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THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF SYRACUSE , NEW YORK MONDAY october 3, 2011 OCTOBURRRRR HI 62° | LO 48° By Dara McBride EDITOR IN CHIEF B ailey Marks had almost given up hope on going to Syracuse University. But only a few days before she had to mail her depos- it to the State University of New York at Fredonia, Marks received an email from SU that changed her decision. “I got the email that said, ‘Your financial aid package has changed.’ And I was just sitting there and my heart started beating faster and I was like, ‘Oh, my goodness what is this about?’” said Marks, one of the first ten recipients of SU’s Phanstiel schol- arship. “And I sat there for a couple minutes and thought, ‘Wow, I can actually go here.’” Announced last October, the How- ard and Louise Phanstiel Scholars Program provides assistance to stu- dents from middle-class backgrounds who show academic strength and a desire to give back. The program is the result of a $20 million gift from Howard “Howie” Phanstiel, a 1970 undergraduate and 1971 graduate and trustee, and his wife, Louise. The scholarship reward varies depend- ing on the financial situation, but it is enough to change a decision, the couple said. In 2008, the Phanstiels were on campus and noticed a concern among administrators that students would not return after the recession. In spring 2010, the Phanstiels presented their idea for the scholarship pro- gram to Thomas Walsh, executive vice By Meghin Delaney NEWS EDITOR With Syracuse’s move to the Atlantic Coast Conference, the university’s teams will now be playing up and down the Eastern Seaboard, not just in the Northeast. This move, how- ever, will not change SU’s market- ing campaign as New York’s College Team, said Daryl Gross, SU’s ath- letic director. Although the move to the ACC may mean SU plays fewer games in the Carrier Dome and New York City’s Madison Square Garden, Gross is optimistic that the ACC will still provide ample opportunities for SU teams to play in the city. “The Big East Tournament, the ACC Tournament was very, very important to us — to be in New York is what I’m saying. I just think that would be great,” he said. “And we’ve had those conversations, and there’s an interest from the ACC to want to have that rotation in New York, so that’s really important.” And having games in New York City is incredibly important to some of the alumni who live there. There are about 43,000 alumni who live in the city’s metropolitan region, said Scott McDowell, director of commu- nications at SU Lubin House. SU will always market itself as New York’s College Team, Gross said, because of the alumni outlet. “But the reason that will — at least as long as I’m here — will always be a campaign for us is because that’s our No. 1 alum stop for careers is in that area. And we should be there with the flag up,” he said. Gross said that as long as SU could continue to market itself in the city, they would because of the By Liz Sawyer ASST. NEWS EDITOR Several local businesses along South Crouse Avenue and Marshall Street were forced to temporarily close Sun- day due to water main gate construc- tion. Water was shut off while gates at the intersection of East Adams Street and South Crouse were under construction Sunday afternoon, said Syracuse Department of Public Works officials. The job took approx- imately six hours and was completed by 2 p.m., officials said. Dunkin’ Donuts, Roly Poly, Jimmy John’s and Bruegger’s Bagel Bakery were among the businesses that reported losing water. Bruegger’s was closed the entire day and placed a sign in the front window saying that it would reopen Monday. Dunkin’ Donuts employees report- ed closing the store from noon to 2 p.m., then reopening for the rest of the day. Jimmy John’s lost water for about 1.5 hours, but it remained open all day because it didn’t present much of an inconvenience, said employee Dustin Bowden. “Everything seemed to be operat- ing fine,” he said. Kyle Metz, a Roly Poly employee of two years, said the water was off for about three or four hours, but, like Jimmy John’s, they remained open because it didn’t interfere with operations enough to close. Businesses farther down Mar- shall Street, such as Insomnia Cookies and Chipotle Mexican Grill, were not affected by the con- struction. [email protected] ‘A habit of Sports marketing to remain unchanged Local establishments temporarily close during construction on water main gates INSIDEPULP Food for thought Ceramic bowls and small portions of soup contribute to hunger awareness. Page 9 INSIDESPORTS Overkill Syracuse turns the ball over five times in a double-overtime loss to Rutgers on Saturday. Page 20 INSIDENEWS United effort The 13th annual Dollar Day at the Dome brought in an estimated $5,000 on Saturday. Page 3 INSIDEOPINION Bad boys, bad boys Harmen Rockler calls for a law protecting citizens taking video of police arrests. Page 5 SEE MARKETING PAGE 4 SEE PHANSTIEL PAGE 4 Phanstiel scholarship program affects first set of middle-class students mitchell franz | staff photographer Students cheer on New York’s College Team during the football game against Rutgers University on Saturday. Athletic Director Daryl Gross said SU would continue to use the NYC appeal for marketing. daily orange file photo LOUISE AND HOWARD PHANSTIEL, founders of the Phanstiel Scholars Program, made a $20 million donation to SU last October. giving back’ atlantic coast conference

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Page 1: October 3, 2011

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

MONDAYoctober 3, 2011

OCTOBURRRRRHI 62° | LO 48°

By Dara McBrideEDITOR IN CHIEF

B ailey Marks had almost given up hope on going to Syracuse University. But only a few

days before she had to mail her depos-it to the State University of New York at Fredonia, Marks received an email from SU that changed her decision.

“I got the email that said, ‘Your fi nancial aid package has changed.’ And I was just sitting there and my heart started beating faster and I was like, ‘Oh, my goodness what is this about?’” said Marks, one of the fi rst ten recipients of SU’s Phanstiel schol-arship. “And I sat there for a couple minutes and thought, ‘Wow, I can actually go here.’”

Announced last October, the How-

ard and Louise Phanstiel Scholars Program provides assistance to stu-dents from middle-class backgrounds who show academic strength and a desire to give back. The program is the result of a $20 million gift from Howard “Howie” Phanstiel, a 1970 undergraduate and 1971 graduate and trustee, and his wife, Louise. The scholarship reward varies depend-ing on the fi nancial situation, but it is enough to change a decision, the couple said.

In 2008, the Phanstiels were on campus and noticed a concern among administrators that students would not return after the recession. In spring 2010, the Phanstiels presented their idea for the scholarship pro-gram to Thomas Walsh, executive vice

By Meghin DelaneyNEWS EDITOR

With Syracuse’s move to the Atlantic Coast Conference, the university’s teams will now be playing up and down the Eastern Seaboard, not just in the Northeast. This move, how-ever, will not change SU’s market-ing campaign as New York’s College Team, said Daryl Gross, SU’s ath-letic director.

Although the move to the ACC may mean SU plays fewer games in the Carrier Dome and New York City’s Madison Square Garden, Gross is optimistic that the ACC will

still provide ample opportunities for SU teams to play in the city.

“The Big East Tournament, the ACC Tournament was very, very important to us — to be in New York is what I’m saying. I just think that would be great,” he said. “And we’ve had those conversations, and there’s an interest from the ACC to want to have that rotation in New York, so that’s really important.”

And having games in New York City is incredibly important to some of the alumni who live there. There are about 43,000 alumni who live in the city’s metropolitan region, said

Scott McDowell, director of commu-nications at SU Lubin House.

SU will always market itself as New York’s College Team, Gross said, because of the alumni outlet.

“But the reason that will — at least as long as I’m here — will always be a campaign for us is because that’s our No. 1 alum stop for careers is in that area. And we should be there with the fl ag up,” he said.

Gross said that as long as SU could continue to market itself in the city, they would because of the

By Liz SawyerASST. NEWS EDITOR

Several local businesses along South Crouse Avenue and Marshall Street were forced to temporarily close Sun-day due to water main gate construc-tion.

Water was shut off while gates at the intersection of East Adams

Street and South Crouse were under construction Sunday afternoon, said Syracuse Department of Public Works offi cials. The job took approx-imately six hours and was completed by 2 p.m., offi cials said.

Dunkin’ Donuts, Roly Poly, Jimmy John’s and Bruegger’s Bagel Bakery were among the businesses that

reported losing water. Bruegger’s was closed the entire day and placed a sign in the front window saying that it would reopen Monday.

Dunkin’ Donuts employees report-ed closing the store from noon to 2 p.m., then reopening for the rest of the day.

Jimmy John’s lost water for about

1.5 hours, but it remained open all day because it didn’t present much of an inconvenience, said employee Dustin Bowden.

“Everything seemed to be operat-ing fi ne,” he said.

Kyle Metz, a Roly Poly employee of two years, said the water was off for about three or four hours, but,

like Jimmy John’s, they remained open because it didn’t interfere with operations enough to close.

Businesses farther down Mar-shall Street, such as Insomnia Cookies and Chipotle Mexican Grill, were not affected by the con-struction.

[email protected]

‘A habit of

Sports marketing to remain unchanged

Local establishments temporarily close during construction on water main gates

I N S I D E P U L P

Food for thoughtCeramic bowls and small portions of soup contribute to hunger awareness. Page 9

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

OverkillSyracuse turns the ball over fi ve times in a double-overtime loss to Rutgers on Saturday. Page 20

I N S I D E N E W S

United effortThe 13th annual Dollar Day at the Dome brought in an estimated $5,000 on Saturday. Page 3

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

Bad boys, bad boysHarmen Rockler calls for a law protecting citizens taking video of police arrests. Page 5

SEE MARKETING PAGE 4

SEE PHANSTIEL PAGE 4

Phanstiel scholarship program affects fi rst set of middle-class students

mitchell franz | staff photographer

Students cheer on New York’s College Team during the football game against Rutgers University on Saturday. Athletic Director Daryl Gross said SU would continue to use the NYC appeal for marketing.

daily orange file photo LOUISE AND HOWARD PHANSTIEL, founders of the Phanstiel Scholars Program, made a $20 million donation to SU last October.

giving back’

a t l a n t i c c o a s t c o n f e r e n c e

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 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

fi ve times in a double-overtime

Page 2: October 3, 2011

N E W S @ D A I L Y O R A N G E . C O M

LINES END HERE TEXT ENDS HERE

S TA R T M O N DA Y2 o c t obe r 3 , 2 0 1 1

MULTIMEDIA >>

chris griffin and justin stumberg | the daily orange

Time-lapsin’ in the rainCuseLapse, a time-lapse video shot this weekend, highlights pedestrians walking on campus in front of the Hall of Languages, Crouse College and near University Avenue. Watch the whole video at bit.ly/cuselapse.

See the rest of last week’s photos in our Photo of the Week Gallery at dailyorange.com.

CONTACT US >>

n e w s

Green LEEDerThe Syracuse Center of Excellence has earned the highest Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certifi cation.

p u l p

OvercastThe Cradle Will Rock muddles expressive acting with its dense plot.

s p o r t s

FlashbackBefore raiding the Big East for Syracuse and Pittsburgh, the Atlantic Coast Conference took Boston College, Miami and Virginia Tech in 2003.

TOMORROW >>WEATHER >>TODAY TOMORROW WEDNESDAY

H62| L48 H62| L41H63| L48

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CORRECTIONS >>In a Sept. 29 article titled “SU could see boost in academ-ics, recruiting,” the U.S. News and World Report ranking of Rutgers University was misstated. Rutgers is ranked No. 68, according to the 2012 list.

In that same article, the average academic ranking for Big East schools was misstated. The Big East average ranking is 110.

In a Sept. 29 online article titled “Anti-Semitism unfounded at SU,” the sponsor of Shack-a-thon was misstated. The event is hosted by Habitat for Humanity, while Hillel at SU and the Muslim Students’ Association are co-sponsoring a single shack at the event.

In a Sept. 29 article titled “Can’t get enough: Abundant selection of tasty dishes make for gut-busting meal,” the name of the yogurt was misstated. The yogurt provided at Taste of India is called raita.

In a Sept. 26 article titled “Dining hall events celebrate His-panic culture, heritage,” the title of the event was misstated. Phi Iota Alpha hosted the event called Sazon Phiota!

In that same article, the Goldstein location of the event was misstated. Sazon Phiota! was held at Goldstein Student Center on South Campus.

The Daily Orange regrets these errors.

MUST LOVE DOGSAsst. News Editor

Jon Harris does.

Write for news. Email [email protected]

Page 3: October 3, 2011

n e w sm o n d ayoctober 3, 2011

pa g e 3the daily orange

c a m p u s b r i e f s

By Dylan SegelbaumContributing Writer

Syracuse University hosted its 13th annual Dollar Day at the Dome on Sat-urday, prior to Rutgers University’s 19-16 double-overtime victory over SU. The event was facilitated by more than 200 members of SU’s fraternities and sororities.

