and even if you com-pletely screwed up all your work, you still have another half of the semester to make up for it. More importantly, you still have a chance to do all those semi-sketchy things that you wanted to do during the first half, but didn’t.

You can still hook up with an attractive person in one of your classes and then make life nice and awkward for one another over the rest of the semester. After all, you only have half as much time left to deal with it, you’ll probably never see them again, and really, what’s the harm in getting to know your classmates better? College is all about

making new friends and study bud-dies – two birds, one stone.

Go to class high. Attempt to appear not high. Challenge yourself. Think outside the box. College is all about these things, too.

Go to class. Honestly, if you’ve never been, you should go at least once and scope out the territory. No man is an island, you know.

Work around your deadlines. If you have an upcoming paper due by email, attach a blank document, send it in, relax, enjoy the finale of the Jersey Shore, go out, get wasted, come home, pass out, nurse your hangover all of the next day, go out again, pass out, wake up at 2 PM, and start writing your paper calmly and resourcefully. Send it in. Apologize profusely for the silly mistake! Blame your hectic 18-credit schedule and your strange but loveable pet hamster, who hap-pened to get sick over the weekend.

Now is the time for you to do all

these things. Don’t wait till next semes-ter, when you’ll be in your deluded, post-New Years resolutions phase, and you’ll be all about doing your work in a timely fashion and smiling kindly at freshmen. (Plus, next semester it’ll be cold. Everything about life sucks when it’s cold. Just a reminder.)

Senior economics major Mike Santaniello agrees. “What’s life like these days? It’s awesome! I really don’t let the idea of failing get to me that much,” he says. “Sometimes I wonder if should be as stressed out as everyone else. But I just prefer not stressing.” True story.

Midterms may be all about school-work, but midterm time is essentially a time for you to stop and reflect on your accomplishments thus far, and strategize future moves towards personal success and happiness. I can only wish you luck, remind you that the world is your oyster, and if all else fails, take off your pants! Very suc-cessful people never wear pants. That can be said of celebrities like Lady Gaga and Rihanna, and as of late, it’s been working out pretty well for me. Hehe. Just saying.

Marina Charny is a senior English and textual studies and writing major.

Her column appears every Thursday, and she can be reached at [email protected].

News Editor Beckie StrumOpinion Editor Lauren TousignantFeature Editor Flash Steinbeiser Sports Editor Andrew L. JohnPresentation Director Becca McGovernPhoto Editor Bridget StreeterCopy Editor Susan KimArt Director Molly SneeAsst. News Editor Michael BorenAsst. News Editor Dara McBrideAsst. News Editor Rebecca Kheel Asst. Opinion Editor Amanda AbbottAsst. Feature Editor Aaron GouldAsst. Feature Editor Sara Tracey

t h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t u d e n t n e w s p a p e r o f s y r a c u s e , n e w y o r k

Kathleen Ronayne mANAgiNg EDitOr

Katie McInerney EDitOr iN ChiEF

general manager Peter WaackStudent Business manager Rebekah Jones it manager Mike Escalanteit manager Derek OstranderCirculation manager Harold HeronSenior Advertising Designer Lauren HarmsAdvertising Designer Dom DenaroAdvertising Designer Matt SmiroldoAdvertising representative Adam BeilmanAdvertising representative Eric FormanAdvertising representative Bonnie JonesAdvertising representative Adam Schatz Advertising representative Marissa PerrClassifieds manager Michael KangAdvertising Design Coordinator Lauren GenivivaSpecial Advertising Sections Michelle ChiuBusiness intern Tim BennettBusiness intern Chenming Mo

Asst. Sports Editor Brett LoGiuratoAsst. Sports Editor Tony OliveroAsst. Photo Editor Kirsten CeloAsst. Photo Editor Danielle ParhizkaranDesign Editor Ankur PatankarDesign Editor Kelly SullanDesign Editor Michele PaolellaDesign Editor Luis RendonDesign Editor Alyson RosemanAsst. News Copy Editor Jon HarrisAsst. News Copy Editor Laurence LeveilleAsst. Feature Copy Editor Elora TocciAsst. Sports Copy Editor Michael CohenAsst. Sports Copy Editor Mark Cooper

Midterms week beginning of second chancesm a r i n a c h a r n y

blondes know better

“There’s nothing I can do. I don’t really care. I’m just not into politics.”

How many times have you heard something like that from a friend, or perhaps even from yourself? Between schoolwork and friends, I have often felt completely powerless to budge the political process. Are we condemned to accept the status quo? Are we pre-pared to allocate a significant chunk of our time and money toward politi-cal activism? Not necessarily.

So how does one change the country? For starters, there is now a chapter of Democracy Matters on campus. DM is a national, nonpartisan and nonprofit organization that advocates reducing corporate influence in the policy-making process by implementing fair election reforms across the country.

The Supreme Court recently ruled

that corporate money in elections is a form of free speech and therefore cannot be restricted by campaign finance laws. Political candidates need millions of dollars to run com-petitive campaigns. To collect funds, candidates usually accept massive contributions from major corporations and unions that later expect favors in return for their implicit sponsorship. Elected officials are held accountable to their donors rather than to the constituencies that have elected them — a phenomenon that contradicts a participatory form of government.

Don’t think that DM is exclusively for students who are “into politics.” Whether you’re a hardcore liberal or a fiscal conservative, DM’s mission is applicable to you. As long as elections are largely financed by corporations

and unions, elected officials cannot be truly representative of “we the people.”

There is a viable public alternative to running campaigns aptly referred to as “Clean Elections.” Anyone eligible to run for public office would be given public funds for campaign-ing if they prove themselves to be serious, legitimate candidates who are willing to comply with certain guidelines, as well as full disclosure of all of their donors. This would per-mit more candidates to run for office, diversifying the political process, and relying more heavily on small donations from citizens while ban-ning direct corporate funding.

Candidates would be assessed

based on their ideas, not visibility in the media. Candidates would be sup-plied with funds to run a campaign, so they’d have more time to communicate directly with voters, instead of pooling millions from industries interested in affecting the policy-making process.

Clean elections would only cost each taxpayer less than $10 a year — much less than what we indirectly waste on today’s multimillion dollar campaigns — primarily financed by and thus beholden to special interest groups. Public financing has already been implemented in other states. Recently, New York state was just two votes away from implementing a public finance option.

Political humor often helps engage young people in politics. DM is taking the initiative to coordinate efforts for

SU students to attend both Jon Stew-art’s “Rally to Restore Sanity” and Stephen Colbert’s “March to Keep Fear Alive” rallies in Washington, D.C., along with organizations like STAND: A Student Anti-Genocide Coalition. Neither group is beholden to a political ideology other than the idea that the nation we are going to inherit needs true grassroots movements to ensure participatory democracy and human rights over corporate privilege.

Will you join us? Attend a general interest meeting for the rallies at 7:15 p.m. in Maxwell Auditorium. Let’s rally to keep our democracy alive.

Christy LevinCAmPuS COOrDiNAtOr OF

DEmOCrACy mAttErS

l e t t e r t o t h e e d i t o r

S c r i b b l e

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is often laced with other drugs like ketamine, methamphetamines and heroine, she said.

Some dealers press well-known brand names into the pills, like Coach or Mercedes, to market them to young people, she said.

“It’s kind of playing Russian Roulette,” Mul-vey said. “You don’t know where the drug’s from. You don’t know what’s in it.”

Erica Peterson, a senior anthropology and Spanish major, said she had never heard of stu-dents taking Molly before she left to study abroad in Chile last spring. But when she returned to SU this semester, she said use of the drug seems to have exploded.

Although she has never taken the drug, she knows many who have. She recalls one weekend party during which “half the people I knew left to do Molly,” she said.

Crouse Hospital, less than a mile away from SU campus, has seen a significant increase in the

past two to three months of patients in multiple units who use MDMA, said Monika Taylor, man-ager of outpatient services.

There has also been an increase in calls to the hospital from users and their family members for more information about the drug, she said. Some parents call with concerns about their child’s well-being in regards to MDMA, she said. The increase in MDMA use started recently, Taylor said, so there are no solid statistics to give yet.

Crouse’s rehabilitation center has six differ-ent support groups for people recovering from

dependency. One of the clinicians told Taylor half of the members of her group names MDMA as their drug of choice, she said. Taylor said there has also been an increase in young people com-ing through the detoxification unit as a result of using Molly or Ecstasy, she said.

Crouse tests MDMA with a urine screening, and Taylor said the hospital has a panel of basic drugs it tests. That panel changes as drug trends change. Currently MDMA is on the list, she said.

The age range for patients coming in for MDMA treatment or therapy is generally between 18 and 25, Taylor said. She is unsure if SU students make up a significant portion of those patients, she said.

“I know it does include some college students, but I would be hesitant to say just college stu-dents,” Taylor said.

Taylor attributes the drugs’ popularity among young people to the reason why young people explore other drugs — a sense of invincibility. Young people often think nothing can hurt them when it comes to drugs, Taylor said.

Some of the usual effects Taylor has seen are increased heart rate, heavy sweating, teeth clenching, chills and sometimes a sharp increase in body temperature, she said. In the 1990s, when Ecstasy first made headlines as a rave drug, Tay-lor said there was a trend of sucking on pacifiers because of the teeth grinding.

There are patients at Crouse who claim a dependency and see withdrawal effects, but that is not the case for everyone who uses MDMA, Taylor said.

“From my understanding, some people may not get addicted to it,” Taylor said. “Young people are willing to take the risk and bet they won’t get addicted.”

MDMA in itself can be harmful to the body, but Taylor said what young people should be more wary of is that MDMA in Ecstasy or Molly is not always pure.

Some patients who said they used MDMA tested positive for PCP, and when told, they responded, ‘Well, that’s not the drug I was using,’” Taylor said.

Tibor Palfai is the professor for PSY 315: “Drugs and Human Behavior” and has authored books on drugs. Most of the research on the long-term effects of the drug has proven to be inconclusive, he said. The drug could be legally purchased in bars until the mid-1980s, he said.

The drug is often taken in party settings, but alcohol and MDMA are not compatible, Palfai said. This is because alcohol is a “downer” and Ecstasy is an “upper.”

MDMA is popular among college students because it induces feelings of empathy toward others. The drug makes users feel warm toward everyone around them, he said.

“College students are highly sexual beings, and I think this drug facilitates it,” Palfai said.

MDMA has been used successfully in cer-tain medical cases, Palfai said. In the 1980s, a psychiatrist in San Francisco used it as a therapeutic aid, he said. But “in the wrong hands, irresponsible college students may use too much,” Palfai said.

For college students, the risks involved increase in a party setting, where dancing and overcrowding are common. Dehydration is a main side effect of MDMA, and if not consciously avoided, it could lead to overheating, convulsing and seizing, Palfai said.

Despite these possible dangers, students who take MDMA perceive the drug as benign in comparison to other drugs, such as cocaine or a hallucinogen.

“It’s not like a hallucinogenic, you don’t have to have a babysitter” said Peterson, the SU senior. “I don’t know anyone who would do it to watch a movie.”

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By Debbie TruongContributing Writer

With the midterm elections fast approach-ing in less than two weeks, Washington Post writer Anne Kornblut will discuss this year’s campaigns during a lecture Friday afternoon at the Maxwell School of Citizen-ship and Public Affairs.

Kornblut’s speech is the first this year in the annual State of Democracy Lecture Series. Kornblut, a White House correspon-dent for The Washington Post, will also be discussing her book, “Notes From the Cracked Ceiling: Hillary Clinton, Sarah Palin, and What It Will Take For a Woman to Win,” and President Barack Obama’s progress after two years in office.