Dollar Day, part of SU’s United Way campaign, is a yearly event targeted toward students to encourage dona-tions to charitable causes.

Organizers were primarily posi-

tioned around the Carrier Dome and on the Quad. But volunteers were stationed as far out as South Campus, Ostrom Avenue and many of the uni-versity’s event parking lots, said Jen-nifer Horvath, campaign coordinator and public information officer for the Department of Public Safety.

It was Horvath’s first year coordi-nating the event, which she will also run next year, she said. Despite a drop off in donations from last year, the event was an overall success, Horvath said.

In the third quarter of the football game, it was announced via the pub-lic address system that $3,667.33 had been raised in total. After the game, Horvath estimated that the actual number was closer to $5,000.

“It was a little down from last year, but it was cold and rainy out, so there’s not much that you can do,” she said.

All proceeds went to United Way of Central New York, which directly benefits 95 programs and 35 agencies that are locally based. SU’s United Way campaign runs through Dec. 9,

according to the SU Athletics website. One area that was particularly

encouraging was the number of stu-dent volunteers, an estimate of about 320, she said. This was up from the 250 students who took part in Dollar Day last year. Though primarily consist-ing of members of SU’s greek system, students not involved in greek life participated as well.

“This year our student volunteers were outstanding,” Horvath said. “They stood out there in the cold and

community donates to Dollar Day at the Dome

By Dara McBrideeditor in Chief

A 19-year-old Syracuse resident was struck by a car near the intersection of Ostrom and Euclid avenues around 1 a.m. Sunday.

Adriana Barletta, also of Syracuse, said she and the victim were at a party. The victim’s father was picking her up in a Chevrolet Cobalt when a Mazda 6 crashed into the rear of the car. The Cobalt was pushed into the opposite lane and significant damage occurred to the Mazda.

Barletta said her friend was con-scious, but her wrist was injured.

Officers from the Syracuse Police Department and Department of Public Safety were on the scene but declined to comment. Ostrom Avenue was blocked off between Clarendon Street and Euclid Avenue.

The driver’s side air bag on the Mazda was deployed. SPD officers searched the car and the trunk. The car had a South Campus parking pass.

The victim was taken in a Rural/Metro ambulance at 1:30 a.m. About 10 minutes later, a tow truck from Big D’s Auto towed the Mazda.

[email protected]

—Presentation Director Becca McGov-ern contributed reporting to this article.

—A previous version of this article appeared on dailyorange.com on Oct. 2.

Man arrested at Westcott TheaterA Syracuse man was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct at 12:30 a.m. Friday at the Westcott The-ater, according to a Syracuse police report.

Stephen Kenny, 26, was harassing customers, police noted. A guard at the theater approached a police offi-cer about Kenny’s behavior.

The owner of the Westcott Theater, told police that Kenny was intoxicated and was asked to leave.

Kenny told police he was doing nothing wrong and just wanted to listen to music. Kenny was advised he would be arrested if he did not leave. After Kenny refused, he was arrested and charged with disorderly conduct.

SU students burglarizedA burglary occurred at the East Genesee Street apartment of two SU students between 9 a.m. and 3:45 p.m. Thursday, according to a report.

One student, a junior in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Com-munications, had his MacBook, two iPods, an Xbox game console and a controller stolen.

—Compiled by Jon Harris, asst. news

editor, [email protected]

By George ClarkeStaff Writer

Does That Make Sense, an online service providing customized study guides for college students and devel-oped by a Syracuse University alum-nus, went public in September after two years of development.

Jonathan Kestenbaum, a 2009 political science alumnus from SU and member of Pi Kappa Alpha, cre-ated the service after he graduated from SU while studying law at Hofs-tra University.

Using money he earned from Familiar Threads, a clothing busi-

ness he started at SU that created greek apparel for SU students, he partnered with Kamran Barelli, a technology consultant in New York City, to create a tutoring service like no other, Kestenbaum said.

“We say we’re like eBay for tutor-ing,” he said.

The service hires degree-holding tutors — called “nerds” — who bid to accept assignments from students to create original study materials for almost any topic, Kestenbaum said. Prices depend on the number of tutors available for an assignment, their familiarity with the topic and

the type of material students request, Kestenbaum said.

Since creating study material is less difficult for “nerds” than it is for a newcomer to the topic, experts in a given subject need less time to create study guides and can then charge students less, he said.

A robust set of software algo-rithms that solve the business model’s most complicated problems is what makes the service unique, Kestenbaum said.

During the website’s two-year, invite-only beta phase, students would sometimes hire and pay a tutor

who had no access to the necessary textbooks, Kestenbaum said. Barelli and Kestenbaum responded to this problem by developing a search algo-rithm that scours libraries near a tutor’s home for the textbooks they need to fulfill an assignment. If a tutor is unable to access the right textbooks, that tutor cannot agree to create that study guide.

The service also works with Tur-nitin, an anti-plagiarism website universities use to scan student essays, to prevent tutors from dupli-cating their work, he said. Every

su alumnus creates online tutoring program for college students

kristen parker | asst. photo editorMiNa JOhNsON, JULEs PEiXOTO aNd sara schMaLbrUch, all sophomores, collect money during the 13th annual event before the football game Saturday. after collecting money, organizers headed to the Physics building to count up the $5,000 in cash.

see TUToring PrograM page 4

see Dollar Day page 4

Syracuse female hurt in Sunday car accident

Page 4: October 3, 2011

Lines end here utext ends here u

rain and raised a lot of money for a great cause.” Ana Estes, a sophomore international rela-

tions major, participated in Dollar Day for the first time this year with her sorority, Kappa Alpha Theta. She said she liked the fact that a majority of the proceeds go back to Syracuse and the surrounding areas.

“They told us that one-fourth of people in Central New York are in a program that is funded or is helped out by United Way,” she said. “Every donation is helpful. People can

give us spare change, or as much or as little as they want.”

Sarah McKinney, a sophomore advertising major and member of Phi Sigma Sigma, was also involved due to similar reasons as Estes.

“I didn’t know too much about Dollar Day before, and I signed up because my house did it,” she said.

Jim Steves, a game attendee, was one of many individuals who donated Saturday. For him, contributing money just made sense.

“It’s ‘cause it’s the right thing to do,” he said. “You guys are taking your time raising money for a nice cause, and that’s what makes every-thing go around.”

[email protected]

4 o c t obe r 3 , 2 0 1 1 n e w s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m

spotlight and fame of New York City.“It’s recruiting, it’s branding, it’s arguably

the greatest city in the world,” he said. “So why would we not take advantage of that.”

Kevin O’Neill, an advertising professor in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communica-tions, said he thinks the move may both hurt and help the university’s marketing strategy.

“I’m not sure it’s fatal, but I mean Madison Square Garden is the national cathedral of col-lege basketball, and we were one of the archbish-ops,” he said. “So you pull us out of that venue, that can’t be a good thing.”

But O’Neill said he is not sure if the bad necessarily outweighs the good because by join-ing the ACC, Syracuse University expand its footprint and expose itself to a highly populated area of the country.

Brian Spector, president of the SU Alumni Association, said that for alumni, the move to the ACC is both a loss and a gain. He said while SU games are scheduled less frequently in the Northeast against teams such as Georgetown and Connecticut, SU also gains some games in the region against teams such as Boston College and Maryland.

On the other hand, SU also has large alumni bases in areas such as Atlanta and South Flori-da, which would allow more alumni from those areas to attend games, he said.

Spector said he expects SU athletics will work in more games in the NYC area once the move to the ACC happens. He said he believes SU has a firm commitment to the fans in the area.

The chancellor has also received assurance that some ACC games will be played in the New York City metropolitan area, he said.

“One would hope that would include in either a permanent or rotating basis all or part of the ACC tournament,” he said. “There is also a belief of a firm commitment by Syracuse to try to continue to play a traditional rival, like St.

John’s, in the New York City metropolitan area.”Spector, a 1978 graduate of the Martin J.

Whitman School of Management, said he thinks from a marketing standpoint, the move to the ACC will force SU to use creative outlets to keep the marketing strategy alive.

“Always going to ramifications or downsides, so we may have to be more creative and find other ways,” he said. “We have teams other than just football and basketball. Why can’t a lacrosse tournament be held again in New Jersey? We have a very large presence there.”

Eva Zaccaria, a 2010 Newhouse alumna, said she was initially surprised and upset with the move to the ACC. Zaccaria has attended every SU game and event at Madison Square Garden since she moved to New York City in December 2010.

“I think it’s definitely going to be an adjust-ment period,” she said. “There’s a lot more alumni in NYC area than there are in the South. Syracuse will obviously lose that home court advantage pretty strongly.”

Zaccaria said she doesn’t think many NYC alumni will travel very far to see games after the novelty wears off. Personally, she said she won’t be flying to any games, unless they are NCAA Tournament games.

She also said she is not sure if SU can main-tain its current marketing strategy if they are not playing in games at MSG or the Pinstripe Bowl as much.

“You can’t call yourself New York’s College Team if the only place you ever really play is upstate,” she said. “I don’t really see them being able to maintain that.”

But in the end, O’Neill, the advertising pro-fessor, said there’s one marketing strategy for sport teams that outweighs all the others.

“I mean the most reliable marketing pro-gram for a sports team is winning,” he said. “You can’t beat winning for a marketing strat-egy.”

[email protected]

— Sports Editor Michael Cohen and Asst. News Editor Jon Harris contrib-

uted reporting to this article.

president for advancement and external affairs, and Youlonda Copeland-Morgan, associate vice president for enrollment management and direc-tor of scholarships and student aid at SU. After that, plans for the program moved quickly.

“Giving back and helping the institutions and people who helped us along the way is very important to us,” Howie Phanstiel said.

Since 2008, Copeland-Morgan said the finan-cial aid office has seen an increased number of students in need of financial assistance. A record number of students have applied to SU, and many of those apply from low- and middle-income backgrounds. If families are seeing college tuition — but not wages — rise, there is going to be a need, she said.

Marks, now a freshman majoring in Spanish and public relations, said she wanted to go to SU, but wasn’t willing to see her family take on the monetary obligation. Her father is an English teacher and her mother is a social worker, and both are also helping her brother through col-lege. Marks still needed to take out loans, but ultimately, the scholarship made attending her first-choice school a reality.

“Really, it was what made the difference for us. She was headed to a state school until that scholarship came in just days before we had to send the check in,” said Jon Marks, her father. “That really made it for us, we’re awfully grate-ful.”

The Phanstiels’ gift is among a small group of scholarships aimed at middle-class students. In 2009, Purdue University introduced a program,

which is given to students from Indiana house-holds with incomes of $40,000 to $100,000. In Sep-tember, the University of Oregon announced the Mary Corrigan and Richard Solari Scholarship, available to Oregonian students also caught in the middle.

But Copeland-Morgan said she has not heard of one quite like the Phanstiel’s gift, which emphasizes philanthropy and stipulates schol-ars to enroll in the financial literacy program, participate in an annual lecture series on giving back and submit a one-page statement about the philanthropic efforts with which they are involved.

“I think it’s absolutely wonderful that Howie and Louise went beyond just giving money, they could have done that, but it reflects a deeper sense of responsibility and a deeper sense of caring,” Copeland-Morgan said.

SU has an institutional budget of $180 mil-lion in financial aid money and a total budget, which includes federal loans and grants, of $450 million, Copeland-Morgan said. More than 80 percent of students receive some sort of finan-cial aid and about two-thirds of the students at SU receive scholarship or grant assistance from SU.

For Howie Phanstiel, who came from a mid-dle-class background and had to work through college, and Louise Phasntiel, who took night classes until she graduated at 27, giving a gift was not to only help students attend their dream school, but also to make the most of the experi-ence, they said.

“For students who have to work a certain number of hours, they’re going to miss out on the total university experience,” Howie Phanstiel said.

The couple was on campus at the start of the semester and met the scholars, who they described as diverse and energetic about giv-ing back to their own communities and now Syracuse.

Copeland-Morgan said she is most impressed with the amount of work the scholars have already done in the community.