November’s State of Democracy lecture

will center on an involved discussion with Roger Hardy, an Islamic affairs analyst with BBC World Service.

Kristi Andersen, a professor of political science, and Susan Arbetter, public affairs director of WCNY News and host of The Capitol Pressroom, will join Kornblut in Friday’s discussion.

“I will be responding to the talk given by Anne Kornblut, and I expect that the three of us — and the audience — will then have a discussion about the role of gender in politics, political leadership and politi-cal decision-making,” Andersen said in an e-mail.

Elizabeth Cohen, an assistant professor of political science, said she and co-organiz-er Grant Reeher, director of the Campbell

Public Affairs Institute, hope the series will focus campus attention on social issues in politics.

“The Campbell Public Affairs Institute, together with the Maxwell Dean’s office, believes that one of our roles in the academic community of Syracuse is to foster open con-versation about matters of pressing concern to our nation,” Cohen said in an e-mail.

To accomplish the goal of fostering a conversation, input is welcome from the anticipated 100- to 500-person turnout dur-ing both the post-lecture discussion and at the reception that follows, Cohen said.

Cohen and Reheer aim to instill long-term political concern in all lecture attendees, she said. In addition to cultivating a politi-cally informed public, Cohen said, the series

was organized to bridge the divide between policy makers and those directly impacted by policy making: the public.

“Our lectures are places where every member of the community can expect to interact directly with people who set politi-cal agendas, write authoritatively about politics and are in some way responsible for resolving pressing political questions of the day,” Cohen said.

Nicole Ruben, an undecided freshman in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Commu-nications, said she hopes to attend the event.

“It would be interesting to hear her view on prevalent current issues and how our society should cope with them,” Ruben said.

[email protected]

Washington Post correspondent to discuss female power in politics

Department of Psychology. She said this could be because psychology could be applied to a number of other fields. People who did not fur-ther their psychology education after graduat-ing tended to move into unrelated fields after one year, according to the study.

If psychology majors further their educa-tion and become a psychologist, they could make anywhere from $48,840 to $160,127, according to PayScale.com.

Alex Collins, a junior psychology major, said he picked psychology because he will be entering the military after graduation, and the major allows him to learn about people. But Collins said it is hard to find a niche in the major.

“I think psych as a major is really pretty worthless because it is kind of like majoring in college,” Collins said. “There is nothing spe-cific, and it’s such a broad field that you have a hard time finding topics to focus on.”

Collins, who is also majoring in forensic science, said pairing psychology with another major or minor is beneficial because students can have a field of expertise along with a psy-chology background.

“You pretty much can’t do anything with a major in psych,” Collins said. “You have to pursue your education further if you want to make a career out of it.”

On the other end of the survey’s spectrum fell chemical engineering as the most satisfying major. George Martin, professor and program director of chemical engineering at SU, said chemical engineering is versatile because stu-dents can enter a variety of fields post-gradua-

tion. They have a unique skill set that prepares them for many areas of work, including medi-cine, law, finance or management.

“Having the problem-solving skills of a chemical engineer gives you a heads-up in a lot of different career paths,” Martin said.

There are currently 59 chemical engineer-ing undergraduate majors at SU, according to the Undergraduate Records Office.

Chemical engineering enrollment at SU has increased in the past few years, and Martin said he hopes it will continue to do so. He attributed this in part to all of the problems currently related to energy, global warming and renewable energy resources.

Another factor that draws people to chemi-cal engineering is the starting salary out of college, Martin said. According to PayScale.com, the average starting salary for a chemical engineering graduate out of college is $59,947.

“I think in general chemical engineers are paid pretty well,” Martin said. “Probably the highest average starting salary for B.S. graduates of all of the different fields because there are a number of jobs that pay reasonably well.”

Sam Poirier, a junior chemical engineering major, said she chose her major because she loved chemistry and wanted to do something useful with it. While some majors require internships or a co-op with companies to get hands-on experience, chemical engineering classes already provide Poirier with that, she said.

“It’s a lot of work and takes up a lot more time than most people in other majors, which is kind of a downfall, but it’s really interest-ing,” Poirier said. “You’re teaching yourself a lot of it, which in itself is really satisfying.”

[email protected]

of Law for authoring the blog. Audaer has neither confirmed nor denied authoring the blog and said the Office of Judicial Affairs is also likely to soon start an investigation.

Roy Gutterman, director of the Tully Cen-ter for Free Speech, and Jason Feldman, a first-year law student, spoke in support of free speech, but first-year law student Chris Lat-tuca and assistant professor of law and LGBT studies Tucker Culbertson spoke against it.

Gutterman said the panel should be just the beginning of a process to discuss and debate the blog and its controversial aspects.

“We are participating in one of the rem-edies right now because the best way to deal with offensive content, offensive speech is to talk more about it and to have a dialogue,” Gutterman said.

The blog highlights the issue of the right to anonymous speech on the Internet, Gutter-man said. And these students are within their rights because people viewing the blog are reading it knowing it’s satirical — principles protected under the First Amendment, he said.

But the amendment does not protect the authors of the blog within the confines of the private university, as SU has its own free speech policies and does not have to adhere to the First Amendment, Lattuca said.

“If Syracuse University decides to find a way to punish the students who created the SUCOLitis blog, they have every right to do so,

and they’re not going to be bound by the U.S. Constitution,” Lattuca said.

SUCOLitis is just another form of bullying, Lattuca said. He said a post on the blog about the current first-year law class being the best-looking and “especially slutty” was offensive. He said students should not have to wait until the blog becomes more extreme and offensive to take action.

“The thing about going too far is you haven’t gone too far until it’s too late,” Lattuca said. “We don’t look at these blogs and say ‘Wow, this is wildly offensive’ until something bad has happened.”

One of the problems with SUCOLitis is many of the people it pokes fun at are “women or people of color” when the law school is “blindingly white,” Culbertson said. Those students who are most vulnerable should not have racial and ethnic slurs thrown in their faces, although derogatory names for sex, race and sexual practices are thrown around at SU often, he said.

Culbertson referenced cases of five lesbian, gay and transgender students who committed suicide over the past four months during the debate, including Tyler Clementi, an 18-year-old freshman at Rutgers University. He com-mitted suicide on Sept. 22 after his roommate secretly filmed him during a sexual act with another man in his room and posted it live on the Internet.

The blog might be a bad joke, Culbertson said, but it still has the potential to cause harm.

But the students should not be punished for writing the blog, Culbertson said. Although

expelling the students would be much easier than going through the remedy process, it would not be a successful means to handle the situation, he said.

“I’m interested in restorative justice as a manner by which not simply to defend a com-munity but to make one,” Culbertson said.

In his closing comments, Gutterman agreed with Culbertson about the punishment of the students and said the best way to deal with these issues is discussion. He said the blog should not result in the law school punishing the authors.

But previous students at SU were disciplined and even threatened for similar actions.

In 2005, freshman Amanda Seideman cre-ated a Facebook group which was critical of her writing class teaching assistant, Rachel Col-lins, according to an article published in The Daily Orange on Feb. 8, 2006. The group, which was called “Clearly Rachel doesn’t know what she’s doing ever,” put Seideman and three of her friends under investigation from Judicial Affairs, according to the article.

Seideman told The Daily Orange in the article that she was threatened to be made an example of by Judicial Affairs. The students were told if they made fliers explaining the dangers of Facebook, their punishment would be lenient. By the end of the controversy, one student decided to transfer to another school, and Seideman and the other two students were placed on disciplinary reprimand, according to the article.

“In a time where we’re dealing with wars, crushing unemployment, financial costs of education, I think we have more serious fish

to fry than a couple of jokes, even bad jokes,” Gutterman said.

As for the blog damaging SU’s reputation as an institution, Gutterman said the offensive content would not deter him from attending the College of Law if he was a prospective student.

But Andrew Natalo, a first-year law student, said SU has every right to protect its image by disciplining the authors of the blog.

“I think the blog is offensive, but I’m OK with that,” Natalo said. “I’m also OK with the university coming down hard on the people that made it. I feel like the university has every right to do that. I feel like they had every legal right to publish it, but in the end it’s a private university.”

SUCOLitis is different from “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” and other satirical shows because the blog goes after private citi-zens rather than public citizens, said Jeff Win-ston, a third-year law student who attended the lecture. Yet he said the authors of SUCOLitis should not be kicked out of the university.

“Don’t kick them out, but put a face to them,” Winston said. “Don’t let them hide behind the wall of the Internet and be anonymous.”

Ryan McCarthy, a third-year law student who attended the lecture, does not think the students should get punished for writing the blog.

“It says right on there that it’s satirical, and the one article had a (third-year law student) who is a very good student and a friend of mine and is getting a job at Chipotle,” he said. “It’s funny and has redeeming quality in and of itself.”

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huge inconvenience.“You’re paying big money, and you can’t

even depend on your Internet,” Tehan said. “And you’re forced to leave your apartment to get work done.”

The slow Internet connection is a wide-spread problem at the South Campus UVA complex, where 432 people live and pay between $900 and $1,000 per month for rent. Residents argue they have experienced online troubles since school started in late August, and some complain the complex’s manage-ment has been slow to fi x the problem. Stu-dents have taken their complaints to the Web as well, where they have been complaining since around Sept. 1 on the apartment com-plex’s Facebook page.

The number of UVA residents grew by 130 in its second year open, so more students are eating up the available bandwidth, but UVA offi cials did not expect the Internet connec-tion to slow because it was not a problem the previous year, said Matt Burkett, the com-munity manager for UVA.

“We didn’t anticipate having this much of an issue,” he said.

UVA runs into the most problems with its Internet connection when its usage peaks between 8 p.m. and 2 a.m., Burkett said. The connection is usually fi ne during the day because students are in class, he said.

UVA offi cials decided the Internet’s band-width needed to be expanded the week of Sept. 13, Burkett said. The complex plans to cancel its contract with Time Warner Cable. The bandwidth provider, Fibertech Networks, will expand UVA’s Internet connection by laying half a mile of new fi ber line, but there is no timetable for when the project will start or fi nish, Burkett said.

“It’s not as easy as just fl ipping a switch, there’s a lot of infrastructure involved,” he said.

The expansion process is slow because Fibertech has to create a contract, fi nal-ize permits with Syracuse, install the fi ber underground and schedule the construction, said Scott Casey, vice president of informa-

tion technology at Education Realty Trust, which owns the UVA property.

“You’ve got to possibly go under streets, you’ve got to redirect traffi c, possibly because of construction crews,” Casey said.

Fibertech is currently in the process of getting permits approved from the city for the fi ber expansion, which will double UVA’s bandwidth to 100 megabytes, Casey said. He said he expects the fi ber line to be installed before bad winter weather strikes, but could not guarantee the new line would be in before fi nal exams in December.

“It’s not going to be six months or anything like that,” Casey said. “We’ll have it in as quickly as possible.”

The biggest challenge UVA faces is an increase in video streaming on websites like Hulu, Casey said. But Education Realty Trust, which manages nearly 60 properties, has complexes with no Internet problems that have more students but the same amount of bandwidth as UVA, Casey said.

“Managing the Internet usage at these properties is really a day-to-day challenge for us,” Casey said.

But the fi x may not come soon enough for some students, who have already decided not to renew their leases for next year.

“Basically the students are out of luck,” said Josh Fishman, a junior marketing man-agement and entrepreneurship major who pays nearly $1,000 for rent.

He started experiencing problems with UVA’s Internet connection at the beginning of the semester and has since been unable to open MySlice at times. When Fishman tries to watch Netfl ix, only the audio or video will play, and videos sometimes take 20 minutes to load, he said.

“One night it’ll be good, and then the next night it’ll be awful,” Fishman said. “It won’t

even load.”He tries to get most of his homework com-

pleted during the day on campus because of UVA’s Internet issues, he said. He blames UVA’s management team, he said, for not communicating the problems to residents.

“It’s basically a big game of pointing the fi nger at each other,” he said.

Fishman also does not get any high-defi -nition channels, something that was guaran-teed in the lease, and his basic cable channels look fuzzy, he said.

Burkett, UVA’s community manager, said the complex was trying to make upgrades to respond to the cable problems.

UVA plans to add a program offering extra high-defi nition channels, but Burkett said there was no timeframe for when the upgrades would be installed. Through the updates, the satellite dish on top of UVA’s clubhouse would intercept new channels and run them through an existing network into residents’ rooms, he said.

UVA resident Dan Blackson, who pays nearly $900 per month for his space, also said he has not received any high-defi nition channels.

“We do pay for that stuff, and we’re not get-ting it,” said Blackson, a junior fi lm major.

His Internet was slow from the fi rst week he got to school, and he said UVA was not pre-pared for the number of students living there this year. UVA offi cials insisted the complex’s Internet speed was fi ne and ignored their residents, he said.

“If they would just respond to us, people would chill out for at least a couple days,” Blackson said. “It’s bad business, it’s just straight up bad business.”

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competitive, especially for the more popular travel destinations, such as Australia and Costa Rica. Students can pick up the one-page application at any of Thursday’s meetings.

During the fi rst two weeks of the trip, students participate in the volunteer work of their choice, with a focus on either conser-vation or community development. Options include working at orphanages, schools, ani-mal conservation parks and several other

organizations. In the second half of the trip, students have the chance to mountain bike, white water raft, repel off mountains and explore local cities.

ISV has approximately 50 or 60 SU alumni from the past few years and has trained two SU students as representatives to talk to others about the opportunities the trip has to offer.

Daniel Crockenberg, a senior and one of the student representatives, traveled to Australia with ISV. He worked at Wild Mountains Trust to build an ecological restoration center and also white water rafted, explored the Great

Barrier Reef and rolled down a 200-foot sand dune.

“You’re constantly doing things and seeing all sorts of new things,” said Crockenberg.

Other students have helped preserve envi-ronmentally threatened species, such as the kiwi bird and the kangaroo, Davies said.

“It’s one of those experiences that’s pretty hard to describe,” Crockenberg said. “When you look at the stars at night, they just don’t look the same here.”

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INTERNETF R O M P A G E 1

VOLUNTEERF R O M P A G E 3

star Landon Donovan, actor Morgan Free-man and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.

Holding the World Cup in America would move soccer in the direction Garber is push-ing it, Burton said.

“The perception is obviously that we see America as a football, basketball, baseball country, but the reality is that we’re very much growing as a soccer country,” Burton said.

Burton gave Garber the option to select his own topic, but given the timeliness of the World Cup and his dedication to soccer over the last 11 years, Burton said the betterment of the sport was an obvious choice.

“I think it was evident that he would speak about soccer, or football, as it’s known around the world, because he’s the commis-sioner of MLS, and he’s been one of the chief architects of the World Cup bid,” Burton said. “Asking him to speak about anything else would kind of go away from what his real passion has been for quite some time.”

[email protected]

GARBERF R O M P A G E 3

“You’re paying big money and you can’t even depend on your Internet. And you’re forced to leave your apartment to get work done.”

Rich TehanUNIVERSITY VILLAGE APARTMENT TENANT

“The perception is obviously that we see America as a football, basketball, baseball country, but the reality is that we’re very much growing as a soccer country.”

Rick BurtonPROFESSOR OF SPORT MANAGEMENT

Page 9: October 21, 2010

NEW APARTMENT LISTINGS!1, 2, 3, 4, & 5-Bedroom Apartments

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House huntGREEK LIFE

every other thursday in news

By Meghin DelaneySTAFF WRITER

Following the end of fall recruitment on Oct. 8, the Interfraternity Council is reviewing the changed fraternity recruitment process

that led to more men receiving bids but also problems with recruits showing up to all the houses.

A total of 135 potential new members par-ticipated this fall in the recruitment process, said Justin Tasolides, the IFC vice president and chair of recruitment. Ten of them did not receive bids on Bid Day, compared to 55 men who did not receive bids last fall and 150 who did not receive bids in the larger spring recruit-ment.

The main change that affected the number of recruits was in the open house portion, in which the potential members visit every frater-nity house.

This year, recruits were led to all of the hous-es by brothers called Rho Chis from the various fraternities on campus. This is a change from last spring’s process, in which men did not have to visit every house, and the main job of Rho Chis was to inspect chapter houses to make sure they were sticking to IFC’s dry rush policy, said McGhee Cost, the president of Phi Gamma Delta.

The structure IFC used in the past did not support the large greek system on campus, said Eddie Banks-Crosson, director of the Offi ce of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs.

“The changes were made because we had a large number of men not being placed at the end of recruitment,” he said. “The structure in the past has mirrored a smaller community, and we are a large greek community, and we had to change the structure of the recruitment process to mirror that.”

The system was successful overall, but it does have a few areas for improvement, Tasol-ides said.

“We ran into a few errors and a number of things have to be worked out, such as how long each potential new member gets at each house and issues with Rho Chis,” Tasolides said.

“However, the issues are defi nitely workable.”Though Cost’s chapter, Phi Gamma Delta,

had more recruits visit the chapter, it experi-enced problems on the third night of the open house, Cost said.

“Our house didn’t see any Rho Chis or poten-tial new members for almost an hour and a half, and when they did come, they were off schedule,” Cost said. “It’s not exactly clear why the groups didn’t show up.”

Phi Gamma Delta is investigating the issue within IFC, Cost said. But Cost said he is hope-ful there will be measures put in place next semester to ensure this does not happen again. He would like to see more accountability for anyone involved who does not follow the guide-lines set out by the IFC, he said.

“When the system changes so that everyone must visit all IFC chapters and we still don’t see all the potential new members, there is a prob-lem,” Cost said. “In the future, I’d like to see these rules enforced so that things go the way they are advertised, instead of being adjusted on the fl y.”

IFC will keep working on these problems to make sure the system is solid for spring recruit-ment, Tasolides said.

“We’re going to take the successes and fail-ures from this fall recruitment and fi gure out what worked and what didn’t,” he said. “Then we will apply it to the spring to make it as suc-cessful and as effi cient as possible.”

The changes put in place this semester yield-ed one of the more successful processes IFC has seen in years due to the large increase of bids received and accepted, Tasolides said. He has hoped for a continued increase in semesters to come.

“We really want to increase our numbers across the board and make our greek commu-nity stronger and stronger,” he said. “Anyone who wants to be involved in greek life should have the opportunity, no question, and hope-fully with this system, they’ll fi nd the right places for them.”

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Fall recruitment brings in more bids, attendance complaints

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c o m i c s & c ro s s wo r d c o m i c s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m

bear on campus by tung pham | [email protected]

10 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

comic strip by mike burns | burnscomicstrip.blogspot.com

apartment 4h by joe medwid and dave rhodenbaugh | 4hcomic.com

the perry bible fellowship by nicholas gurewitch | pbfcomics.com

last-ditch effort by john kroes | lde-online.com

want to know the secret to eternal youth?drawing comics.

and then submitting them to [email protected]

Page 11: October 21, 2010

nov e m be r 2 9 , 2 0 0 7 1 1p u l p @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m

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By Gregory MillerStaff Writer

The collegiate gentleman is dead. The bands of brothers merrily skipping to class in their flouncing pleated pants and varsity sweaters are long gone. Today, the chances of seeing a herd of guys wearing four different items made of sweatshirt material are higher than seeing one guy in a pair of penny loafers.

“The standard sweatshirt isn’t going to cut it,” said Syracuse University alumna Sharon Clott, editor of MTV Style, MTV’s fashion web-site. “Even if you put four on, it still doesn’t work. So step up your game.”

Thanks in part to the recession, men’s run-way shows have become decreasingly idealistic. For the average male college student, this means styles have become increasingly available. Case in point: Fall’s trends are all about cool, casual comfort, not the glitz of yesteryear. But it does include a number of relatively simple trends Syracuse guys can pull off without too much effort.

Take flannel, which is finally having its moment in the sun.

“Flannel’s something that’s had a horrible reputation for all these years,” Clott said. “Like, ‘Ew, don’t touch flannel.’ But now designers are really embracing it.”

Flannel is an easy fix for warmth that also adds a little color in the wardrobe. Molly Gal-lagher, editor in chief of Zipped, SU’s fashion magazine that is published once a semester, called the look one of her favorites.

“I think it’s really easy to layer and manipu-late and carry into winter,” she said.

Just be careful of what you pair the flan-

nel with, lest you look like a lumberjack who suddenly rolled up on campus. To avoid the grungy look, don’t wear the flannel with a pair of grubby khakis, said Gallagher, also a staff writer for The Daily Orange.

“If it’s with a dark-washed jean and a nicer pair of shoes, it looks more put together,” Clott said. “The worst thing to do is wear a printed T-shirt that says ‘Syracuse’ with the flannel over top.” Instead, pair a flannel with a solid white, gray or black tee.

With that flannel, go ahead and throw on a pair of the season’s hottest pants — tailored denim. Clott said college guys’ jeans are in desperate need of some attention.

“They’ve been too lazy, just taking their baggy pants and going with it for all their lives,” she said. To maintain masculinity, Clott suggested pairing the more fitted jeans with a looser top.

The biggest thing in footwear this year couldn’t translate to Syracuse any better.

“Every guy who’s into fashion this year will be buying a combat boot if they don’t have it already,” said Clott. “I feel like it’s the must-have for fall.”

Last season was all about the hiking boot, but the ability to make the combat boot casual or formal makes this year’s look far more versa-tile. Both Clott and Gallagher said combat boots work best with the flaps loose and on the outside of pant legs.

As temperatures drop, the go-to coat for several years running has been the peacoat. Finally, the runway has transitioned to the duf-fle coat — those trench-looking coats with three or more toggles down the front for closure.

“It’s really to take on and off in class,” Gal-lagher said. “And they offer great detail.”

Clott said there’s one look with these coats every guy must avoid.

“You can go prep-overload with this and think you should be on a yacht,” she said.

While most students probably won’t be on a yacht anytime soon, some formal occasions may arise. One of the freshest looks for formal evenings is the tuxedo jacket paired with dark denim.

“I automatically think of Brad Goreski from ‘The Rachel Zoe Project,’” Clott said. “He’s kind of perfected the tux jacket in any occasion, every occasion, every-moment-that-I-wake-up look.”

Gallagher said the most important thing about the look is its transferability from day into night. And best of all, Clott said, it’s great for students who will be dressing to impress.

“I think if a guy were wearing this on a date, I’d think, ‘Oh, he’s got it together,’” she said. “He’s not just trying to hook up on a night after Chuck’s.”

[email protected]

Men’s fashion heads in relaxed direction

“The standard sweatshirt isn’t going to cut it. Even if you put four on, it still doesn’t work. So step up your game.”

Sharon Clotteditor of MtV Style and SyracuSe

uniVerSity aluMna

Page 12: October 21, 2010

p u l p @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m1 2 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

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felt as weird as it sounds.”Most people told him they didn’t have secrets.

He eventually persuaded them to write down a secret anyway and discovered those were usu-ally the most interesting ones.