“No one person was doing one thing,” she said. “When you read their bios, it’s a habit of giving back. It’s almost as if they have to be engaged in service in one way or another.”

Throughout high school, Katie Arts, of West Palm Beach, Fla., balanced her love of the arts with community service. She danced and vol-unteered at the Norton Museum of Art and the Sandoway House Nature Center. When it came to applying to college, she said she also applied for financial aid and scholarships. She said it looked like she would be going to a state school in Florida given her economic background.

“It’s that middle ground where people kind of forget about you,” Arts said.

Arts, now a freshman art photography major, said she was honored to be selected for the program.

“I’m amazed at how small the group of people is,” Arts said, adding she’s still surprised she was selected to such an intimate scholarship program.

“But I’m still grateful that they did.”Adrienne Marcino, of Sparta, N.J., heard

about the scholarship, but did not imagine it to be so selective, either.

“I thought it was a broader, much broader program,” said Marcino, who was a member of the lacrosse team and the student newspa-per in high school and also involved in volun-

teering through her church. As the eldest of four, Marcino said the gift was the final push for Syracuse.

Now that she has come to SU and met everyone involved in the program, Marcino said she has a feeling of security. Each schol-ar will be paired with a student mentor from SU’s Student Philanthropy Council and also has contact with the Council of Mentors, a group comprised of different leaders from offices on campus.

The network of guidance available — from the Phanstiels to the mentors on campus — has been the best part of the program so far for Marks, the freshman Spanish and public rela-tions major.

“They’re so helpful, and they just really want all of the Phanstiel Scholars to succeed in what-ever they do at Syracuse,” Marks said.

In many ways, this is a test year for the program, and SU officials have said there may be some tweaks to how the program operates, the number of scholars or functions of the mentor groups.

Walsh said his hope for the program is that the scholars will begin to break out and become leaders of philanthropy on campus. He said he would like to see the scholars continue to help each other and future incoming scholars.

The gift is now part of SU’s endowment, meaning it will grow and always be available, Copeland-Morgan said. Although the program and the number of scholars may change, the money will continue to go toward helping stu-dents’ futures.

“It will always go on,” Copeland-Morgan said. “There will always be Phanstiel Scholars.”

[email protected]

study guide is unique, Kestenbaum said, and students retain the rights to the guides that tutors create for them.

The website displays no ads but is already profitable because of a price markup that covers the cost of Turnitin verification and other costs of business, such as Web hosting and software development, Kestenbaum said.

After two years and $250,000 in software development, Kestenbaum’s service grew from a 100-student beta to a company with 225 tutors and more than 13,000 students, he said.

Jose Moreno, a sophomore broadcast journalism major, said a service like Does That Make Sense had crossed his mind before, but he has yet to see any marketing for it at SU.

“If a faculty member or someone of that authority were to promote it, I’d be more likely to use it,” he said.

After starting the business with a total of $250 in marketing, Kestenbaum said, he is appealing to students and faculty at several universities, including Pennsylvania State

University and the University of Michigan, and he will come to SU within the next month.

“Now we’re ready to start putting out the word,” Kestenbaum said. “There’s no other service like this right now.”

Does That Make Sense is working with The Campus Socialite, a lifestyle blog for college students, on a 12-campus marketing tour that includes nerd mascots and vials of M&Ms candy, Kestenbaum said. To woo faculty, the business hosts free luncheons and raffles tick-ets to local attractions, such as Turning Stone Casino, he said.

For the next two years, Does That Make Sense will be Kestenbaum’s primary focus, though he sees a long list of possibilities for the service’s patented technology, he said. In the future, he said he hopes to apply its bid-ding system to real estate services and legal research. The service may someday fit the needs of younger students, especially those with disabilities, he said.

In the meantime, Kestenbaum said, finish-ing law school at Hofstra comes first.

“I’ll have to develop some kind of exit strat-egy,” he said. “It’s just really hard to do every-thing at once.”

[email protected]

phanstielf r o m p a g e 1

marketingf r o m p a g e 1

Dollar Dayf r o m p a g e 3

tutoring programf r o m p a g e 3

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opi n ionsi d e a s

pa g e 5the daily orange

The university’s move to the Atlantic Coast Conference from the Big East conference will increase Syracuse University’s exposure in the Southeast. The exposure will aid SU’s recruitment efforts in new geographic areas, but underscores a need to complement recruiting with real academic improvements.

Representatives from Boston College said the Northeast school experienced an increase in applica-tions from the Southeast, though that was not a motivation for joining the ACC in 2004. SU’s move to the ACC may mend some of the recent blows to its academic reputation and certainly highlights its need to do just that.

Schools in the ACC cover a greater area of the United States and are primarily located in the South. Tele-vision coverage of SU games will also increase as a result of the move to the ACC. These two factors could attract a greater number of applications from the Southeast, experts say. This predicted increase in applicants goes hand in hand with other academic recruitment efforts. SU has focused its recruitment on this portion of the United States because more college-bound students will be graduating in

the Southeast than the Northeast in the coming years.

Despite the expansion of its recruitment efforts, SU has received several blows to its reputation in recent years. U.S. News and World Report ranks SU No. 62 in college rankings, a drop from No. 40 in the late ‘90s. It voluntarily pulled out of the prestigious Association of Ameri-can Universities before getting forced out last spring and has focused less on raising money for academics and faculty relative to almost every other fundraising effort.

SU’s declining national reputation may be healed in part by the move to the ACC. SU has had traditionally little name recognition outside of the Northeast. This is changing thanks to recruitment efforts. But SU’s future exposure in games against schools with enormous fan bases like the Tarheels of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the Blue Devils of Duke University will greatly expand the SU brand.

High school upperclassmen with

no prior knowledge of SU will put significant weight into SU’s rela-tively low U.S. News ranking and high acceptance rate. But students who grew up rooting against, or for, SU in games and hearing the name tossed around by friends and relatives will be far more likely to overlook otherwise discouraging figures.

Schools in the ACC have relation-ships that could greatly benefit SU students, particularly those with international interests. ACC member schools participate in the Interna-tional Academic Collaborative, which brings together study abroad and research opportunities among the institutions. SU’s already thriving abroad program could become even more renowned as part of these coop-erative relationships.

Overall, the move to the ACC, where SU sits below the average U.S. News ranking of No. 49 among member colleges, should motivate SU to revitalize its national reputation. If SU’s administration believes the more competitive schools of the ACC are more in line with SU’s academic profile, then it should work to make that notion a reality.

M o n d ayoctober 3, 2011

News Editor Meghin DelaneyEditorial Editor Beckie Strum Feature Editor Kathleen KimSports Editor Michael CohenPresentation Director Becca McGovernPhoto Editor Brandon WeightCopy Chief Laurence LeveilleArt Director Emmett BaggettDevelopment Editor Kathleen RonayneSpecial Projects Editor Katie McInerneyAsst. Presentation Director Ankur PatankarAsst. News Editor Jon HarrisAsst. News Editor Liz SawyerAsst. News Editor Debbie Truong

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

Amrita Mainthia mANAgiNg EDitor

Dara McBride EDitor iN ChiEF

Asst. Feature Editor Colleen BidwillAsst. Feature Editor Danielle Odiamar Asst. Sports Editor Mark CooperAsst. Sports Editor Ryne GeryAsst. Photo Editor Stacie FanelliAsst. Photo Editor Lauren MurphyAsst. Photo Editor Kristen ParkerDesign Editor Daniel BerkowitzDesign Editor Stephanie LinAsst. Copy Editor Stephen BaileyAsst. Copy Editor Stephanie BouviaAsst. Copy Editor Karin DolinsekAsst. Copy Editor Andrew TredinnickAsst. Copy Editor Breanne Van NostrandAsst. Copy Editor Erik van Rheenen

general manager Peter Waackit Director Mike Escalanteit manager Derek OstranderCirculation manager Harold HeronAdvertising Designer Cecilia JayoAdvertising Designer Yoli WorthAdvertising representative Bianca Rodriguez Advertising representative Kelsey Rowland Advertising representative Andrew Steinbach Advertising representative Yiwei WuClassifieds manager Michael KangCirculation Joyce PlacitoCirculation Olivia St. Denismarketing manager Assel BaitassovaStudent Business manager Brooke WilliamsBusiness intern Tim Bennett

l i b e r a l

Law should protect citizens filming police arrests

I n recent months, citizens videotaping police activity have escalated conflict with the

police. Most of the confrontations are a result of the increasingly easy access to cameras and video record-ers on cellphones.

In most of these situations, police proceed about their jobs, but there are a growing number of reports that police have intimidated people who take videos. Because police can easily abuse their power and intimidate, laws should limit the police’s ability to confiscate or delete footage.

In one incident, reported in the Baltimore Sun, a man who took video of his friend being arrested at a horse racing event in 2010. Police asked the man to surrender his camera as evidence. The man eventually complied and later found that the video had been deleted. Now, the American Civil Liberties Union is suing The Baltimore police department.

In Philadelphia, two people recorded a woman whose head was repeatedly slammed into a police cruiser. Shakir Riley, one of the people filming told the Philadelphia Inquirer that police “beat him, poured a soda on his face and stomped on his phone, destroying the video he had just taken.” Police claimed that filming was a violation of federal law. Riley and the other person filming were charged with disorderly conduct, only to have the charges dropped.

These incidents, two of a grow-ing number, highlight the need for greater protections from police. Deborah Jeon, ACLU legal direc-tor, told The Baltimore Sun, “It is antithetical to a democracy for the government to tell its citizens that they do not have the right to record what government officials say or do or how they behave in public.”

Police officers offer a different perspective. Allowing people to record can often distract police from their duties. Officers may be too preoccupied by the potential biases of the video. By not capturing

the whole incident and the back-ground, those who view the video may not have the full information needed to judge the situation. While video may offer a biased perspec-tive, this should not be cause for police to overstep their authority and confiscate videos.

A commonality in several of the incidents is that officers use the law and their position of author-ity to compel people taking video to surrender their footage. The unevenness in power requires that the law protects citizens who are simply exercising their rights to film in public spaces. Police should be barred from making illegitimate threats and lying to the public.

Some states’ courts, such as in Illinois and Massachusetts, have interpreted existing laws to deter-mine videotaping police or anyone without their consent represents a violation of the privacy of the person being filmed. Certain excep-tions exist. Other states have no precedent or definitive ruling which states that videotaping is illegal.

Interpretations from these courts conflict with the basic rights citizens have to hold the govern-ment and its employees accountable. Without video evidence of police abuses, oftentimes a police officer’s word is valued over a citizen’s word.

The goal of a proposed law to permit citizens to videotape would not try to make police work more difficult. Instead, protecting the public’s right to videotape would promote accountability. Those who are supposed to protect us should not be exempt from justice.

Harmen Rockler is a junior news-paper and political science major.

His column appears every Monday. He can be reached at [email protected].

H a r m e n r o c k l e r

to the left, to the left

Move to ACC to mend SU’s reputatione d i t o r i a l

by the daily orange editorial board

S c r i b b l e

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By Jess SiartSTAFF WRITER

W hen Robert Miller returned to his hometown of Margaretville, N.Y., after Tropical Storm Irene, the area

was barely recognizable. Half of Main Street was devastated, entire buildings were washed away and roads were impassable.

Miller, a senior polymer chemistry major at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry, organized a group of fi ve students to spend the weekend of Sept. 10 helping repair the damage done by the storm.

Along with Miller’s group from ESF’s main campus, there were also multiple groups from ESF’s Ranger School in Wanakena, N.Y., that visited damaged towns in the Catskills region.

“We wanted to help out businesses that were destroyed or fl ooded and help out families,” he said. “We pulled the group together and did some work.”

The group spent the fi rst day in Arkville, N.Y., a neighboring town, cleaning up debris in a park, and the second day was spent on Main Street in Margaretville helping businesses, including a drug store owned by Miller’s family.

Most businesses experienced fl ooding in their basements and fi rst levels and some fared even worse, Miller said. A recently renovated plaza in a low-lying part of town was completely destroyed and partially washed away, he said.

“The CVS Pharmacy is gone and the grocery store was basically destroyed,” Miller said.