Students were surprised by how relevant they found the presentation.

“It hit home for me in ways that I definitely wasn’t expecting,” said Leslie Ott, a sophomore inclusive elementary special education major.

Jessica Denman, a freshman fashion design major, said she has been reading Post-Secret since she was in eighth grade but did not expect the presentation to resonate with her so strongly. “It was shockingly relatable,” she said.

Warren also talked about the importance of turning ideas into reality. At one point, he flashed a photo of a nipple with a hair being plucked from it, and the word “confession” was scrawled across the top. The photo was one of many censored from Warren’s five PostSecret books by his publisher, HarperCollins Pub-lishers.

He encouraged students to take risks and embrace the power of the Internet, just as he did, and to put their ideas into action.

“I know that there are one thousand, maybe ten thousand people out there who have ideas as good as or better than PostSecret,” he said. He said each time he gives his presentation, he hopes to inspire someone to take an idea, believe in it and make it happen.

After Warren’s presentation, students lined up at microphones on either side of the audito-rium and confessed their own secrets.

Some fought back tears as they shared their

pain with the crowd. One student said he was rejected from 10 of the 13 schools he applied to and still feels like a failure. As he walked back to his seat, another student shouted, “You’re not a failure!” prompting the crowd to cheer wildly.

Choking through her story, another student teared up as she talked about the suicide of a close friend and her own struggles with depres-sion. Strangers hugged her as she walked back to her seat.

“I really admired the bravery of everyone who came up to the microphone,” said Kerey Morris, a freshman international relations

major. “I wasn’t expecting all the random hug-ging and support. It was amazing.”

Warren travels around the country giving his presentations because of the support that rises in response to the students who quiver through their secrets.

“Each story you all shared is an individual fingerprint,” he said. “But together, they tell our universal story and remind us of the most important thing: You are never alone.”

[email protected]

postsecretf r o m p a g e 3

“Each story you all shared is an individual fingerprint. But together, they tell our universal story and remind us of the most important thing: You are never alone.”

Frank WarrenPostsecret creator

Page 13: October 21, 2010

PA G E 1 3the daily orange

T H U R S D AYOCTOBER 21, 2010

From the

Adopt the season’s top trends with long layers, comfortable knits

runway

hillsideto the

Text by Lauren TousignantOPINION EDITOR

Photos by Keith EdelmanSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Finally. After two seasons of bright neons, bold prints and

exaggerated shapes, designers have turned down the volume.

Chic looks and sleek styles dominated the fall 2010 run-

ways. The studded, grunge rock ‘n’ roll designs have faded into fash-

ion abyss as designers are more focused on tailored, put-together

pieces that are better suited for the opera house than a KISS concert.

The ripped-up rags are back in the trash, and clean looks have

taken center stage. The biggest trends to take away from the fall

runways are both sleek and Syracuse-friendly. Heavy knits, faux fur,

long sweaters and layers — lots and lots of layers.

A front row seat at Louis Vuitton, Fendi and Marc Jacobs might

imply we’re back in 1958 or, with any luck, on the set of “Mad Men.”

Vuitton’s elbow-length leather gloves, waist-cinched skirts and

corseted tops are a beautiful breath of fresh air from the grunge

look.

Even though a high-waist, calf-length, full-tweed skirt might be the

last thing to expect in a Saturday night wardrobe, Vuitton’s ladylike

outfi ts have inspired a new season of curve-enhancing clothes. Look

for waist-cinching belts, soft necklines and simple accessories; turn to

Christina Hendricks from “Mad Men” for further instruction.

Fur fans can rejoice. If there was only one trend to take away from SEE FALL FASHION PAGE 16

online photos: style.commodel: josephine pimentel

the sweet stuff in the middle

Page 14: October 21, 2010

1 4 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0 15

Derek Lam

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Marc Jaco

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FurLook for a tailored trench coat with fur trim to tackle two trends at once.

Coat: Ellie Mia Boutique

Heavy KNitsPerfect for blizzards and sub-zero days.

Camo shirt, scarf: Some GirlsSweater, headband: Ellie Mia Boutique

NordicPair long sweaters with Nordic pat-terned accessories for a comfort-able, effortless look.

Scarves: Some GirlsSweater: Ellie Mia Boutique

layersMix patterns and colors for a look that’s stylish and cozy.

Jeans, Sweater: Ellie Mia Boutique Vest, hat: Some Girls

f r o m t h e ru n wa y t h e h i l l s i d e

Page 15: October 21, 2010

p u l p @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m16 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

the fall runways, it was fur. Almost every designer, from Chanel to Balenciaga to Giorgia Armani, featured vests, jackets, sweaters, scarves, boots and skirts made of or trimmed with the fuzzy stuff.

Chanel may have cloaked their models in head-to-toe fur frocks that would only be practical in the North Pole. However, the line’s consistency is a sure sign that fur is here to stay. Animal lovers, relax: The biggest trend in fur was that it was all faux.

Other designers, such as D&G, Marc Jacobs and Jean Paul Gaultier, have filled their collec-tions with cheery Nordic styles. This mountain-friendly pattern may have you rummaging through your mom’s old ski sweaters, but know that these styles are anything but ‘80s. In hues of rich reds and navy blues, Domenico Dolce and Ste-fano Gabbana’s designs make you wish you were sitting in a wooden Colorado cabin, curled up in front of a fireplace with a mug of hot chocolate — wrapped in a reindeer knit sweater, of course.

The head-to-toe ensembles of D&G can be overwhelming outside the ski lodge, but the pat-tern can easily be worked into any winter outfit. Snowflake hats, gray cable sweaters and fur-trimmed vests make for the perfect accessories for Syracuse’s snowy days.

Anna Sui, Christian Dior, Missoni, and Marcus Wainwright and David Neville of Rag & Bone wrapped their models in layers of sweaters, long-sleeved shirts, scarves and fur-trimmed vests. Rag & Bone continued with the menswear trend, piling on plaid button-ups, gray wool coats and plenty of blazers. Anna Sui decided against the more tailored trend and designed her layers with bright colors, loud

patterns and plenty of funk. Christian Dior’s equestrian-themed line showed layers of brown leather, frilly frocks and plaid blazers.

Heavy knits and long pieces also swarmed this fall’s catwalks. Long skirts graced the Michael Kors and Hermes runways, while knee-length cardigans and wraps were shown at Peter Som, Ralph Lauren and Richard Chai Love.

Three sweaters, a vest, two scarves and two hats might be a bit overkill, but the wrapped up, long-layered trend couldn’t be more perfect for Syracuse University’s windy subzero days. Nordic patterns and prim, feminine accents add the relaxed details once held by flashy neons, leather, studded accessories and feathered, flowered headbands.

Fur, layers and knits create both a comfort-able and stylish wardrobe for the season. The fall 2010 trends may lack the overpowering intensity that previous seasons have shown, but the collections are anything but dull. Styles are simpler, classier and effortless.

[email protected]

What’s out80s shoulder padsTime for them to go back to where they came from.

MetallicsFace it, you never really liked it anyway.

Biker chicKeep the leather jacket, but ditch the studded gloves and chain necklaces.

LeggingsAt least the patterned, ripped, sequined, and light-up ones.

Thigh-high bootsReplaced with thigh-high socks.

fall fashionf r o m p a g e 1 3

Page 16: October 21, 2010

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binge.The drink has taken off in popularity, espe-

cially on college campuses where students are attracted to its high alcohol content and cheap price. It inspired several amateur artists to post YouTube music videos about it and prompted a U.S. senator to call for an investigation into its confusing marketing strategy.

At Syracuse University, Four Loko attracts a wide variety of supporters, from upperclassmen to freshman and from greek life bashes to low-key house parties.

Tiffany Tanz, an undeclared freshman in the College of Arts and Sciences, said she has never tried the drink but knows a lot of people who have.

“I’ve seen it a lot,” Tanz said.Tanz said she would stay away from the drink,

mostly because of its high alcohol content. Students mistakenly believe the caffeine, a

stimulant, and the alcohol, a depressant, will benefit the drinker, said Sarah Short, a nutri-tion professor.

“Well, it’s an upper and a downer, so it’s not going to even out somehow,” Short said.

With its combination of a stimulant and a depressant, Four Loko will not make the drinker experience a more awake buzz. On the contrary, the combination and the high alcohol content will fool students into believing they are drinking less alcohol. How drunk the consumer gets then depends on his or her body composi-tion and tolerance, Short said.

When someone consumes a drink like Four Loko, the caffeine is likely absorbed before the alcohol, increasing the heart rate. The alcohol is absorbed soon afterward, slowing down the con-sumer’s body functions in a short period of time.

To make matters worse, it’s doubtful any doc-tors will run studies on the exact effects of these caffeinated alcoholic drinks, Short said.

“I don’t think there is really a consensus on what this will do to you,” she said.

Doctors shy away from alcohol studies, fear-ing a study participant would die or become ill from consuming too much alcohol. Many alcohol studies are considered unethical, Short said.

As for Four Loko’s popularity, at least one college, Ramapo College of New Jersey, banned the beverage from its campus because it expe-rienced a spike in student trips to the hospital after students consumed alcohol. At least six students were hospitalized after consuming Four Loko this year, CBS News reported Friday.

The growing popularity of the drink prompt-ed Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) to send let-ters to the Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade Commission, calling for an investigation and possible sanctions against the drink and its manufacturers, Phusion Projects.

“The style and promotion of these products is extremely troubling,” Schumer wrote in the let-ter to FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz. “Frankly, it looks to me as if manufacturers are trying to mislead adults and business owners who sell these products, while at the same time actively courting underage drinkers. This type of mar-keting is, at minimum, grossly irresponsible.”

The FTC has the power to regulate advertis-ing and marketing campaigns. Schumer alleges Four Loko targets underage drinkers and youth in general with its campaign.

In 2008, the Center for Science in the Public

Interest filed lawsuits against Anheuser-Busch and Miller-Coors to stop selling their caffein-ated alcoholic drinks, according to the center’s website. Busch sold both Bud Extra and Tilt, and Miller produced Spark. Since then, both companies have stopped selling the alcoholic energy drinks.

Schumer also argues the labeling and pack-aging of Four Loko make it difficult to distin-guish it from regular drinks. Four Loko comes in cans that are roughly the same size as energy drinks Monster and Vault, and Four Loko cans all feature bright, colorful packaging.

“Some stores even stock them directly next to

non-alcohol energy drinks, causing further con-fusion for both legal and underage consumers,” Schumer said in the letter to the FTC.

The FDA, which possesses the ability to regulate the drink’s contents, is in the pro-cess of responding to the letter, said Schumer’s deputy press secretary, John Rizzo. The FTC has already responded, and Schumer’s office is waiting for the results of an FTC report.

Jay Wright, a communications law professor, said the FTC would try to limit Four Loko’s advertising if it felt the advertisements improp-erly targeted children.

The FTC did this before, when it banned the use of carton characters from cigarette adver-tising, which included the termination of Camel cigarette’s Joe Camel.

Four Loko may agree to scale back its adver-tising. Many advertisers prefer self-regulation to imposed rulings from the FTC.

Before anything happens, though, the FTC will need to see concrete facts that prove the advertising has a direct effect on youth and underage alcohol consumption.

Wright said: “You can’t just go in and change someone’s advertising campaign without real evidence.”

[email protected]

The buzz on four lokoNicknames“Blackout in a can,” “liquid cocaine”

ABV12 percent

IngredientsAlcohol, caffeine, taurine, guarana, sugar, carbonation, artificial flavoring and color

Size23 oz. can

FlavorsCirtus, grape, fruit punch, orange blend, watermelon, blue raspberry, lemonade, cranberry lemonade and lemon lime

Similar drinksAnheuser-Busch’s “Bud Extra” and “Tilt;” Miller-Coors’ “Sparks”

dailyorange.com

“Well, it’s an upper and a downer, so it’s not going to even out somehow.”

Sarah ShortnuTriTion profESSor

four lokof r o m p a g e 1

Page 17: October 21, 2010

p u l p @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m18 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

By Eric Vilas-BoasStaff Writer

Bringing a rainbow assortment of Post-it notes, duct tape and mannequins, an uncanny amount of color will brighten the dreary Case Supply Building in downtown Syracuse.

All the color is part of the second annual Salt City Urban Art and Craft Market. The market opens at 10 a.m. on Saturday. The one-day event will feature three live musical acts, three food vendors and 39 booths featuring local artists from Central New York.

The Salt City Urban Art and Craft Market was started by Syracuse locals Briana Kohl-brenner and Vanessa Rose. Collaborating with Syracuse University, Kohlbrenner and Rose want the arts fair to be edgier than the typical craft market.

“I think a lot of people get confused about what it is,” said Rose, an organizer and co-

founder of the market. “They think it’s just another arts and crafts show. We’re really looking for something edgier, something more urban, something that people haven’t seen as much.”

The building, which is at 112 Wyoming St., has space for 40 booths. Over 90 artists initially applied to have their works featured this year, a number greater than last year when the organizers were having trouble finding a space, Rose said.

“There are a lot of empty storefronts in Syra-cuse, but trying to get a hold of doing something with them is not easy,” Rose said. “It’s sad.”

After securing the space last year, Kohl-brenner and Rose vacuumed the dust off of the entire warehouse floor with a store-bought Shop-Vac and a few friends. This year, they knocked a wall down to make more room. Using only a $250 private donation and the $40 fee from each artist, Kohlbrenner and Rose have man-aged to keep the event free of charge. With the exception of SU-subsidized space, they operate independently.

Rose, a fourth grade teacher in the Fayette-ville-Manlius School District, met Kohlbrenner while working on a Syracuse One Take Super-8 film event. Kohlbrenner owns and operates Craft Chemistry, a Syracuse-based art gallery, studio lab and retail store. Rose and Kohl-

brenner started the market as an outlet for art-ists to expose and hopefully sell their work.

In mid-2009, the then-nonexistent market found recourse in the Near Westside Initiative. The initiative recently backed the Love-Letter Bridges art project, a series of paintings on Syr-acuse highways and overpasses with lines like “fall leaves, winter longs,” and “nothing to do, is everything with you.” The initiative is dedi-cated to promoting community involvement and artistic growth in the Westside neighborhood, said Near Westside Director Marten Jacobs. The Near Westside Initiative is funded and run by SU’s Office of Community Engagement and Economic Development.

Jacobs met Rose and Kohlbrenner through 40 Below, another community involvement initia-tive in Central New York. After working with them on 40 Below and helping find a space for Craft Chemistry, Jacobs helped finance their latest endeavor. The building is being used for single-day events, like the arts fair, until it becomes the new home of Syracuse’s public access television station, WCNY, he said.

“If it wasn’t for the university putting the money and the manpower into these projects, some of them would never have happened,” Rose said. “But on the same note, the university tends to get its hands in everything.”

SU is the main resource of many Syracuse art and community projects, Jacobs said.

“I think in an ideal world, it’s not Syracuse University’s responsibility. The city of Syracuse should deal more with this stuff, too,” he said. “I’m just happy SU can pick up the slack, but I think there’s a real need to keep pushing the city to make economic investments in the arts.”

For Rose and Kohlbrenner, the important thing is not the money but the involvement.

“I do get worried about everything becoming property of the university,” she said. “Some of the SU projects have these grand schemes, but I live in Syracuse, I want to make them happen.”

[email protected]

Personal TouchKey vendors appearing at the Salt City Urban art and Craft Market include:

• Pistachio Press: Handprinted Letter Press

• Peaches Products• Dirty A** Soaps• Michelle Darin Jewelry• Ink+Wit• Vicki Hartman Ceramics• Imaginary Monsters• Barbara Bags• Kassondra Amada: Original artwork and

illustration

Source:saltcitycraftmart.com

“We’re really looking for something edgier, something more urban, something that people haven’t seen as much.” Vanessa RoseSALt CIty UrBAn Art AnD CrAft MArKet CO-fOUnDer

Creative craft market allows local artisans to showcase, sell pieces

Write for Pulp.e-mail Flash at [email protected].

Page 18: October 21, 2010

spliceevery thursday in pulp

o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0 19P U L P @ D A I L Y O R A N G E . C O M

By Sam LittmanSTAFF WRITER

O nly in the midst of a fi lm festival could a Syracuse resident walk around the outside of a theater to fi nd four-time Academy Award-

nominated actor Ed Harris leaned against the wall, introducing himself for a friendly conversation.

As the fi nal end credits scrolled off-screen, the seventh annual Syracuse International Film Festival concluded Sunday night. Almost a week after the festi-val, the thrill of discovering and seeing fi lms from all over the world still lingers. The Syracuse fi lm festival should not be taken for granted, and not just because it injects some increased economic activity in the city across a fi ve-day period.

Critics, such as Roger Ebert, have suggested that one should try to see three or four fi lms a day when attending a fi lm festival. In Syracuse, fulfi lling that unoffi cial requirement can be an indelible pleasure, venturing from Watson Auditorium on the Syracuse University campus to the cozy Red House Arts Center to the somberly majestic Palace Theatre, where most of the marquee events were held.

This festival kicked off on a light note Oct. 13 with a screening of “Pizza with Bullets” at the Palace The-

atre, which actor Vincent Pastore (“The Sopranos”) attended. On Friday night, the Palace Theatre hosted a screening of Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Lodger” (1927), for which American saxophonist Javon Jackson per-formed a new score. Saturday night saw the premiere of the riveting Syracuse-shot thriller “Session,” star-ring Israeli model Bar Refaeli and Cuban-American actor Steven Bauer.

The festival ended late Sunday night after Harris presented one of his most recent fi lms, “Touching Home,” and a new print of “Pollock” (2000), the fi lm that earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Actor.

Of the many great works shown at the festival, the fi nest was arguably Robert M. Young’s “Human Error,” a fi lm that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2004. Boasting a refreshingly theatrical script and a slew of great performances, “Human Error” deserves a great deal more recognition than it has received. The fi lm’s stars, Xander Berkeley, Robert Knott and Tom Bower, joined Young to discuss the fi lm afterward in an engrossing Q-and-A session, asking members of the audience for suggestions as to how they could reach a wider audience.

Among the exciting events, Harris’ appearance on

Sunday night was a true gem of the festival. One of the most respected and accomplished actors of today, Harris was very modest in presenting and discussing “Touching Home,” often deferring to his much young-er directors, twins Logan and Noah Miller. Harris is phenomenal in the true story fi lm, owning the fairly challenging role of the Miller twins’ alcoholic, self-destructive father. A performer who takes his art quite seriously, there isn’t a better guy to speak to outside of a theater on a cold Syracuse night.

The excitement of screenings is amplifi ed by the notion that the fi lms the audience is watching may never screen for a large crowd again, because many fi lms aren’t picked up by big-time distributors. Acclaimed fi lmmakers and performers gather to discuss their work and are generally very receptive to questions from members of the audience.

A fi lm festival is arguably the most exciting cultural event in today’s art scene. Literary festivals have, unfortunately, lost a great deal of popularity, and music festivals function more or less as prolonged concerts. Film festivals are unique in their ability to attract large crowds that are eager to engage with and experience something new.

[email protected]

Premier eventBig-name actors make Syracuse International Film Festival leading downtown arts affair

ticketnet.gr

Page 19: October 21, 2010

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SU CAMPUS

College HomeYour home away from home.

By Katie McInerneyEDITOR IN CHIEF

When Andy Carr showed up for work at Pre-sentation College on June 1, he was stepping into uncharted territory.

Carr and his staff had no offi ces to work in. No computers, either. The staff didn’t even

own a single set of keys to the building they’d be spending their days working in.

There were no blueprints for this kind of undertaking. Instead of fi xing a broken program, Carr and his staff were building one out of nothing.

“When a head coach gets his fi rst position, usually he’s fi xing something that’s broken,” Presentation head coach Carr said. “But for us, it’s going to have our thumbprints all over it. We’re building from the ground up.”

This summer, Presentation threw its hat into the world of college football, and when Carr showed up for his fi rst day of work, he began his journey to create history for the small South Dakota school. The Saints will begin playing in the Upper Midwest Athletic Conference in the fall of 2011. The Saints’ fi rst game is scheduled against Trinity Bible on Sept. 3. The last weekend of October 2011, they’ll be playing a conference opponent in the Metrodome in Minneapolis.

The Metrodome can seat more than double the population of Aberdeen, S.D., the town in which Presentation College is located and the

third largest city in South Dakota.But fortunately for Presentation, it’s the

only game in town. There are no other Divi-sion III football programs in the entire state of South Dakota. That, Carr said, was one of the driving factors to make this team become a reality.

“That’s really what drove (Presentation president) Dr. (Lorraine) Hale to do this,” Carr said. “A large portion of the population is being unserved.”

Talented athletes from South Dakota who cannot live up to Division I or Division II football previously had nowhere to go, Carr said. Already, Carr and his coaching staff have begun informally recruiting and getting the word out about the team. He said he has seen numerous coaches’ lists, and two or three players on their teams would have jumped at the chance to play in-state Division III ball.

With enrollment currently around 800 stu-dents, the 60- to 65-man roster Carr hopes to bring to campus in the fall could make up almost 10 percent of the student body.

Presentation has seen its enrollment grow in the past few years, and for Carr, football seemed like a natural next step.

But it’s not an easy one. It’s more than play-books and schedules. Luckily for Carr, he had the guidance of another coach — in his own league, nonetheless — that had gone through this process only three years ago.

Greg Carlson, head coach at St. Scholastica in Duluth, Minn., came in at the end of the season last year with a 4-6 record. The year before, they went 1-7. The year before that,

those Saints didn’t exist.So Carr sought the advice of his colleague

when he took the job. Carlson gave Carr the advice he was looking for — the “do’s and don’ts,” the little things he can’t forget.

“Some of the coaches at St. Scholastica told us we need to be clear and explain every-

thing,” Carr said. “We can’t take for granted that they know how to break down at the end of practice, what style of dress we wear on the road and to take their hats off when we go out to eat.”

Carlson recognized the diffi culty of the position Carr had gotten into, but he also noted the benefi ts of taking the risk.

“Just knowing that, for the fi rst time, your team is taking the fi eld representing their

college,” Carlson said. “Wearing the uniforms you helped design, the coaching staff and play-ers you chose — they’re a part of history.”

Pat O’Brien recognized those benefi ts, too, and took the leap from a comfortable high school head coaching job in Tampa, Fla., to Aberdeen to become defensive coordinator and secondary coach for the Saints.

O’Brien said he’s looking forward to start-ing from scratch. When Presentation coaches head out on the recruiting trail, they don’t have to give players empty promises. Those freshmen coming in will get the chance to play football right when they get on campus. They don’t have to wait years for a spot like they would at other schools. They can pursue their passion right off the bat.

“The pot is empty,” O’Brien said. “Every time we go and sit down and talk with a player right now, we can say, ‘You know what, you have a chance to play.’ Every freshman we talk to can get a truthful statement from us.”