Miller said the fl oods after Irene were the worst he’s seen since 1996, when there was 14 feet of water, compared to 16 feet in the most recent fl oods. While cleanup efforts are still going on, almost half of the businesses in town

are still closed because the buildings aren’t structurally sound. During the week, the town tries to carry on with life as normal as possible, he said, and then focuses on cleaning up and repairing damage on the weekends.

Miller said the small town, where he gradu-ated with about 35 people, banded together to help.

“A lot of projects are going on where local construction companies are offering free labor and free equipment for buildings that revital-ize instead of demolish,” he said.

Miller said that it was important to him to go back and help his family and friends return his town to normal.

Julia Brophy, a junior landscape architec-ture major, also from Margaretville, was part of Miller’s group. Brophy said her house wasn’t seriously damaged, but several of her friends’ houses were hit hard.

“There was debris in trees way up where there should never be water,” said Brophy. “It was pretty unbelievable, and it was one of the weirdest things I’ve seen.”

Like Miller, Brophy said she was struck by how the people in town came together. Because people are still trying to repair the damage, several local businesses are operating out of temporary locations to keep things as normal as possible, Brophy said.

Despite the severity of the damage, the fl oods haven’t received much attention, which Brophy said she attributes to the town’s size.

“If it’s New Orleans, there’s so many people there and everyone knows where it is,” Brophy said. “But if you say Margaretville, New York, no one knows where it is.”

Kelly Long, a senior conservation biology major, joined Miller’s group because she saw how the fl oods affected the two. Long has experience with fl ood damage cleanup, having spent last spring break in New Orleans at St. Bernard Parish.

“The thought of letting my friend’s home-town sit in that disarray was not OK,” said Long. “We knew that people needed help and that it really couldn’t wait.”

Long was amazed by the amount of debris the group saw at the park in Arkville on their fi rst day. The group collected the debris and put it in piles for government organizations to haul away. She said they picked up many things that had washed away from houses like tires, fenc-ing, furniture, televisions, stairways, picture frames, tackle boxes and Christmas ornaments.

Long said that while some areas were rel-atively unscathed, other parts of town have homes that are partially or fully submerged in sinkholes.

Victoria Reinhart, a senior environmental science major, also helped with the cleanup.

Reinhart is from Prattsville, N.Y., which now has more than 40 houses condemned and a trailer park that no longer exists.

“I went home Labor Day weekend with a large suitcase fi lled with donations, and I cried at how much devastation there was within the valley and my home itself,” she said.

“People I grew up with lost their homes and everything thing in them on the day Irene hit and the days after,” Reinhart added. “I watched them all suffer, my family included, for four days while sitting in Syracuse going to classes,

doing assignments and essentially doing noth-ing.”

To help do her part, Reinhart organized the Hurricane Irene Relief Drive. Donations can be made at ESF’s Moon Library and are then distributed to towns affected by the fl oods in Schoharie, Greene and Delaware counties.

During her time spent at home, Reinhart said, she and her family worked from sunrise to sunset cleaning out homes and buildings and disposing damaged property. Reinhart said she’s not sure when she’ll be able to return to the area, but she will continue to run the drive until supplies are no longer needed.

“I know that in the long run,” she said, “the people back home will help each other and some-day get back to normal lives.”

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o c t obe r 3 , 2 0 1 1 7N E W S @ D A I L Y O R A N G E . C O M

ESFevery monday in news

courtesy of robert millerMain Street in Margaretville, N.Y., flooded after Tropical Storm Irene worked its way up the East Coast last month. With the help of a group of ESF students, the town has been working to clean up debris since the aftermath of the storm.

Flood controlStudents travel to Margaretville, NY, to help clean up after tropical storm

“The thought of letting my friend’s hometown sit in that disarray was not OK. We knew that people needed help and that it really couldn’t wait.”

Kelly LongSENIOR CONSERVATION BIOLOGY MAJOR

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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 m8 o c t obe r 3 , 2 0 1 1

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

comic strip by mike burns | burnscomicstrip.blogspot.com

BeAr on cAmpus by tung pham | [email protected]

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

put some spice in your life. drAw comics.

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perry BiBle fellowship by nicholas gurewitch | pbfcomics.com

Page 9: October 3, 2011

the sweet stuff in the middle

Text and photo by Stacie Fanelli Asst. Photo Editor

F inding a matching set was no easy task, so Franchesca Clemente settled for a color scheme: four bowls painted

in different shades of blue and purple — a few uneven around the edges and others with intricate carvings all around. Her purchases will pay for 28 pantry meals for hungry fami-lies.

The Interreligious Food Consortium of Central New York will be able to provide these meals and thousands more with proceeds from the hunger awareness charity Empty Bowls, part of IFC’s “Eliminate Hunger” cam-paign, which took place at The Warehouse on Friday.

“I love the uniqueness of pottery. I love how every time you do it, it comes out different,” said Clemente, a Syracuse resident.

Syracuse University has had a hand in the city’s rendition of the Internation-al Empty Bowls project since shortly after its founding in Michigan in 1990. Back then, a local crafts shop in Syracuse, Eureka Crafts, created and donated most of the bowls and let students in the College of Visual and Performing Arts pitch in. But

for the past four years, the school’s ceramics department has helped sponsor the event.

Erin Daetsch, a sophomore advertising major, was one of many who attended as an art enthusiast and said the hunger relief effort was an added bonus.

“I think it’s a really cool idea. You’re help-ing the cause, but you get to see everyone’s art,” she said.

Attendees sorted through the 1,800 bowls created by art students from the uni-versity and in the ceramics programs at Clayscapes Pottery in Syracuse. Each pur-chase of a bowl included six ounces of soup, provided by a variety of local restaurants. Errol Willett, chair of the art department

in the School of Art and Design, said this amount is very symbolic.

“Six ounces of food a day is what most of the world is surviving on,” said Willett, who has been working for months to organize the event with Peter Beasecker, a professor of ceramics in VPA.

Beasecker said the goal was to have people hungry at the event to make them understand what others go through in their daily lives. Both Willett and Beasecker said they hoped awareness of the issue would grow after peo-ple went home craving seconds.

Six ounces was barely enough to cover the bottoms of some bowls, and Tim See, Clay-scapes ceramics instructor and SU alumnus, said the bigger bowls were the more popular choices.

Zach Dunn, a third-year graduate student in ceramics, estimates that he made about 100 bowls.

“We tried to keep them on the smaller side, but by the same token, we wanted to make something people would want to take home,” he said.

Dunn and several graduate students began making bowls over the summer to prepare for

By Josh CampbellContributing WritEr

Victoria Crisp, a 71-year-old woman from Nashville, Tenn., was among the hundreds who showed up to run in Sunday’s Syracuse Festival of Races despite the less than cooperative weather.

“Sure, it’s cold and raining, but nothing short of a hurricane is going to keep us off those streets,” Crisp said.

The morning of races kicked off with the men’s 5K at 8:50 a.m. After 15 minutes and 26 seconds of soldiering through the wind and rain, Mark Andrews broke the finish line tape to enthusiastic applause. For his persis-tence and speed, the 40-year-old Roch-ester, N.Y., athlete will receive the $250 John Trowse Memorial Award.

Exactly one hour after the men’s 5K began, the women’s 5K starting gun sent hundreds of runners into the USA Track and Field-certified course. At the end of the race, Stephanie Herbst-Lucke, a 45-year-old Atlanta, Ga., native and former University of Wisconsin runner, claimed victory with a time of 16:37. She not only won the Women’s 5K in the Syracuse Fes-tival of Races, but also nabbed the record for fastest 5K time in the 45-49 age group, breaking the previous record by two seconds.

Sascha Scott, assistant professor of art history at Syracuse University, also participated in the women’s 5K. She came in sixth overall, but came in first place in her 35-39 age group with a time of 17:52.

The Syracuse Festival of Races isn’t just about the record-setters and semi-professional runners. It’s also about the everyday individual who decided to step out and exercise — like 7-year-old Sean Cahill, who finished at the 30-minute mark, or 56-year-old Christine Kennedy, who crossed the finish line just under 19 minutes. This year, the event had its youngest competitor ever: 5-year-old Amanda Aitken, who crossed the line with a time of 37:44.

Following the men’s and women’s 5K main events, the MVP Health Care 3K Fun and Fitness Run kicked off, bringing large numbers of com-petitors from both races out into the street, ready to finish out the day with a casual fun run alongside their families.

Several dozen who chose to stay after the races treated themselves to free food and drinks, including

pa g e 9the daily orange

m o n D aYoctober 3, 2011

Fast-paced race draws big crowd

see bowls page 10see race page 12

kelsey francella and Meredith Jeffers attended the Empty bowls event, which donates to hunger-fighting groups. Francella, a freshman communication design major, and Jeffers, a freshman English and textual studies major, were two of hundreds of participants.

Less is moreHand-crafted bowls, small portions of soup drive hunger awareness fundraising event

“I can’t give money. I’m an artist. I’m poor. One thing I can do is make bowls.”

Tim See ClAysCAPEs CErAmiCs instruCtor

And syrACusE Alumnus

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Good news: you still have time to study abroad!But not much. The deadline for spring 2012 semester and short-term programs is October 10.

Visit suabroad.syr.edu for information on programs and application requirements. Need-based financial aid is available.

the event. See reminded a woman checking a bowl for

an artist’s initials or a date: “It’s about the bowl, not who made it.”

Willett said every bowl is signed with a

simple, “EB” for Empty Bowls rather than an identifier.

“We try to not have it be about the artist as much as the cause,” he said.

Most artists manning the tables could not identify their own work at all. So many bowls were thrown in the same short stretch of time that it had to be about quantity as much as qual-ity, See said.

Outreach to the Greater Syracuse area was a tremendous effort this year in appealing to both artists and participants. See said the ceramics students worked together to create, glaze, trim and pack the bowls.

See said that he’s doing this not just to fur-ther his artistic pursuits, but also because he truly believes in the cause and making a differ-ence through art.

“I can’t give money. I’m an artist. I’m poor. One thing I can do is make bowls,” he said.

Volunteers wearing red and yellow bowling-style shirts swarmed the lower level of The Warehouse. They realigned the bowls on the

seemingly endless tables every time someone picked one up to inspect its texture. Volunteers came from Clayscapes, which donated all of the clay, and from the Bank of New York Mellon, Solvay Bank and the Syracuse Ceramics Guild, which donated $1,000, the organizers said.

“I think it’s a very mixed group,” he said. “It’s the biggest event yet in terms of bowls, people, members of community organizations and just in terms of reach. And in terms of volunteers — we have an army here!”

VPA ceramics majors were required to attend. Senior ceramics major Sofia Mejias said she would have volunteered whether it was mandatory or not because the cause was impor-tant to her.

“For Ramadan, we fast and see how it is with-out the privilege of food, and I think this helps people see it in a nonreligious way,” Mejias said. Beasecker said what interested them was hav-ing their students get involved in the commu-nity.

Willett added, “Ceramics is invented with the notion of community from day one. ... It has always been about the food, about the use.”

[email protected]

bowlsf r o m p a g e 9

Stopping Starvation the empty Bowls Project is an inter-national effort created by the imagine render Group to fight hunger. individuals create handcrafted bowls for guests who are invited for a meal of soup and bread. Guests make a cash donation and keep a bowl as a reminder of all the empty ones that exist in the world. the empty Bowls Project started from a luncheon to raise money for a school district food drive and has since grown into a grassroots move-ment. events have taken place across the United states, Canada, new Zealand, Ger-many, Finland, england and hong Kong.

"Six ounces of food a day is what most of the world is surviving on."

Errol WillettChair oF the dePartment oF art in

the sChooL oF art and desiGn.

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By Erik van Rheenen

Asst. Copy Editor

The Quad was quiet on Friday, with the excep-tion of several students conversing with each other on their way to class. At 12:40 p.m., a group of Chinese students flooded the Quad, singing China’s national anthem, carrying flags and wearing stickers on their faces. Most students were decked out in shades of red, the national color of their motherland.

One student taking pictures and partici-pating in the mob was Ling Liang, a gradu-ate public administration major and student at the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry.

“This is a way for us to celebrate our love for our homeland, but also to show our together-ness as students from China,” she said.

The event was planned by the Chinese Stu-dents and Scholars Association at Syracuse University to celebrate the National Day of the People’s Republic of China. Member Wei Zhuang, a graduate environmental science and engineering major at ESF, helped plan two dif-ferent flash mob events. The group used mailing lists to reach out to Chinese students on both SU and ESF campuses.