And it seems that Aberdeen is ready for a team like Presentation. With a population of only around 30,000, O’Brien said the commu-nity has been supportive of the endeavor.

So for Carr, a man who has been working to become a head coach his entire career, the time and the location is ready. He’s fi nally the one who will help to create the traditions and structure the team needs. And Aberdeen’s his-tory will be made from his thumbprints.

“We’re recruiting on the base that we have a chance to make history,” Carr said. “We’ll be the fi rst picture in that trophy case. We’ll let them be a part of building that tradition.”

[email protected]

2010RACE

for theCASES

Presentation College joins D-III, begins football preparations

“When a head coach gets his fi rst position, usually he’s fi xing something that’s broken. But for us, it’s going to have our thumbprints all over it. We’re building from the ground up.”

Andy CarrPRESENTATION COLLEGE HEAD COACH

TOP 25 *First-place votes in parentheses

1. Oregon (39)2. Boise State (15)3. Oklahoma (3)4. TCU (3)5. Auburn6. LSU7. Alabama8. Michigan State9. Utah10. Wisconsin11. Ohio State12. Stanford13. Iowa14. Nebraska15. Arizona16. Florida State17. Oklahoma State18. Missouri19. South Carolina20. West Virginia21. Arkansas22. Texas23. Virginia Tech24. Mississippi State25. Miami (Fla.)

Page 20: October 21, 2010

s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0 2 1

By Mark CooperAsst. Copy Editor

The negative side of football reared its ugly head last weekend when Rutgers defensive tackle Eric LeGrand suffered an injury that paralyzed him from the neck down.

Rutgers, though, is doing its best to just establish a stronger community. From the rest of the football team to the Rutgers stu-dents to the Big East conference, LeGrand’s injury has left that community with many heavy hearts.

“We appreciate all the thoughts and prayers of so many people,” Rutgers head coach Greg Schiano said in the Big East coaches’ teleconfer-

ence Monday. “The league has been tremendous. Coaches, athletic directors, trainers, players from across the country really, but our league has really been special.”

LeGrand, mainly a special teams player, was attempting to make a tackle on a kickoff return in the fourth quarter Saturday against Army when he was involved in a violent collision with the Black Knights’ Malcolm Brown. After lying motionless on the field for several minutes, LeGrand was carted off. The crowd, attending the first FBS game in New Meadowlands Sta-dium, fell silent in shock.

And it has since affected the entire athletic program. It was a main topic of discussion Wednesday for Rutgers head coach Mike Rice at the Big East media day for men’s basketball.

“(Rutgers Athletic Director Tim Pernetti) came and spoke to our student athletes, as he did (with) all our athletic teams, and just about how to support (LeGrand),” Rice said. “The prayers for him, picking up the men’s football team as they walk by, making sure your thoughts, and you’re communicating your support for them and for Eric.

“As a coach — and I was at the game — your heart sinks.”

Rutgers went on to win the game, but the focus was on LeGrand, who still remains at Hackensack University Medical Center.

It sparked reaction across the Big East foot-ball landscape, including Syracuse. Senior linebacker and captain Derrell Smith said his prayers go out to LeGrand and his family.

“It’s something that happens in the game,” Smith said. “It’s unfortunate that it had to hap-pen to somebody. … I’ll definitely keep him in my prayers, and I wish the best for him.”

Other Scarlet Knights’ teams have also shown their support, along with students of the university. Rice, entering his first year as RU’s men’s basketball coach, said tragedies like the one that occurred Saturday create a greater sense of closeness among teams, students and

people.“Things like this unfortunately do. It brings

you together,” Rice said. “Me and my wife can’t even think of what (Schiano’s) last four or five days have gone through. As usual, he’s handled it with class, with a personal touch.”

The football team will pay tribute as well, wearing stickers on the front of their helmets that will read “Believe.” The team chose “believe” because it is one of the few things the players can do in the situation.

They believe LeGrand will walk on the field with them once again.

“It has been a challenging couple of days here since the game,” Schiano said. “It’s going to be a long, long road and a long fight.

“But everyone here at Rutgers, on his team, his family, we believe he is going to recover and is going to walk out of there.”

UConn announced Wednesday that starting quarterback Cody Endres has been suspended for the rest of the season for an undisclosed violation of school policy.

The junior took over in the middle of UConn’s game with Buffalo on Sept. 25 and kept the role as starter from that point. He has thrown for 471 yards and five touchdowns to only two interceptions in his two-plus games of work. The Huskies went 1-1 with him as a starter.

Connecticut (3-3, 0-1 Big East) was picked to finish fourth in the Big East football preseason media poll, and the Huskies had even higher expectations than that. But things haven’t gone as planned — especially the quarterback situ-ation. Endres, who was suspended in the pre-season for breaking team rules, took over for quarterback Zach Frazer in the Buffalo game. Frazer had struggled as the Huskies’ starter, completing only 52 percent of his passes and throwing just two touchdowns in three-plus games.

Those struggles allowed Endres, back from suspension, to take the starting role. Endres also started six games last season before an injury ended his year.

Frazer had since been dropped to third on the quarterback depth chart, behind redshirt freshman Michael Box. It hasn’t been decided whether or not UConn head coach Randy Edsall will give Box his first career start Saturday at Louisville or if he will go back to Frazer.

Big man on campusWR ARmon BinnsSenior

CinCinnati

Last week: 8 receptions, 175 yards, 3 tds

Binns, part of the Bearcats two-headed wide receiver attack along with D.J. Woods, had a career day against Louisville Friday. In the midst of a shootout with the Cardinals, Binns was quarterback Zach Collaros’ favorite target all night, hauling in eight catches, including three for scores. His big game helped Cincin-nati (3-3, 1-0 Big East) win its conference opener, 35-27.

He also accounted for over 60 percent of his quarterback’s 275 yards passing. And all three touchdowns came at crucial junctures in the game.

The senior’s 10-yard touchdown catch in the first quarter was a much-needed response to a Louisville touchdown, putting the Bearcats back on top 14-7. After the Cardinals reeled off 17 unanswered points to take a two-score lead, Collaros found Binns for a 31-yard touchdown catch, cutting UL’s lead to three heading into halftime.

In the fourth quarter, Binns got the hat trick with a touchdown that gave Cincinnati a cush-ion it needed. Winning just 28-27, Binns burned Louisville cornerback Bobby Burns, and his

quarterback delivered a perfect strike, leading to a 62-yard touchdown that gave the Bearcats the 35-27 score that eventually went final.

Binns and Woods have combined for 63 catch-es, 1,075 yards and 13 touchdowns in six games this year. Woods is first and Binns second in receiving yards in the Big East, and Binns is tied for second and Woods fourth in receptions. They are also No. 1 (Binns) and No. 2 (Woods) in touchdown receptions in the conference.

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b i g e a s t

LeGrand’s condition sends shock through Rutgers, Big East

A history of the injuryLast week rutgers defensive tackle Eric LeGrand suffered a spinal cord injury that paralyzed him from the neck down. the injury isn’t as common or notorious in col-lege football as it is in the NFL, but here are some similar injuries from the past 25 years. this includes two from 10 years ago when the injury became well-known nation wide with the Adam taliaferro injury:

Curtis Williams, Washington (2000)Williams, a senior strong safety who led the Huskies in tackles in 1999, suffered a horrific paralyzing injury on oct. 28, 2000, against stanford. He collided in a helmet-to-helmet tackle with stanford’s running back, and fell to the ground immediately, his body frozen. the rest of UW’s season was dedicated to him. Eighteen months

later — May 6, 2002, Williams died at the age of 24.

Adam Taliaferro, Penn State (2000)taliaferro, a Nittany Lions defensive back, suffered a career-ending spinal cord injury while making a tackle at ohio state on sept. 23, 2000. taliaferro, then an 18-year-old freshman, was one of the most highly-recruited defensive players in the country. it was only his fifth game as a collegiate player.

Chucky Mullins, Mississippi (1989)Mullins broke four vertebrae in his cervi-cal spine trying to make a tackle against Vanderbilt during ole Miss’ Homecoming game on oct. 28, 1989. He was paralyzed immediately, and never regained feeling below his neck. He died 18 months later, on May 6, 1991.

— Compiled by Asst. Copy Editor Mark Cooper

“Everyone here at Rutgers, on (LeGrand’s) team, his family, we believe he is going to recover and is going to walk out of there.”

Greg SchianorUtGErs HEAd CoACH

Connecticut quarterback suspended for season

dailyorange.com

Page 21: October 21, 2010

s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m2 2 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

By Andrew L. JohnSportS Editor

NEW YORK — A year after winning an out-right Big East regular season championship, Syracuse found itself No. 3 on the conference’s 2010-11 preseason poll Wednesday. The poll was released at the conference’s annual media day at Madison Square Garden.

Pittsburgh, not Syracuse or West Virginia — a Final Four team a year ago — was the coaches’ preseason choice to win the conference this sea-son. Jamie Dixon’s squad returns four starters, including All-Big East preseason selection Ash-ton Gibbs, from a team that finished 25-9 and was tied for second place in the league in 2009-10.

Villanova was selected as the second-place team, with Syracuse, Georgetown and West Virginia rounding out the top five.

“Being picked to finish high is not a bad thing,” Dixon said. “We’ve been picked high before. Last year was the first year we really haven’t. What we have done every year is finish a little higher than we were picked, so I guess it’ll be hard to do that this year.”

Syracuse freshman Fab Melo was voted as the league’s preseason Rookie of the Year. The 7-foot freshman, originally from Brazil, is expected to come in and play a significant role for the Orange this season, especially after likely losing center DaShonte Riley for the sea-son with a foot injury.

Georgetown guard Austin Freeman was selected as the league’s preseason Player of the Year. Freeman, a three-year starter for the Hoyas, was an All-Big East second team selection a year ago, after averaging 19.5 points and shooting nearly 52 percent from beyond the 3-point arc in league play.

Aside from Freeman, the preseason first team is comprised of Pittsburgh’s Gibbs, Connecticut guard Kemba Walker, Villanova guard Corey Fisher, Seton Hall guard Jer-emy Hazell and West Virginia forward Kevin Jones. Syracuse forward Kris Joseph was selected to the preseason second team, and SU forward Rick Jackson was one of three honor-able mentions.

Before Freeman, the only other Georgetown

players to be tabbed the conference’s preseason Player of the Year were Roy Hibbert (2007-08), Alonzo Mourning (1991-92) and Patrick Ewing (1982-83, 1983-84 and 1984-85).

“It’s an honor, but I also look at it as all that matters is what happens at the end of the sea-son,” Freeman said. “I also know I need to focus even more because I’ll have a target on my back. It’s something I prepared for this summer, so I think I’m ready for it.”

Red Storm on the way back to the top?Former UCLA head coach Steve Lavin was

hired to turn around a St. John’s team that had fallen on hard times recently, and the buzz was evident Wednesday. Just a year after finishing with a 6-12 record in conference play, Lavin’s squad was the preseason pick to finish sixth and even snagged a preseason vote to win the conference.

Lavin admitted he knew the vote came from Louisville head coach Rick Pitino, who was very complimentary to the media of St. John’s com-bination of experience and talent heading into the season. The Red Storm has a league-high 10 seniors, including multiple key contributors from last season.

“One of the strengths of this team is that we have 14 seniors in this program,” Lavin said. “Ten players and four managers, and we want to send them out on a high note. To do that, they’ll have to take advantage of the fact that they are experienced, we are a veteran group, and they’ve been through the rigors of the Big East.”

St. John’s hasn’t been selected to finish higher than ninth in the preseason poll since 2002-03. Evidently with a new head coach and a group of experienced veterans, league coaches believe the Red Storm is ready to make a big jump this season.

Connecticut was selected as the No. 10 team in the preseason poll, prompting head coach Jim Calhoun to predict that he and Lavin have the best shot at winning the league’s Coach of the Year award if either of

them can improve upon what both squads did a year ago.

“It’s the first chance I’ve had in quite some time,” Calhoun said. “Any time that you’re seven or above, you’re not winning the Coach of the Year. Lavin has a chance. Even when we have someone even at six, it could be Coach of the Year. It’s after that, that you start having chances.”

More Big East games to be televisedTo kick off the annual media event, Big East

Commissioner John Marinatto announced 73 of 144 of the league’s regular-season games would be televised nationally. In addition, all 16 teams in the league will play in at least five nation-ally televised games within the conference this season.

To Marinatto, this only further solidifies the Big East as perhaps the superior conference in college basketball.

“Year in and year out, our conference has proven to be among the most competitive from top to bottom in the country,” Marinatto said. “There is no question that much of our programs’ success can be attributed to the unparalleled exposure they receive annu-ally.”

Once again, the league will partner with ESPN for the network’s Big Monday format. In addition, the Big East will have nationally televised games on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.

Syracuse will be showcased on national television 18 times this season, starting with Canisius on Sunday, Nov. 14, on ESPNU.

Overall, it will be the fourth consecutive year in which all 144 in-conference games will be nationally televised.

“This is why most of us chose to play in the Big East,” Connecticut guard Kemba Walker said. “It’s because of the competitiveness of the league and the exposure we get as players.”

[email protected]

— Asst. Copy Editors Michael Cohen and Mark Cooper contributed reporting to this article.

m e n ’s b a s k e t b a l l

Big East coaches rank SU 3rd in preseason conference poll

Page 22: October 21, 2010

S P O R T S @ D A I L Y O R A N G E . C O M o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0 2 3

CARTER VAN CHEW

SATURDAY, NOON, ESPN2SYRACUSE at WEST VIRGINIA

1The place where WVU running back Noel Devine sits in nationally among active players in career rushing yards. Devine has rushed for 3,885 yards in his career.

30The number of times WVU’s defense has forced its opponents to give up the ball via three-and-outs. The mark is good enough for fourth in the nation.

8The rank of WVU’s over-all record for the last fi ve years nationally. The Mountaineers are also the ninth best team nationally over the last six years and 11th best in the last four years.

1The rank in the Big East of the West Vir-ginia defense in scoring defense, rushing defense and total defense.

1993The fi rst year The Schwartzwalder Trophy was given out. The tro-phy is given out annu-ally to the winner of the WVU-SU game and is named in honor of for-mer SU head coach Ben Schwartzwalder.

SYRACUSE OFFENSE12 QB Ryan Nassib3 RB Delone Carter49 FB Adam Harris15 WR Alec Lemon82 WR Van Chew85 TE Jose Cruz67 LT Justin Pugh75 LG Zack Chibane70 C Ryan Bartholomew66 RG Andrew Tiller74 RT Michael Hay

WEST VIRGINIA OFFENSE7 QB Geno Smith3 RB Noel Devine43 WR Jock Sanders9 WR J.D. Woods81 WR Stedman Bailey45 WR Tavon Austin63 LT Don Barclay55 LG Josh Jenkins62 C Joe Madsen79 RG Eric Jobe75 RT Jeff Braun

West Virginia 28 Syracuse 13Beating USF on the road and getting destroyed by Pitt on Homecoming makes this SU squad fairly unpredictable. But I still can’t pick this one to be close.

In a game in which SU’s defense will have to contain all four of West Virginia’s big-play threats, the Sanders-Merker-son matchup may be the best. Last week against Pitt, Merker-son held the Panthers’ leading receiver to just 61 yards on one catch.

DA’MONMERKERSON

CBJust like Merkerson, Holmes will be going up against a top-notch receiver for the second week in a row. If Holmes has a repeat performance of fail-ing to mark his receiver on a short pass like last week, SU and Holmes will be in for a long day.

MIKEHOLMES

CB

TAVON AUSTIN

WRThe key here will be not letting Smith hit Austin, Sanders or anyone else on deep balls. The breakdowns are bound to happen for the SU secondary with two of the fastest receivers in the Big East. Phillips’ main assignment will be the textbook one for a free safety: not letting anyone get deeper than him.

PHILLIPTHOMAS

FS

GENOSMITH

QB

WVU’s best vs. SU’s best here. Devine torched the Orange last year as he took the reigns of the game over with an 11-yard touchdown reception four minutes into the game, kick-starting 27 unanswered points for the Mountaineers to start the game.

NOELDEVINE

RB

DERRELLSMITH

LB

BIG EAST SCHEDULE

TEAM RECORD (THROUGH WEEK 2)

West Virginia 5-1 1-0

Rutgers 4-2 1-0

Cincinnati 3-3 1-0

Pittsburgh 3-3 1-0

Syracuse 4-2 1-1

Louisville 3-3 0-1

Connecticut 3-3 0-1

USF 0-2 0-2

BIG EAST STANDINGS

BEAT WRITER PREDICTIONS

DID YOU KNOW?

ANDREW L.JOHN

TONYOLIVERO

RECEIVING REC YDS AVG. TD Van Chew 28 452 16.1 3Alec Lemon 22 265 12.0 3Nick Provo 15 174 11.6 1

WEST VIRGINIA ON OFFENSE

SYRACUSE ON OFFENSE

1

25

6

9

32

54

63

94

55

24

11

99

79 6443 45

35

3

51

62

7

81

8 1

2

8285

57

74

34

94

67

36

46

75

58

66

16

15

97

70

12

49

3

SYRACUSE DEFENSE54 DE Mikhail Marinovich94 NT Bud Tribbey51 DT Andrew Lewis99 DE Chandler Jones11 SLB Marquis Spruill25 MLB Derrell Smith32 WLB Doug Hogue6 CB Da’Mon Merkerson35 CB Mike Holmes24 SS Max Suter1 FS Phillip Thomas

WEST VIRGINIA DEFENSE94 DE Craig Marshall46 DT Cory Grissom97 DT Terrell McClain58 DE David Bedford57 OLB Jacquian Williams36 MLB Sam Barrington34 OLB DeDe Lattimore16 CB Steven Barker2 CB Quenton Washington8 SS Jon Lejiste1 FS Jerrell Young

Current Statistical Leaders

BY THE NUMBERS STARTING LINEUPS

• Syracuse hasn’t defeated West Virginia since 2001, when the Orangemen beat the Mountaineers 24-13.

BRETTLoGIURATO

KEY MATCHUPS

Friday, Oct. 22

USF @ Cincinnati 8 p.m.

Saturday, Oct. 23

Rutgers @ Pittsburgh Noon

Syracuse @ West Virginia Noon

Connecticut @ Louisville 3:30 p.m.

West Virginia 34Syracuse 17After tears of joy at USF and an apology after Pitt, this game is just, well, pretty much expect-ed. West Virginia just has the superior talent.

West Virginia 31Syracuse 10If the SU offense didn’t like the three-and-out stretch in the second quarter, they are going to hate Saturday. WVU is fourth in the nation in forcing three-and-outs, only behind TCU, Ohio St. and Boise State. Do you think SU would have a chance versus those teams?

PASSING COMP-ATT YDS TD INT Ryan Nassib 98-173 1220 11 4

RUSHING ATT YDS AVG TD Delone Carter 112 562 5.0 6 Antwon Bailey 40 220 5.5 0

NASSIB

JOCKSANDERS

WR

• WVU wide receiver Jock Sanders has recorded a reception in 34 straight games. The mark is good enough for the fourth best mark in Big East history and the second best mark in West Virginia history.

• Mountaineer Head Coach Bill Stewart has the second best record for a WVU head coach in program history after 33 games at 24-9.

Page 23: October 21, 2010

s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m2 4 o c t obe r 2 1 , 2 0 1 0

classified discount ratesruns classifieds boxed1 - 4 $4.45 $7.005 - 10 $4.20 $6.8011 - 20 $3.90 $6.5521 - 30 $3.55 $6.2531 - 50 $3.10 $5.9051 - 70 $2.65 $5.50

the contact info

deadline is at 2:30 pm, 2business days before publication. Place by fax at 315/443.3689, online at www.dailyorange.com, by phone at 315/443.2869 or in person at 744 ostrom ave. cash, checks and all major credit cards are accepted.

the Particulars

and Pricing

The Classifieds list prices include 15 words. each additional word is 10 cents per day. bold and caPitaliZed words cost anadditional 5 cents per word.the boxed list pricesare per inch. there is no per word charge and bold and caPs are free.

By Zuri IrvinStaff Writer

The three senior forwards on the SU ice hockey team have each been playing collegiate hockey longer than their current program has been alive. Julie Rising, Ashley Cockell and Stefanie Marty are in their fourth year. The program is in its third.

The Orange is benefiting from the lessons the players learned before the program’s existence. And in its third season, the Orange is ahead of the usual curve for a third-year team, thanks to the lack of a need for that learning curve with the

front line. It was a head start.“One of my friends mentioned a new program

at Syracuse,” Rising said. “I didn’t mind (Rising’s former school) Bemidji much, but it was just Syra-cuse was pretty cool starting a new program. … I thought, why not?”

Rising, the first of the three to commit, played in 36 games her freshman year at Bemidji State. Since joining the Orange, she was named co-captain as a sophomore and led the team in shots as a junior. At Bemidji, ice hockey was the only Division I team on campus. At Syracuse, athletics is much bigger, and being a part of an extensive athletic program was important for

Rising. Without her, Bemidji State is 2-4 on the season so far.

It was a similar situation for Rising’s front-ice counterpart Marty.

“For me, SU is just a huge sports school,” Marty said. “That made my decision even easier. UNH was big, and coming from Europe, we don’t have sports and academics. We don’t have sports teams at universities. So (Marty’s former school New Hampshire) was already big to me, and then I came here and it was 10 times bigger.”

Much like Rising, Marty came to SU following a disappointing freshman campaign. Still new to American colleges, Marty originally wasn’t aware that an opportunity with the Orange existed. Her freshman season at UNH was also her first in the United States. A member of the Swiss National Team since 2003, Marty is the team’s other co-captain and a veteran of both the 2009 Olympics and the 2008 Frozen Four. In her absence, New Hampshire is 3-2 on the season.

The third of the trio is Cockell, SU’s lone new senior. Cockell is in her first year on campus after transferring from division powerhouse Mercyhurst this past August.

“(Mercyhurst) just wasn’t the right fit for me,” Cockell said. “It was late, but I took the chance of not going back and maybe having to sit out a year. It worked out.”

Cockell came from the program everyone involved in SU ice hockey is chasing. Mercyhurst is the perennial league favorite and has taken the first eight CHA titles since the league’s inau-guration in 2002-03. She has played on a team that has been to the Frozen Four and the NCAA championships and that has been ranked No. 1. Still, Cockell transferred because she wanted to come to a team that she could learn more from and to help a new program improve. Mercyhurst is 5-1 on the year.

There were only four teams in the league when the Lakers began their run several years ago. Syracuse became the fifth in 2008, and since

then, SU has quickly asserted itself as one of the more attractive destinations for up-and-coming players. Rising, Marty and Cockell all left pro-ductive teams with the intention of creating something stronger here in Syracuse.

And for Rising, the only option to transfer that she would have considered was the unique situation at SU. Becoming an elder immediately attracted her.