“We came up with the idea last Sat-urday,” said Zhuang. “We only had it planned for a week, but a lot of students participated, and it turned out nicely.” Before the mob started, students mingled in small groups, chatting idly and constantly look-ing at their cellphones to check the time. Once a sharp whistle sounded, the quiet packs of stu-dents sprinted to meet each other at the center of the Quad, shouting loudly and exchanging tri-umphant smiles and hugs. Passers-by stopped dead in their tracks, not sure what exactly was happening.

After taking pictures with each other, the throng of students broke into song with the Chinese national anthem, proudly holding flags in the cool September breeze. Some stu-dents sang it seriously. Others tried to tag friends with stickers bearing the Chinese national flag without them noticing. But all the CSSA members radiated a feeling of united jubilation. The flash mob on the Quad lasted from 12:40 to 12:45 p.m. The second flash mob

took place at the E.S. Bird Library from 1:10 to 1:15 p.m.

At about 1:10 p.m., the carousing group of students meandered to the library for the encore performance of the flash mob. The flash mob not only allowed Chinese students to celebrate China’s national day, but also to showcase their national spirit to the rest of the campus.

“We wanted to show Syracuse how proud we are of our culture,” said Liang. “And hav-ing a flash mob was a good way to surprise everyone with a unique display of our holiday.”

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o c t obe r 3 , 2 0 1 1 1 1

Flash mob celebrates national day of pride with song, dance

zixi wu | staff photographerXiaosong Yan, a freshman in the College of Arts and sciences, and other students flood-ed the Quad on Friday to celebrate the National day of the people’s republic of China.Time To CelebraTe

the National day of the people’s repub-lic of China is celebrated every year on oct. 1 as a public holiday in China. it was founded oct. 1, 1949, at tiananmen square in Beijing. the Central people’s Government passed the “resolution on the National day of the people’s republic of China” on dec. 2, 1949. this day is cel-ebrated through a variety of government-organized activities throughout mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau. some the activities include fireworks and concerts. places such as tiananmen square are decorated with portraits of past leaders like Mao Zedong, founder of the people’s republic of China.

“We wanted to show Syracuse how proud we are of our culture. And having a flash mob was a good way to surprise everyone with a unique display of our holiday.”

Ling LiangGrAduAtE puBliC AdMiNistrAtioN MAjor At tHE stAtE uNivErsity oF NEw yorK CollEGE

oF ENviroNMENtAl sCiENCE ANd ForEstry

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Electronica band provides versatile set, enthralls crowdText and photo by Gabriela Sarzynski

design editor

The crowd roared in unison as the band mem-bers struck their first chord. All eyes were glued to the stage. The beat slowly built and after much anticipation, it intensified and

dropped like an exploding grenade. Hundreds in the crowd were overtaken by the infectious rhythm.

“There was a war out there,” said Conspira-tor’s guitarist Chris Michetti. “We won the battle tonight. It was a fun battle.”

Electronica band Conspirator performed at

the Westcott Theater on Thursday night for a crowd of more than 300, said Casey Jarrett, box office manager. Thursday night’s crowd was predominantly college-aged.

In the electronica world, Conspirator has become a household name. Two members of the popular jam band The Disco Biscuits, keyboard-ist Aron Magner and bassist Marc Brownstein, formed the band in 2004 alongside producer DJ Omen.

With the addition of guitar prodigy Chris Michetti of RAQ, Conspirator is no longer an electronic duo. The band is fluent in dubstep, electro house, drum and bass, house and drum-step, fully encompassing the umbrella genre of electronica. Brownstein said the tempo deter-mines what genre a song will fall under, each having a distinct pace and sound.

“They’re versatile, that’s why kids like them,” said Jesse Spitzer, a senior forest health major at State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry.

The band performed newly released tracks “Seek Bromance” and “Gypsy Lane,” along with older EPs, like “Velvet Red.” The crowd went wild for “Feed the Wolf,” enthusiastically jump-ing up and down. Darren Shearer of The New Deal and Mike Greenfield of Lotus alternated playing drums.

Conspirator can no longer be considered a mere side project. Within a week of releasing EP “Seek Bromance,” the track has been down-loaded 10,899 times with more than 36,000 plays

on the website SoundCloud, where the band makes their music available.

Because Conspirator is a conglomerate of musicians from other well-established bands, some fans have become uncomfortable with the style of music it has chosen to embody, Brown-stein said.

“The reason they’re begrudging us for liking it is because we’re the people who make the music that they like, and they’re afraid we’re gonna start making music they don’t like,” Brownstein said.

However, there are some fans that still enjoy both bands.

“I’m a fan of all the musicians onstage. When they’re all together, everyone hates on them,” Sara Snodgrass of Scranton, Pa., said. “But

when they’re playing together, it is definitely something that is substantial, something that should be heard.”

Brownstein expressed his enthusiasm for electronic music’s resurgence in the main-stream after a decade-long hiatus. Despite the growing competition, Brown expressed his excitement for the increasingly popular music.

“This new music is so nasty, I’m excited that it’s progressing again,” Brownstein said. “There was like a 10-year lag, and now the young kids came along and showed all of us older guys what’s next, and now it’s if you can make it, you can make it, and if you can’t, you can’t.”

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Installation project reflects artists’ heritage racef r o m p a g e 9

By Karin DolinsekAsst. Copy editor

As she moved through the exhibit describing a carbonized wood sculpture she created, New York-based artist Natalia Porter recalled the challenge of assembling stacks of fragile char-coal into a vertical piece of art.

“It’s the stacking gesture of a kid,” Porter said. “These sculptures are like the everyday passage of life. You take one step and another, and in the end, you have a whole. This instal-lation represents our learning and growth as artists.”

Porter was one of two Mexican-born artists from New York City who presented their col-laborative installation project “Edifice,” cur-rently on display at the Point of Contact Gal-lery in Syracuse. Curated by Pedro Cuperman, founder of the gallery and associate professor of Spanish at Syracuse University, the exhibi-tion commemorated Hispanic Heritage Month. The gallery hosted an opening reception with Porter and Gabriela Alva Cal Y Major last Thursday.

Inviting Boston-based writer Andrew Wit-kin to participate in the collaboration, the artists formed a dynamic partnership between written word and spatial composition, said Tere Paniagua, the gallery’s managing direc-tor and associate editor. Porter and Alva employed Witkin’s writings, which read like lists of accumulated thoughts, as inspiration for their pieces. The artists responded to Wit-kin’s juxtaposition of order and abstraction, as well as the visual composition of his printed words.

“It was interesting but also a challenge to keep the integrity of my work and still explore interests through someone else’s perceptions and thoughts,” Alva said.

While Porter created vertical structures that parallel Witkin’s organized building of written word, Alva based her works on indi-vidual poems using the word layout to generate new compositions in her prints and photo-graphs.

What draws Porter and Alva together is their interest of urban landscape and archi-tecture, reflected in the installation’s common theme of buildings, constructions and indus-trial objects.

“Human built objects placed in nature are fascinating,” Porter said. “I was inspired by cityscapes we live in and their elements, like graffiti marks on the side-walk.”

In one of her pieces, Porter stacked laser-cut paper shaped like tree foliage to build a vertical structure. The sculpture interacts with the porous quality of the gallery’s ceiling, con-necting with its environment to communicate an image of a stone stalactite spearing from above, Porter said.

Porter drew inspiration mainly from architecture and Alva employed industrial objects as the basis for her pieces. Using glass from broken soda bottles scattered all over cities in Mexico, she used the easily available material to portray an aspect of her home country. Alva said that in her home country, glass shards are placed on top of fences and used for protection.

“Glass became a part of the landscape in Mexico,” Alva said. “I tried to show the con-tradiction between danger and the feeling of safety. Broken glass is dangerous, but when light hits it under a certain angle it reflects beautifully.”

The colors resonating through the exhibit are predominantly earth tones and grays

resembling urban concrete, with surprising flashes of bright pink and orange color. Artists use colors they are suddenly drawn to, but also adhere to rules they created to keep consistency in their work, Alva said.

While it is an enriching experience for people to see works of art firsthand in a gallery, both artists also said it’s important that their work is represented in print media.

“Many people can’t experience and see art-work in person,” Alva said. “It’s important how you reproduce your pieces in print because it’s the closest some people will get to your work.”

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freshly made salads, Pom Wonderful juice and Subway subs. A Tops tent provided Vitamin Water, yogurt, bananas and crumb cake.

At the end of the day, the 19th annual Syra-cuse Festival of Races got people moving, raised money for many good nonprofit causes and provided families with a morning full of fun — everything it was designed to do. But race

director Dave Oja is already putting an eye toward the future.

“Next year is an early Columbus Day, so we’ll see you all on September 30th,” he said.

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marc brownstein (LeFt) and chris michetti, bassist and guitarist of electroni-ca band Conspirator, perform at the Westcott theater on thursday.

“Sure it’s cold and raining, but nothing short of a hurricane is going to keep us off those streets. I drove here all the way from Tennessee, and I’ll be damned if I let a little water keep me from running.”

Victoria Crisp syrACuse festivAL of rACes pArtiCipAnt

What is Point of ContaCt?established in 1975, point of Contact/punto de Contacto is a nonprofit organiza-tion that explores diversity through the exchange of ideas in the verbal and visual arts. point of Contact is dedicated to publish-ing, producing and documenting art exhibits, film screenings, music, poetry readings, performance and symposia in conjunction with syracuse university as well as the local and national arts com-munity.

in 2005, the point of Contact gallery opened at 914 e. genesee st. the space provides the syracuse community with an open forum for further discussions of contemporary art and serves as a place showcase the point of Contact Art Collec-tion and other exhibits.

puntopoint.org

“I’m a fan of all the musicians on stage. When they’re all together, everyone hates on them but when they’re playing together, it is definitely something that is substantial, something that should be heard.”

Sara Snodgrass sCrAnton, p.A. resident

dailyorange.com

Page 13: October 3, 2011

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

“UNFORGETTABLE”Network: CBSWhen: 10 p.m. every TuesdayRating:

Thumbs down

kclic erevery monday in pulp

Lockedin

By Jeff WucherSTAFF WRITER

C rime drama, next to mindless reality shows, may be the most

abundant genre on TV. There’s “Law & Order” and its three spin-offs, “CSI” and its two spin-offs, “NCIS” and its spin-off, every show on the USA Network and countless other scattered programs. To break up the monotony of this oversaturated format, a new crime show needs a gimmick, something that will allow the viewer to differentiate between two shows following the exact same blueprint from week to week. For “Unforgettable,” that gimmick is hyperthymesia.

If the title of the show was not a big enough hint, hyperthyme-sia is a very rare disease that allows a person to remember everything. In the case of “Unfor-gettable” the lucky recipient is protagonist Carrie Wells. She used to be a detective in Syra-cuse, N.Y., but quit and decided to start working at a nursing home. She helps them remember things, obviously. Then one day, or in the fi rst episode, her old partner and ex-boyfriend Al, also from Syracuse, says he needs her help on the force in New York City. So for the foreseeable future, the two of them will use what is probably the single most boring superpower in the world to solve

a new crime each week.“Unforgettable” has a lot of problems right from the start, the most pressing of which is Wells’ titular “power.” It’s pretty boring watching someone remember things. The show attempts to remedy this via elaborate fl ashback sequences in which present-Wells watches past-Wells in an event that is too complicated to explain — and too uninteresting to watch. No one cares about someone’s stylized thought process. Also, the idea of a perfect memory could be interesting, but it makes no sense for police work. Presumably in every show, the detectives will hit a snag in the case. Wells remembers some teeny tiny detail everyone missed the fi rst time, and the wheels keep spinning until it either happens again or they catch the bad guy. In the most recent episode, she uses her power of human nitpicking to fi nd a boy hiding underneath a tarp because she recalled the tarp had moved since she last saw it. Riveting.Then there’s the Syracuse issue. “Unforget-table” attempts to inject its characters with depth and give them an interesting backstory. Unfortunately, the creators of “Unforgettable” fail to develop the show’s characters, instead favoring the thrill of chasing criminals in its hour of airtime.