“This was the only school,” Rising said. “If my friend didn’t mention it, I’d probably still be at Bemidji. I just thought it was a really neat opportunity to be able to start something new. Just to be able to build a program, and to have that, is pretty special.”

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i c e h o c k e y

jenny jakubowski | staff photographerjulie rising (right) is one of three players who transferred to Syracuse when the program was created two years ago. the trio add veteran leadership and experience, having played collegiate hockey at other programs prior to their arrival at SU.

Quick hitsLast 3Oct. 9 Boston College L, 2-5Oct. 15 Providence L, 1-4Oct. 16 Connecticut W, 7-1

Next 3Oct. 22 Union College 3 p.m.Oct. 23 Union College 3 p.m.Oct. 29 Ohio State 7 p.m.

Outlookthe Orange is coming off a strong performance against Connecticut last weekend, which featured a hat trick from sophomore isabel Menard. it was the first hat trick in Syracuse women’s ice hockey history. With that win, the Orange snapped its two-game losing streak. SU takes to the road friday to face in-state opponent Union College. Syracuse won both meetings versus the Bulldogs last season, 4-1 and 3-2 respec-tively. Union comes into the weekend at 3-1, and the Orange stand at 2-2-1.

Trio of transfers bring experience to Orange

“I just thought it was a really neat opportunity to be able to start something new. Just to be able to build a program, and to have that, is pretty special.”

Julie RisingSU fOrWard

1 66 9 5 78 4

4 8 55 6 4 3

2 5 67 8

7 2 1 58 2

R.I.P. Jersey Shore.

Page 24: October 21, 2010

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abandonment of the run allowed Pitt defenders to pin their ears back and rush quarterback Ryan Nassib, who also had his worst game of the season as a result.

Clear enough?It’s easy to say it’s not that simple. But consider

this: Carter gets most of his carries in the first quarter, which, not coincidently, is when the Orange typically has the most success offensively. Against Colgate, during SU’s most explosive second half of the season, it was Carter who car-ried the load and rushed for 146 yards and three touchdowns in the second half.

Against Pitt, the SU offensive line struggled to keep the Panthers from breaking into the back-field. Carter wasn’t going to do it all by himself. Nor should he have to. The line needs to start to pave the way, and Nassib and the receivers need to keep the opposing defenses honest and not allow them to stack eight or nine men in the box. And more than every so often, the coaches need to call Carter’s number time and time again.

This isn’t in opposition to what Marrone wants out of his offense, either. The Syracuse head coach firmly believes in running the football to control the tempo, open up the passing game and keep the defense rested and off the field.

The head coach has preached that to his play-ers.

“Our offense likes to have a good balance of running and passing,” freshman tight end Beck-ett Wales said last week. “One can’t work without the other.”

This Saturday, Syracuse takes the field against the league’s best team in the league’s loudest, most disorderly venue. Mountaineer Field will be rocking, and that WVU defense — ranked No. 5 in the nation — will be relentless. That is the reality SU faces.

But if the Orange hopes to have any chance of walking away victorious, it needs to have Carter pound the ball early and often. It won’t be easy against a defense ranked No. 4 against the run this season, but we’ve seen the results of not doing that — and it wasn’t too pretty.

It’s really that simple.Andrew L. John is the sports editor at The

Daily Orange, where his column appears occasion-ally. He can be reached at [email protected]

johnf r o m p a g e 2 8

a big loss — a disappointing loss — to a Pitt team, the schedule doesn’t get any easier. We’re playing a West Virginia team that’s all of Pitt and prob-ably more speed.”

The challenge for this SU defense will come in the form of a four-headed monster of weapons that are among the Big East’s leaders in their respective categories.

Quarterback Geno Smith is second in the conference in passing yards per game and pass efficiency. Running back Noel Devine is a two-way threat. And wide receivers Jock Sanders and Tavon Austin are one-two in receptions per game.

“They have the potential to be an explosive offense with the players that they have,” Mar-rone said. “I think this is a Top 10 football team. … We’re playing a team that truly, deservedly,

should be a Top 10 football team.”And the key to stop those threats starts with

stopping the big plays, the third-down conver-sions in the red zone that came back to haunt the Orange against Pittsburgh.

Three plays, 170 yards. Those three plays — a 79-yard touchdown reception by Devin Street to start the game, a 61-yard reception by Jon Baldwin and a 30-yard touchdown reception by Mike Shanahan — are what the SU defensive coordinator pinpoints as the main perpetrators of the blowout.

“Yeah, the big plays did kill us,” Shafer said. “We missed some tackles. … You can’t take those back. You take them back, and we’re sitting here having a different conversation. So you look at where we lost leverage or where we missed a tackle or two here and there.”

One of those broken plays was a surprise — the 79-yard touchdown to start the game, when a simple bubble-screen from Pittsburgh quarter-back Tino Sunseri turned into a mad dash to the

end zone for Street and humbled the SU defense to start the game.

Shafer credits that to the Panthers’ scheme and game plan for the Orange. They went away from their bread and butter — the power forma-tion. Shafer said Pittsburgh ran 46 plays out of that formation in its four previous games. Against SU, he said the Panthers only lined up six or seven times in the formation.

The element of surprise caught Syracuse off guard. But Shafer isn’t altering the way he pre-pares. He has to scheme for the percentages.

“You have to go with the numbers,” Shafer said. “You have to go with the percentages. You have to prepare for who they are and what they do well. They’re not going to change. They’re going to do what they do well.”

Spruill was the culprit in another of those plays last Saturday against the Panthers. A Dion Lewis rush for no gain and a false start on Pitts-burgh had pushed the Panthers back to second-and-goal at SU’s 15-yard line.

Then Spruill missed his assignment. Pitt running back Ray Graham slipped out of the backfield and found himself wide open to stroll into the end zone. It gave the Panthers a 14-7 lead, the start of a 28-point run that would put the game away.

“I think it’s just when we get in that type of mode,” Spruill said of red-zone situations, “everyone gets excited, and one person might forget their assignment. And that one blown assignment might mess up the whole thing, and they might get a big play out of it.”

So though most of his defensive stats are near the top of the charts, Shafer knows the most tell-ing number is perhaps that glaring 85.

Spruill knows the elements his defense will face. He took a trip to be amid the Mountaineer faithful last year while at Fork Union Military Academy in Virginia. That game was against Colorado, and the only way he described being with the crowd was “crazy.”

He also knows the elements the defense will face on the field, in the form of those four players very capable of turning no-gains into big plays.

And he knows for the Orange to win, those recurring big plays can’t happen.

“It’s very important,” Spruill said. “We can’t let them do that, because that obviously puts us in a big hole. … It’s just something we have to work on.”

[email protected]

west virginiaf r o m p a g e 2 8

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SP ORT S pa g e 2 8the daily orange

t h u r s d ayoctober 21, 2010

SYRACUSE AT WEST VIRGINIA20SATURDAY, NOON, ESPN2

Let’s not complicate things here. Syracuse is a heavy under-

dog heading to West Virginia this weekend, and rightfully so. But to avoid a second consecutive blowout, Delone Carter needs to pull a Key-shawn Johnson and tell his coaches, “Just give me the (darn) ball.”

It’s really that simple.Admittedly, watching Syracuse

abandon the run in just the second quarter last weekend was puzzling. With three quarters still remaining in what would become arguably SU’s worst loss in the Doug Marrone era, the Orange opted to go with a more pass-oriented offense and turned Carter, its leading rusher, into a spectator.

Eleven of Carter’s 13 carries came in the first quarter. After that, he was basically done for the day. For the second time in as many losses this season, Carter watched the second half from the sidelines Saturday. Staring in the face of a 28-7 halftime deficit, Carter might just as well have not been in the building for the second half. He watched as his team failed to generate a sufficient amount of offense as it turned to the passing game in an attempt to forge a comeback.

During a critical second quarter, when Pitt began to separate itself, Carter was a non-factor. By the third drive of the second quarter, the Orange completely dumped its rushing attack and passed six out of seven times before the drive ended on a Ryan Nas-sib interception.

By halftime, it may have been a lost cause, and perhaps the only way to get back into the game was to get the ball down the field for some quick offense. But not in the second quarter.

For three quarters, Carter — argu-ably Syracuse’s most valuable offensive weapon — stood helplessly on the sidelines.

“Running the ball is where our offense starts,” said Antwon Bailey, Carter’s fellow backfield mate, on Sept. 22 as the Orange prepared to take on Colgate. “That starts with Delone and the offensive line. When they have suc-cess, our team usually has success.”

The Orange finished Saturday’s game with just 77 yards rushing — eas-ily its lowest total of the season. And surprise, it came in the Orange’s worst loss of the season. Syracuse’s obvious

Big Facing West Virginia’s dynamic offensive weapons, SU looks to eliminate big plays on defense

By Brett LoGiuratoAsst. sports Editor

Marquis Spruill can’t explain the disparity of the Syracuse defense.

He hears the numbers. In a unit that has been wildly inconsistent from game to game this season, the stats are all there near the top. SU ranks 18th in the nation in total defense. Tied for a cool 19th in first downs allowed, holding opponents to just 16 first downs per game.

But then there’s the big play. The red zone plays. When opponents are inside the Orange’s 20-yard line, they score 86 percent of the time. That figure is virtually the only stat that ranks SU near the bottom of college football on defense — 85th overall.

It’s troubling to Spruill, a freshman linebacker. He pauses for eight seconds, thinking about why a defense that looks dominant on paper has had so much trouble in big spots.

“(Eighty-five) in the red zone?” Spruill said. “I couldn’t really — I don’t even really know.”

As the Orange (4-2, 1-1 Big East) heads to West Virginia for a contest with the No. 20 Mountain-eers (5-1, 1-0 Big East) Saturday at noon (ESPN2), keeping WVU’s middle-of-the-pack, yet dynamic, offense out of the end zone in those big-play situa-tions could be crucial in determining the outcome of a close game. It’s a matchup SU is looking to win for the first time since 2001.

In its two losses this season, Syracuse has been plagued by the big play. The backbreaker. And on Saturday, it will be especially important to correct. Because to SU head coach Doug Marrone, this West Virginia team is the best his Syracuse squad has faced thus far. A common theme this season has been Marrone preparing the Orange as if it is fac-ing a Top 10 team every week.

And this time, Marrone admitted the Mountain-eers are far and away better than the Maine’s, the Colgate’s and the Akron’s. Even Pittsburgh.

“To date, this is the best team we’ve faced, from what I’ve seen on film,” Marrone said. “Coming off

see john page 26see west virginia page 26

kirsten celo | asst. photo editor

the syracuse defense faces its toughest test when the team travels to West Virginia saturday to take on the No. 20 Mountaineers. After being outclassed by pittsburgh’s offense last week in a 45-14 loss, the defense needs to improve if sU wants its fifth win of 2010.

NEEDS imPROvEmENTin the words of defensive coordinator scott shafer, big plays have “killed” syracuse in its two losses this year to Washington and pittsburgh last week. the six plays total 307 yards of offense:

OppOnent DOwn-Distance DescriptiOn resultWashington 1st and 10 Jake Locker to Jermaine Kearse 57-yard tdWashington 1st and 10 Jake Locker to Jermaine Kearse 28-yard tdWashington 2nd and 5 Chris polk rush 52-yard tdpittsburgh 1st and 10 tino sunseri to devin street 79-yard tdpittsburgh 1st and 10 tino sunseri to Jon Baldwin 61-yard first down to sU 3pittsburgh 3rd and 10 tino sunseri to Mike shanahan 30-yard td

trouble

Improving offense is simple: Give ball to CarterA N D R E w l . j O h N

goin’ hog wild