To fi x this, the writers quickly establish that Wells and Al both worked at the Syra-cuse Police Department and then shoehorn Syracuse references about three times per episode. As a resident, I laughed every time it was referenced. For example, Wells shows up to the crime scene in her street clothes and Al immediately tells her, “You can’t dress like that here. This isn’t Syracuse.” The name-dropping illustrates nothing about the city, as it could have easily been

replaced with Rochester or Buffalo or Neverland. It is a cheap tactic that gives a sense of history between the characters, but “Unforgettable” could not care less about them. They only exist to service the cases.Speaking of a poorly developed backstory, the show’s other two character shadings are unbearably ironic. First, Wells can’t remember the day her sister was murdered. Second, her mother has Alzheimer’s disease. Both of these thoughts are about one minute long vignettes scattered throughout the episode, but they offer essentially nothing to the overall show. Wells is still going to solve crimes every week, and nothing is ever going to change that. In the world of TV crime shows, stasis equals success. Unfortunately, that’s a wholly uninteresting concept for the cognitive viewer. If “Unforget-table” wants to set itself aside from all the other detective stories, it had better invest in its characters.

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New crime drama ‘Unforgettable’ fails to break out of stale format

wikipedia.org

Page 14: October 3, 2011

S P O R T S @ D A I L Y O R A N G E . C O M1 4 o c t obe r 3 , 2 0 1 1

By Michael CohenSPORTS EDITOR

Dyshawn Davis knifed through the gap unblocked. As he charged full speed toward Rut-gers running back Jawan Jamison, he knew he had the chance to do something special just two plays after Syracuse coughed the ball up on an Antwon Bailey fumble.

The ensuing collision in the backfi eld brought the crowd to its feet and elicited a roar that was equal parts jubilation and recoil.

“I saw the guard’s hands, so I knew that he was pulling,” Davis said. “He gave me the look, so as soon as he pulled, I just hit the hole right away and I was clean. And I knew I had to make a big play.”

Davis’ hit resulted in a fumble, and SU corner-back Ri’Shard Anderson scooped it up to return it for a 66-yard touchdown less than one minute into the game. It was the beginning of a day in which the Orange defense continually bailed out Ryan Nassib and the offense to keep Syracuse in the game. But because SU ultimately fell short in a 19-16 double-overtime thriller, the defense walked sullenly out of the Carrier Dome knowing that its best performance of the season was all for naught.

For a unit fresh off back-to-back games in which it gave up an excess of 435 yards to Toledo and Southern California, Saturday’s effort was a dras-tic improvement.

Though the Scarlet Knights ran a staggering 95 offensive plays — more than either the Rockets or the Trojans in the past two weeks — the SU defense stifl ed Rutgers. Nearly 100 plays resulted in only 302 total yards for a meager 3.2 yards per play.

“As a defensive unit … we had an incredible game,” Syracuse middle linebacker Marquis Spruill said.

The forced fumble by Davis nullifi ed Bailey’s fumble, which gave the Scarlet Knights the ball at the Syracuse 30-yard line. It was one of three instances during Saturday’s game in which the Orange defense made an important stop after a blunder by the SU offense, which turned the ball over fi ve times.

After Nassib’s fi rst interception of the game in the second quarter, the defense didn’t yield an inch after Rutgers drove down to the Syracuse 9-yard line. SU pushed the Scarlet Knights back 1 yard on the next three plays and only allowed a fi eld goal.

In the third quarter, Syracuse kicker Ross Krautman shanked a 39-yard fi eld goal, failing to extend the Orange’s lead to 13. But on the ensuing Rutgers drive, quarterback Gary Nova fumbled the ball as he was sacked by Mikhail Marinovich. Spruill came out of a scrum with the fumble recovery.

“When your defense is playing like that and you turn the ball over, you don’t feel bad for yourself, you feel bad for that defense,” Syracuse center Macky MacPherson said. “… You feel terrible, and they have the right to be upset because they played their butts off, and we didn’t do what we should have done, and that’s put points on the board.”

The Orange’s most impressive defensive perfor-mance came in a game where the unit was ravaged by injuries. Both Anderson and Keon Lyn, two of SU’s cornerbacks, wore casts on one hand. Start-ing strong safety Shamarko Thomas was out again due to injury, and safety Olando Fisher, who head coach Doug Marrone thought would be back this week, couldn’t suit up.

A ragtag secondary still found a way to control Rutgers wide receiver Mohamed Sanu, who is one of the best pass-catchers in the nation. He was held

to 65 yards receiving after a 176-yard outburst last week against Ohio.

Free safety Phillip Thomas and linebacker Dom Anene bracketed Sanu in double coverage during portions of the game in an over-under scheme employed by SU defensive coordinator Scott Shafer.

“They want to try and get him in open fi eld and try to get him the ball, and that’s what coach Shafer tried to eliminate with me and Dom Anene, just trying to double-team him and get him tired,” Thomas said.

And while Sanu was blanketed for most of the game downfi eld, SU’s defensive front turned in a stellar performance as well. Rutgers fi nished the game with 5 rushing yards on 38 attempts — an almost unheard of 0.1 yard per attempt — due to relentless pressure by the Orange.

The defense recorded fi ve sacks, 11 tackles for loss and recovered three fumbles while harassing both Scarlet Knights quarterbacks used during Saturday’s game.

On a day when the Orange defense came up with four takeaways — the most since 2007 — it still walked off the fi eld defeated. Though none of SU’s defensive players would pin the loss on the offense’s subpar performance, it was clear which side of the ball did its job.

“There’s nobody to blame,” Thomas said. “We’re all a team. We win and lose as a team.”

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SU stays in game behind tough defense

Knights defense is at stripping the football. But the Orange failed to execute its game plan and protect the ball. Bailey’s fi rst fumble on the opening possession set the tone for the fi rst half, as the offense couldn’t fi nd its rhythm.

The SU defense redeemed Bailey’s fumble by forcing the ball loose from Scarlet Knights running back Jawan Jamison on the next pos-session and taking it back for a score.

But the Orange did not score a point on offense in the fi rst half. SU converted only two fi rst downs in the fi rst two quarters.

“It was tough, but it’s not different than what we’ve experienced before,” center Macky MacPherson said. “We always focus on getting the fi rst fi rst down, which we didn’t accom-plish enough.”

Even with good fi eld position coming off a couple of Rutgers turnovers, the Orange found ways to botch golden opportunities to add insur-ance points.

Marrone pointed to two specifi c turnovers

that he said would be “tough” to handle.Up 7-0 in the second quarter, SU defensive

end Torrey Ball had just recovered a fumble for the Orange in Rutgers territory. Syracuse planned to run a screen pass fi rst, pump faking to the left and tossing the ball back to the right.

But the screen was covered well by Rutgers defensive tackle Justin Francis, who dropped back into coverage, grabbed the pass for an interception and secured it against his 275-pound frame.

“They dropped (Francis),” Marrone said, “and what Ryan did was pump left, and then his eyes are off what’s going on.”

Then in the third quarter, Scarlet Knights quarterback Gary Nova — who had recently entered for starter Chas Dodd — coughed the ball up on a sack, and Marquis Spruill recov-ered it for Syracuse at the RU 16-yard line. A 6-yard run by Bailey, who had a sound game with 124 yards and a touchdown despite the two fumbles, moved the ball down to the Rutgers 10.

But in an empty backfi eld set on fi rst-and-goal from the 5, Nassib’s quick slant to freshman Kyle Foster was tipped in the air. Rutgers safety David Rowe came down with the pick.

“You can’t expect to win a game when you

have fi ve turnovers,” Nassib said. “Leaving all those points on the board is unacceptable.”

Yet in the midst of the Orange’s worst offen-sive performance of the season, Rutgers was just as ineffi cient. The Scarlet Knights turned the ball over four times. While Syracuse missed two fi eld goals and an extra point, Rutgers missed three fi eld goals. The result was a 13-13 tie and overtime.

They remained tied in overtime, too — until Bailey’s fumble.

MacPherson said after the game that many of SU’s mishaps on offense fell on the offensive line. So when Bailey walked to the podium for his postgame press conference, he was sur-rounded by the fi ve members of the starting SU offensive line.

MacPherson, Michael Hay, Andrew Tiller, Zack Chibane and Justin Pugh stood with him, looking like bodyguards as Bailey took questions.

“He’s a great running back, and we support him all the way, with anything he needs to do,” MacPherson said. “And it’s our responsibility to keep those linebackers from hitting him late so the ball doesn’t come out.”

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OFFENSEF R O M P A G E 2 0

DRILLUPDan VaughanVaughan entered Saturday’s game with 23 tackles on the season at linebacker. He was coming off a career-high seven stops against Toledo. The senior broke that mark with 15 tackles to lead the Orange defense, as it held Rutgers to fi ve yards rushing on 38 attempts.

Dyshawn DavisDavis made the biggest defensive play for the Orange, forcing a fumble that Ri’Shard Anderson returned for a touch-down less than one minute into the game. The freshman linebacker fi nished with two sacks and 3.5 tackles for loss to spearhead SU’s constant pressure on the Rutgers quarterbacks.

DOWNRoss KrautmanKrautman hasn’t been as effective as he was last year when he converted 18-of-19 fi eld goal attempts. After missing a 39-yard attempt and having another blocked against Rutgers, the sophomore is just 6-of-9 this season. He also had an extra point blocked that allowed Rutgers to eventually tie the game at 13.

Syracuse wide receiversAfter starting the season strong with multiple receivers stepping up to make plays, SU failed to break through with a big play through the air against Rut-gers. The team’s leading receiver, Alec Lemon, only made four catches for 54 yards, and Van Chew caught just one ball for nine yards.

Ball securityThough Antwon Bailey rushed for 124 yards and a touchdown, he also fumbled the ball twice — the last one ending the game in the second overtime. SU head coach Doug Marrone mentioned after the game that his team knew Rutgers was good at stripping the ball, but still couldn’t hold onto it despite extra prepa-ration.

Brandon SharpeSharpe, one of the players expected to fi ll the hole left by injured defensive end Chandler Jones, had just one assisted tackle on Saturday. He also hurt the SU defense with penalties, getting fl agged for offsides on a third-and-1 and a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct pen-alty on Rutgers’ fi rst scoring drive.

TURNING POINT

2:59Third quarterAfter the SU defense forced a turnover deep in Rutgers territory, the Orange set itself up with fi rst-and-goal at the RU 5. But quarterback Ryan Nassib’s quick slant pass attempt to freshman Kyle Foster defl ected off of Foster and up in the air, where Rutgers safety David Rowe came down with it. The pick cost SU an opportunity to go up 20-3.

F O O T B A L L

mitchell franz | staff photographerRI’SHARD ANDERSON (9) recovers a fumble forced by Dyshawn Davis (35) in the first quarter. Anderson returned it 66 yards for Syracuse’s lone touchdown in the first half.

Page 15: October 3, 2011

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 3 , 2 0 1 1 15

By Mark CooperASST. SPORTS EDITOR

Ross Krautman became a hero as he sent Syra-cuse to a bowl last season with a game-winning fi eld goal against Rutgers. This year, his fi eld-goal kicking unit was one of the goats.

One blocked fi eld goal, another missed fi eld goal. A blocked extra point. Seven potential points lost due to a feeble day by the SU kicking game.

“I think it’s very diffi cult to win football games when you have fi ve turnovers, and a fi eld goal gets blocked and a PAT gets blocked,” SU head coach Doug Marrone said. “Those things happen, and we lost that game because of those errors, and we weren’t able to capitalize at times.”

Both Krautman and Scarlet Knights kicker San San Te missed kicks at an alarming rate in Rutgers’ 19-16 win over Syracuse on Saturday. Krautman fi nished 1-of-3 on fi eld goals — miss-ing one more fi eld goal Saturday than he did all of last season — and 1-of-2 on extra points. Te had a much busier day than Krautman, attempt-ing seven fi eld goals and hitting on four of them.

There was controversy last week surround-ing the botched call by the offi cials on Kraut-man’s missed extra point against Toledo. But this week, all of Krautman’s misses were clear.

Syracuse produced one of its best drives of the season on its fi rst possession of the second half, driving 93 yards in six plays. Running back Antwon Bailey fi nished it off with a 3-yard touchdown run to put SU up 13-3, but Krautman’s extra point was blocked by Jamal Merrell coming around the right side of the Syracuse line.

“I think we have to look at that wing area at

the right tight end,” Marrone said. “One of the things we’ll do is get bigger out there. We had to go overload on that last one, which secured it for us. In the other circumstances, it’s not acceptable.”

Krautman then missed a 39-yard attempt wide left less than three minutes later. But it was the fi eld goal unit’s fi nal error that really shifted the momentum to force overtime.

Holding a 13-6 lead late in the fourth quarter, Syracuse drove into Rutgers territory but stalled just inside the 30. Krautman lined up for a 44-yard attempt, one that could have pushed SU’s lead to double digits to potentially seal the win.

But Merrell again swooped in front of the kick, breaking past the right side of the offen-sive line. Rutgers cornerback Marcus Cooper picked up the football and returned the ball into SU territory, setting up the game-tying touch-down drive for the Scarlet Knights.

Te, the Rutgers kicker, missed three fi eld goals but made the kick that mattered most — a 47-yard try in the second overtime to put RU up 19-16.

“I’m proud of our players and coaches for continuing to stay calm and continuing to chop,” Rutgers head coach Greg Schiano said. “Sometimes it goes your way and sometimes it doesn’t, but if you don’t keep doing what we did today, it never goes your way.”

SU misses injured playersDoug Marrone expected to see Olando Fisher on the fi eld Saturday. Fisher, SU’s nickel back and second-string strong safety, hasn’t played since the Orange’s season opener Sept. 1, when he suf-fered a lower body injury against Wake Forest.

One month later, he was surprisingly not ready to go.

“We thought Olando Fisher would have been able to come back, and that would’ve helped us in a big way because he would’ve been able to start the game at safety and maybe play some nickel,” Marrone said. “Then we thought that we would’ve been able to get him back to just play-ing nickel for us, and he wasn’t able to do that.”

SU could have used Fisher and the handful of other SU players who were unable to return this week. Defensive end Chandler Jones missed his fourth straight game and strong safety Shamarko Thomas missed his second. Backup running back Prince-Tyson Gulley was unable to play as well.

Gulley had a breakout game last week with 66 yards on 10 carries, but he suffered a collar-

bone injury and was unable to go.The player moving into Gulley’s spot as the

second running back is sophomore Jerome Smith. His fi rst game as the change-of-pace back was uneventful — three carries for 6 yards.

But he did take part in a crucial third down in overtime on his third carry. Facing third-and-1 from the Rutgers 2-yard line, Smith was stopped by RU safety Duron Harmon for a half-yard gain.

Smith did get a fi rst down on a third-and-1 earlier in Saturday’s game, though, so Marrone was pleased overall with his effort.

“Once a kid is in the lineup and how the game progresses determine when you have to put him in there,” Marrone said. “I thought he ran hard, I thought he had a real nice fi rst down.”

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Krautman, fi eld-goal kicking unit fail SU in loss to Rutgers

normal fourth-down play so risky? Especially for a team that had two kicks blocked during the course of the game.

But that’s surface-level stuff. Marrone furthered his explanation as to why he opted against lining up and pounding the ball up the middle for a potential fi rst down or touchdown.

“My philosophy as a football coach is to never take the game away from the players,” Marrone said. “What I didn’t want to do is get stopped, and we’ve been stopped before. Rutgers is very good on defense for tackles for loss, so why not kick the three points, which I felt comfortable about.”

Marrone is absolutely right that the Scarlet Knights defense is great at getting tackles for loss in the backfi eld. Rutgers came into the game in a tie for second in the nation in tackles for loss per game with 9.3.

But that was absolutely not the case on Sat-urday. The stellar RU front was kept in check by the Orange offensive line, only managing three tackles for loss throughout the course of the game. And two of those were sacks of Nassib.

The only time an SU running back was stopped behind the line of scrimmage was when Rutgers cornerback Logan Ryan met Antwon Bailey in the backfi eld for a loss of 1 yard on a fi rst-and-10 play with 14 seconds left in the third quarter.

In other words, Syracuse hadn’t been stopped before like Marrone said — at least not in this game.

The Orange faced exactly two third-and-1 situations prior to overtime against the Scarlet Knights on Saturday. The fi rst such situation came in the second quarter, and Syracuse opted to throw. Nassib’s pass intended for Bailey out of the backfi eld was too far in front of him and fell incomplete.

The second short-yardage situation came with less than 10 minutes remaining in the

game. This time, SU opted to run. Jerome Smith got the carry and ran up the middle, bouncing off tacklers to get the fi rst down.

Marrone even applauded that run by Smith. “He hit the pile, and got bounced a little bit,

and then he found a crease and ended up gain-ing extra yards,” Marrone said. “I thought it was a great effort trying to get the fi rst down.”

In overtime, Smith gained a half-yard on third-and-1 to set up the crucial fourth-down play.

And for some reason, on the game’s most important short-yardage situation, Marrone decided against handing the ball to Smith or Bailey — even though the team needed less than 1 yard for a fi rst down and only 2 yards for a touchdown.

It’s puzzling, and I don’t understand it because Rutgers had shown no ability to stop the run. Of Syracuse’s fi ve games this season, Saturday marked the highest yards-per-carry average by SU running backs. Bailey and Smith combined to average 5 yards per carry against the Scarlet Knights, more than any

other game in 2011. “We knew we were going to be able to run

the ball, and that’s what we showed coming out of the second half,” offensive coordinator Nathaniel Hackett said. “They were going to try and stop Ryan in the pass game. We came out running and did a really good job.”

Had Syracuse gone for it, it’s unclear how the rest of the game would have played out. But it was shocking for me to see Marrone — a former offensive lineman who loves to overpower opponents with his stellar offensive line — decide to go the other way and kick the fi eld goal.

To the observer, it displayed a lack of faith in his offensive line. And for a team supposedly built on running the ball fi rst, running the ball second and throwing the ball third — that’s not the message you want to send.

Michael Cohen is the sports editor for The Daily Orange, where his column appears occa-

sionally. He can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter at @Michael_Cohen13.

COHENF R O M P A G E 2 0

16 S Y R AC US E V S . RU T G E R S 19

BIG NUMBERThe number of turnovers by Syracuse on Saturday.

There were Antwon Bailey’s two fumbles, one during SU’s fi rst pos-session and the other on the fi nal play in double overtime to seal the loss. And then there were the Ryan Nassib picks, all three of which came in Rutgers territory to halt Syracuse scoring opportunities.

This one is certainly disap-pointing. Syracuse had plenty of chanes to knock off Rut-gers and begin Big East play 1-0, but fi ve costly turnovers handed the game to the Scarlet Knights. After this defl ating loss, SU must rebound quickly before Saturday’s game at Tulane.

BCS CONTENDER OR BIG EAST BOTTOM-FEEDER?

5

mitchell franz | staff photographerROSS KRAUTMAN (37) has his extra point attempt blocked by Rutgers’ Jamal Merrell in the third quarter Saturday. Krautman was 1-of-3 on field goal attempts in the loss.

THEY SAID IT“You can’t expect to win a game when you have fi ve turnovers. Leaving all those points on the board is unacceptable.”

Ryan NassibSU QUARTERBACK

Page 16: October 3, 2011

s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m16 o c t obe r 3 , 2 0 1 1

Stephen BaileyAsst. Copy Editor

The usually loud and demonstrative Ange Bradley remained calm on the Syracuse side-lines Friday. The SU head coach didn’t need to give her players much instruction against

Providence. They were just that dominant.

The Orange held Providence without a shot and prevented the Friars from gaining

possession in the shooting circle for the entire 70-minute game.

“To give up zero shots, it’s like throwing a no-hitter in baseball,” Bradley said after Sunday’s game. “It’s pretty much unheard of in field hockey.”

The Orange defense led SU (9-2, 3-0 Big East) to an 8-0 victory over Providence (2-8, 0-2) Friday in front of 341 at the J.S. Coyne Stadium. The team continued its outstanding play at home Sunday to beat Massachusetts (2-8, 0-0 Atlantic 10) 2-0 in front of 278. The Orange prevented the opposition from shoot-ing for the first three halves of the weekend and finished Sunday’s game having allowed just two shots and two penalty corners in a span of 140 minutes.

The strong defensive effort over the weekend was anchored by Amy Kee and Nicole Nelson,

who played nearly all of both games.Kee is SU’s vocal leader. She played into

the 68th minute of Friday’s victory and until the final whistle Sunday, barking out direc-tions throughout both games and keeping the defense in proper alignment.

Under her instruction, the Orange was ready to stop the opposing offenses by dis-mantling threats before they could develop. Kee credited the defensive success against Providence to the team’s hard work in practice last week.

“From a defensive perspective, I was really pleased with that because we’ve been working all week on being more aggressive, stepping up, getting better organization at the back,” Kee said on Friday.

Kee often rotates between back and midfield throughout games with Liz McInerney. Their versatility allows the Orange to adjust its formation immediately when there is a change of possession, which helps SU in stopping opposing offenses.

Nelson also made her presence felt playing alongside Kee on defense. She is also involved in the rotation.

“We try to get, instead of having four backs, five into the mid,” Nelson said. “So I kind of do become a mid at a lot of points dur-ing the game, but when we’re on defense I’m back at defense.”

This weekend, Nelson primarily played in a defensive role and made some key plays.

In one play against UMass in the first half, a Minutewomen ball handler sped toward

the SU goal as a teammate cut in from the left side behind the defense. Nelson stepped up to challenge the attack near the 25-yard line and blocked her attempted pass with her stick to end the UMass threat.

A few minutes later, she stopped a potential counterattack when she took the ball away from a Massachusetts forward.

“She does really well stepping up more aggressively into the pocket, intercepting balls,” Kee said of Nelson after Sunday’s game. “She’s very good at reading the play and knowing where the ball is going to come next.”

And while SU’s backs played well in the two shutouts, Bradley was equally impressed by the play of her forwards and midfielders. By reshaping the team’s forma-tion, Syracuse was able to “get behind the ball” on all levels of the field and limit the opposition’s opportunities.

It seemed every time the Friars would gain possession, a swarm of Syracuse play-ers was waiting to take it right back. And when SU had the ball, it waited patiently for its plays to develop while eating up time by the minute.

Though many of those chances did not result in goals, the Orange’s offensive posses-sions limited the time the opposition had to score, Bradley said.

“We kept possession,” Bradley said. “When you have the ball, you’re on attack. And when you don’t have the ball, you’re on defense. “

The best Syracuse could hope for is allow-

ing two shots in a span of 140 minutes. However, Kee said the Orange always has

areas in which it can improve. SU could be setting up its formation quicker, and it can’t expect other teams to attack as directly as Providence and UMass, Kee said.

Bradley also felt the Orange had room for improvement.

Faster competition than the inferior Provi-dence squad may have created problems, and her team will need to improve upon its flaws to achieve its postseason goals, she said.

Not every team will be the Friars or the Minutewomen as SU chases its postseason goals.

“I always have to remember when we want to be a Big East champion and a national cham-pion, so we’ve got to play speed that’s similar to ours,” Bradley said.

[email protected]

Orange defense shuts down opponents in weekend sweep

keegan barber | contributing photographer

Nicole NelsoN (4) controls the ball during syracuse’s 2-0 win over Massachusetts on sunday. Nelson and the orange held UMass to just two shots in the shutout victory.

“From a defensive perspective, I was really pleased with that because we’ve been working all week on being more aggressive, stepping up, getting better organization at the back.”

Amy KeesU bACk

syracuse 8providence 0

syracuse 2massachusetts 0

f i e l d h o c k e y

prettystingysyracuse relied on its defense to stifle opponents in two wins this weekend. the orange outscored its opponents by a combined score of 10-0 in victories over providence and Massachusetts. Here’s a look at how dominant the sU defense was in the two games:

Team Goals shoTs PenalTycornersSyracuse 10 54 26providence 0 0 0Massachusetts 0 2 2

dailyorange.com

Page 17: October 3, 2011

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 3 , 2 0 1 1 1 7

pumpkin spice sudokus

By Chris IsemanStaff Writer

Ian McIntyre had a painful 6.5 hour bus ride to think about a game Syracuse let slip away.

The SU head coach said he still felt the final result didn’t reflect the way his team played.

“This is a tough loss,” McIntyre said. “I’m proud of the effort our guys put

forth. I feel that we let this one slip away. But we did enough to get something out of this game.”

Syracuse (2-7, 0-2 Big East) fell 2-1 in double overtime on Saturday night, dropping its fifth consecutive game and second Big East game this season. The Orange had another strong defensive performance, holding the Panthers (3-6-1, 1-1) scoreless for the entire first half. SU’s offense, though, struggled to find the back of the net against Pittsburgh goalkeeper Lee Johnston.

Syracuse created plenty of scoring chances, taking 12 shots in regulation. The frustration came from being unable to sneak any of those shots past Johnson, who finished with a total of six saves in the game.

After a sloppy, unaggressive offensive per-formance against Binghamton last Tuesday, SU took five shots in the first half, with three on goal. The Orange broke through quickly in the second half when junior forward Louis Clark scored Syracuse’s lone goal in the 47th minute of the game.

But that was the only blunder Johnson would make in more than 104 minutes of play.

Five minutes after Clark scored, Pittsburgh freshman Chu Chu Onyeukwu won a battle on a breakaway with SU goalkeeper Phil Boerger to tie the game at 1-1.

Neither team scored again in regulation, forcing the game into overtime. McIntyre said

his team failed to take advantage of some of the scoring opportunities it created.

“We had some chances when it was 1-1 to go on and win the game,” McIntyre said. “But unfortunately we fell a little bit short.”

Both teams took two shots in the first overtime, but none of them translated to goals. About midway through the second overtime, Ryan Brode, brother of SU junior Mark Brode, put a header past Boerger to win the game.

As hard as Syracuse fought for both halves and almost two full overtimes, it still left with a sour taste in its mouth after failing to push harder for another goal. McIntyre said overall, he was happy with the way his defense played, but the two goals the Panthers scored could’ve been avoided.

“I think at the end of the day, we gave away two soft goals,” McIntyre said. “But

we did enough. We created enough chances. … I feel that with the body of work that the guys put in, they deserve something out of the game.”

Syracuse took a total of 14 shots in the game, with four taken by senior Nick Roydhouse. But the midfielder’s chances proved to be futile on a frustrating night for the SU offense.

“Obviously, we’re disappointed not coming away with any points tonight,” McIntyre said. “We still have a long way to go as a team. But we’re going to learn from tonight, and it was certainly an education for us all.”

Despite the effort he saw from his players, McIntyre’s ride back to Syracuse wasn’t made any easier. All he had to think about was one that got away.

Said McIntyre: “As we’re finding out this season, it’s a cruel sport.”

[email protected]

m e n ’s s o c c e r

Syracuse suffers crushing defeat in double overtime at Pitt

The Syracuse women’s soccer team accom-plished something this weekend that it hasn’t done since 2001.

For the first time in 10 years, Syracuse had a three-game winning streak against Big East opponents. And it’s the team’s highest win total in conference play since 2001.

The Orange (5-4-3, 4-2 Big East) topped both Seton Hall and Rutgers, pushing its Big East record to 4-2.

Against the Pirates on Friday, SU scored a season high in goals with a 4-1 victory. Casey Ramirez netted SU’s first goal in the 27th min-ute after collecting a pass from Brittany Kin-mond from 18 yards out. The Orange knocked in another goal six minutes later when Cecilia Borgstrom scored her second goal of the season.

In the second half, SU kept applying the offensive pressure, with Megan Hunsberger scoring in the 69th minute. It was the fresh-man’s second goal in as many games.

Tina Romagnuolo put the finishing touches on the game with her goal in the 78th minute. With the score, Romagnuolo now moves into a three-way tie for fifth on the all-time scoring list in program history.

SU goalkeeper Brittany Anghel finished with four saves, allowing just one goal in the 79th minute.

While Friday’s match was never really close, Sunday’s game was the complete opposite. It was a nail biter to the end, with SU coming away with a 2-1 double-overtime victory.

In the second overtime period, Romagnuolo sent the ball into the box for Borgstrom. From there, Borgstrom moved past her defender and hit the ball across RU’s goalkeeper. Junior Jas-mine Watkins was able to finish off the play with

the game-winner. It was Watkins’ first career goal.

Ice hockey The Syracuse women’s ice hockey team split two games over the weekend at the East/West Showcase in Minneapolis, Minn.

The Orange came away with a narrow 2-1 victory Friday night against St. Cloud State, but was shut out one day later by Minnesota in a 4-0 blowout.

Things got off to a fast start for SU in its opening contest of the year against the Huskies when the Orange offense scored twice in the first period.

SU sophomore Sadie St. Germain netted the first goal of the season with 3:03 to go in the opening period to give Syracuse the early edge. Kaillie Goodnough took a shot that was blocked by St. Cloud goalkeeper Taylor VanDenakker, but St. Germain was in the right place at the right time to knock in the rebound.

Less than two minutes after SU’s first goal, it scored again when Lisa Mullan slid the puck just past the goal line. Originally, the score was waved off. But upon further review the call was reversed for what would be the eventual game-winner.

SU goalkeeper Jenesica Drinkwater earned her seventh career win. The sophomore had 32 saves. The only goal she surrendered was in the middle of the second period to Huskies forward Haylea Schmid.

The day after Syracuse narrowly escaped with a win, it was beaten soundly by the No. 4 Gophers.

Minnesota dominated on the offensive end all night long, outshooting the Orange 50-10.

SU goalkeeper Kallie Billadeau allowed

three first-period goals and one more in the second period. The four goals were scored by four different players for Minnesota.

Despite letting in four goals, Billadeau had an impressive 46 saves in the loss.

VolleyballAfter dropping its Big East opener, Syracuse took its first step in righting the ship in Big East play with a pair of three-set sweeps against St. John’s and Connecticut.

Lindsay McCabe and Sam Hinz fueled the Orange (11-6, 2-1 Big East) in the first set against the Red Storm (9-12, 0-4), contributing back-to-back kills to give SU a 12-10 lead that it would never relinquish en route to a 25-20 victory.

In the second set, Syracuse found itself behind 17-14 before a 7-1 run led the Orange to a 25-22 victory and a commanding two-set lead.

The third set was again close throughout, but with the score tied at 15, SU pulled away for a 25-22 victory and its first Big East victory of the season.

Syracuse had a quick turnaround as it con-tinued its road trip in Storrs, Conn., against the Huskies (8-9, 0-4) the next day.

A 12-2 run let SU storm back and eventually win the first set 27-25. The next set was a polar opposite for Syracuse. The Orange led by as much as eight in the set as five of Andrea Fish-er’s 10 kills helped SU cruise to a 25-18 victory.

But the third set was another battle. Syra-cuse again found itself down, but with the Orange trailing 20-18, SU again fought back for a 26-24 victory to push Syracuse to another conference win.

Laura Homann also became the sixth player in Orange history to tally 3,000 career assists.

SU returns home Wednesday for a nonconfer-ence matchup against in-state rival Colgate before getting back to the Big East schedule Friday against Villanova.

Cross countryThe Orange harriers kicked off the more competitive part of their 2011 schedule this weekend at the Paul Short Invitational, racing against some of the top teams in the Big East and the nation.

The Orange, which was ranked No. 12 on the women’s side and No. 15 on the men’s side, held its own against top schools like Georgetown, Providence, Oklahoma and Villanova.

The women’s team placed third overall and the men’s team finished in fifth place. Going into the race, head coach Chris Fox had a goal of placing in the top three on both the men’s and women’s sides.

Pat Dupont led the men’s team, finishing in 11th place with a time of 24:27. Crossing the finish line in 35th place was Tito Medrano with a time of 25:00 and freshman Andrew Palmer (25:02) was right behind in 38th place.

The third-place finish for the women’s team was led by senior Lauren Penney (20:32) with a fifth-place finish. Junior Sarah Pagano was just six seconds behind Penney, with a time of 20:38.

Senior Natalie Busby (21:09) finished in 24th place with teammates Rebekah MacKay (21:23) and Heather Stephens (21:25) close behind, claiming the 44th and 45th spots, respectively.

The Orange will travel to Madison, Wis., to compete in the Wisconsin Adidas Invitational on Friday, Oct. 14, and Terre Haute, Ind., for Pre-Nationals on Sunday, Oct. 16.

—Compiled by The Daily Orange Sports staff

s t a f f r e p o r t

Orange wins pair of Big East games to extend conference winning streak

pittsburgh 2syracuse 1(2ot)

Page 18: October 3, 2011

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Page 20: October 3, 2011

SP ORT S PA G E 2 0the daily orange

M O N D AYoctober 3, 2011

By Mark CooperASST. SPORTS EDITOR

Antwon Bailey’s fi nal carry was practically the same as his fi rst. He took a handoff going right,

shifted left and turned upfi eld. The one action the Syracuse running back didn’t plan for on either carry, though, was the fumble.

His last carry in overtime resulted in the fi nal blunder for SU in a game that was full of them. Rutgers line-backer Edmond Laryea forced the ball from Bailey before he hit the turf, and Logan Ryan emerged from the ensuing scramble with the loose ball.

The play was reviewed, but offi -cials confi rmed the original call, and the game was over.

“I thought I was down, but at the end of the day, I need to hang on to the ball,” Bailey said. “That’s all on me.”

The performance of Syracuse’s (3-2, 0-1 Big East) offense was book-ended by Bailey’s lost fumbles, with

multiple interceptions and various miscalculations in between. Quar-terback Ryan Nassib threw three momentum-killing interceptions, and Bailey lost the two fumbles. The sloppy play ultimately cost SU the game in a 19-16 double-overtime loss to the Scarlet Knights (3-1, 1-0 Big East) in front of 42,152 in the Carrier Dome on Saturday.

Bailey’s fi nal fumble ended the game, after San San Te nailed a 47-yard fi eld goal to begin the second overtime and give Rutgers the lead.

“It’s the No. 1 way to not win a football game,” SU head coach Doug Marrone said of the turnovers.

The Orange survived two over-time games against Wake Forest and Toledo, but in its third overtime game of the season, the team couldn’t over-come its poor offensive performance.

Marrone said the Orange talked this week about how good the Scarlet

Ah, to play the role of Monday morning quarterback. The time when we look and think

back to the weekend’s game and sec-ond guess every wrong decision.

If only I had … It’s clear I should have … I wish I could have …

It’s perhaps the easiest position in football. So from the comfort of my apartment I look back at Syracuse’s 19-16 double-overtime loss, and one play continues to irk me. Faced with a fourth-and-1 at the Rutgers 2-yard line in the fi rst overtime, SU head coach Doug Marrone opted to kick the fi eld goal instead of going for it.

It was the wrong decision. “There, I just wanted to make

sure I got the points knowing that they’re (Rutgers) going to take the fi eld and a lot of things could hap-pen,” Marrone said. “They could fumble the snap. They could fumble the football, which we ended up

doing in overtime. So I wanted to make sure I took the points and moved on and got to the next over-time period.”

Well, let’s think about that for a second. Couldn’t SU long snapper Eric Morris have a poor snap on a fi eld goal attempt just as easily as Rutgers could fumble on its own possession? Couldn’t holder Charley Loeb fumble the snap as he tries to set it down for kicker Ross Krautman?

What guarantees the success of a fi eld goal but makes running a

Marrone’s decision to kick in overtime remains puzzling

M I C H A E L C O H E N

not a dime back

HERORutgers defenseIt was the worst performance of the year for SU’s offense, and much of the credit should go to the Scarlet Knights. Syracuse couldn’t get anything going through the air, and the fi ve turnovers — one more than the Orange defense caused — were ultimately the difference.

ZERORyan NassibNassib looked nothing like the quarterback SU fans saw

through the fi rst four weeks of the season. The accuracy that was his stron-gest asset to start the season disap-peared against

Rutgers. He went just 15-of-32 for 169 yards and threw three picks.

SEE COHEN PAGE 15SEE OFFENSE PAGE 14

Five SU turnovers prove costly in double-overtime loss to Rutgers

SLIPPING AWAY

1 6 S Y R A C U S E V S . R U T G E R S 1 9 ( 2 O T )

mitchell franz | staff photographerANTWON BAILEY (CENTER) carries the ball in Saturday’s 19-16 double-overtime loss to Rutgers. The Orange had five costly turnovers, two of which were fumbles by Bailey.