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FREE THURSDAY april 3, 2014 high 47°, low 34° the independent student newspaper of syracuse, new york | dailyorange.com Text by Meredith Newman | Social Media Producer Photos by Sam Maller | Staff Photographer K ent Syverud doesn’t like his office. At least not in its current state. He has plans to change it, though. He’s already removed a small wall dividing the office to make it more open, and wants to remove the long, brown conference table. But his office, he says, isn’t an appropriate place to pour money into yet. To Syracuse University’s newest chan- cellor, there’s a lot more to the university than the person sitting on the top floor of Crouse-Hinds Hall. His life is sprinkled throughout the room. The Asian art on the wall, the red Everlast boxing gloves and the big white binder of his speeches tucked in the shelf of a bookcase. A Sandra Day O’Connor bobble head nods, paying homage to his time working for the former Supreme Court justice. Photos of his family — specifically his wife, Ruth Chen, and three sons, Steven, Brian and David — sit on his desk and along bookshelves. One of his desks is a five-feet tall table with two PC computers. For Kent Syverud, Syracuse University is more than just the man CHANCELLOR KENT SYVERUD looks over his morning agenda before a meeting with the Board of Trustees. SYVERUD AND ERIC SPINA, vice chancellor and provost, walk to a luncheon with the 2014 class marshals. 3 The number of speeches Syverud gave on Monday. 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. The average length of Syverud’s work day. 287 The amount of people Syverud interacted with on Monday. At the top see Chancellor page 10
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Page 1: April 3, 2014

free THURSDAYapril 3, 2014high 47°, low 34°

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 | dailyorange.com

Text by Meredith Newman | Social Media ProducerPhotos by Sam Maller | Staff Photographer

Kent Syverud doesn’t like his office. At least not in its current state.

He has plans to change it, though. He’s already removed a small wall dividing the office to make it more open, and wants to remove the long, brown conference table.

But his office, he says, isn’t an appropriate place to pour money into yet. To Syracuse University’s newest chan-cellor, there’s a lot more to the university than the person sitting on the top floor of Crouse-Hinds Hall.

His life is sprinkled throughout the room. The Asian art on the wall, the red Everlast boxing gloves and the big white binder of his speeches tucked in the shelf of a bookcase. A Sandra Day O’Connor bobble head nods, paying homage to his time working for the former Supreme Court justice. Photos of his family — specifically his wife, Ruth Chen, and three sons, Steven, Brian and David — sit on his desk and along bookshelves.

One of his desks is a five-feet tall table with two PC computers.

For Kent Syverud, Syracuse University is more than just the man

CHANCELLOR KENT SYVERUD looks over his morning agenda before a meeting with the Board of Trustees.

SYVERUD AND ERIC SPINA, vice chancellor and provost, walk to a luncheon with the 2014 class marshals.

3 The number of speeches Syverud gave on Monday.

7 a.m. to 9 p.m. The average length of Syverud’s work day.

287 The amount of people Syverud interacted with on Monday.

At the top

see Chancellor page 10

Page 2: April 3, 2014

2 april 3, 2014 dailyorange.com

By Tom Sharkeystaff writer

It’s finally warming up in Syracuse, if only for a couple of days, and to cel-ebrate the arrival of spring, I chose a warm-weather favorite this week: a shandy.

Adding lemon flavor to beer cre-ates a familiar summertime taste and also apparently classifies the beer as a shandy. I love anything lemon flavored, so I was excited to tap into The Traveler Beer Co.’s Curious Traveler Shandy.

You may have heard of “summer beers” or “mud buckets,” both of which — at least in my experience — involve some mixture of beer and lemonade (and sometimes vodka). Most of my experiences with shandy-type concoctions have been with Keystone Light and powdered Coun-try Time lemonade, so it was a luxury to try an “actual” shandy.

I hunkered down outside on my porch with an ice-cold bottle of Curious Traveler Shandy and I took a moment of silence to think about how excited I am for the summer.

(I’m rolling my eyes, too.) The first few sips of the shandy

reaffirmed my excitement, and I was in such a good mood that it might have been impossible for me to not enjoy the beer.

In contrast to my previous shandy experiences, the Curious Traveler Shandy had a really nice balance of malty beer taste paired with the lemon flavoring. In the past, so much lemonade powder was used to mix up a batch of summer beer that I hardly noticed anything besides the lemon taste.

With the Curious Traveler Shandy, I was able to taste the malt, which was a nice reminder that I was actually drinking a beer. I also picked up on a subtle lime taste. It was hard to distinguish, but I finally was able to pinpoint the flavor in my last couple of sips.

Hopefully my choice of a shandy will align the beer gods with the weather gods and we won’t see snow again until fall. If not, well, I guess I’ll just keep drinking any way.

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All contents © 2014 The Daily Orange Corporation

con tact

today’s w e at h e r

noonhi 47° lo 34°

a.m. p.m.

The Curious Traveler Shandy combines a malt beer taste with lemon flavoring and a hint of lime to create a summertime favorite. The shandy didn’t have too strong of a lemon taste and was reminiscent of summer. photo illustration by nicole abrams staff photographer

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EDITORIAL 315 443 9798 BUSINESS 315 443 2315 GENERAL FAX 315 443 3689 ADVERTISING 315 443 9794

THIRSTY thursday | curious traveler

Shandy delights with summertime flavor

i nsi deO • Whaling outEnvironment columnist Meg Cal-laghan writes about international anti-whaling laws and why it needs to be understanding of all cultures. Page 5

S • Q the musicSyracuse softball creates a new statistic to measure quality at-bats, with hopes that it will yield results. Page 15

Page 3: April 3, 2014

Power to her Allie Curtis is bringing Elect

Her – Campus Women Win to SU. The program encourages college women to run for student govern-ment. See Monday’s paper.

Come togetherThe L.C. Smith College of

Engineering and Computer Sci-ence will host its annual Nunan Lecture and Research Day today. See dailyorange.com.

dailyorange.com @dailyorange april 3, 2014 • page 3

Nn e w s

Judges to evaluate video competition entries

Symposium to discuss disabilities

Students, city residents to barter, exchange skills

By Anagha Dasstaff writer

Applications for the Fast Forward competition closed March 31. Now, judges are narrowing down the sub-missions to find student videos that will be presented at the Chancellor’s Inauguration April 11.

To participate in the Fast Forward

competition, students pitched videos detailing potential projects they may pursue, if chosen. Up to 12 winners will receive a grant of up to $1,500.

Sixty-six entries were submitted, said Elizabeth D. Liddy, dean of the School of Information Studies.

“Winners will be told on Monday, April 7, in order to give them enough time to prepare their in-person pitch-

es at the inauguration event on Friday the 11,” said J.D. Ross, the communi-cations director of the iSchool.

The showcase for the competi-tion will be held on April 11 at 2 p.m. in the Joyce Hergenhan Audi-torium. A panel of 10–12 judges, whose names will remain confi-dential, pick the winners, said Julie

By Robert Romano contributing writer

William J. Peace’s battles with neu-rological deficiencies sent him in and out of hospitals for most of his youth until he was 18 years old, when he became paralyzed. He never expect-ed to reach his 21st birthday.

Peace’s father told him that he needed to live his life fully despite the limits of a wheelchair.

“My parents held me to the exact same standards as my siblings — best thing that could have happened to me,” he said.

Peace will address the social stig-ma of living with disability on Friday when he hosts the Watson Sympo-sium entitled, “Lives Worth Living” in the Schine Student Center room 304. The event will start at 9 a.m. and run until 5 p.m. The symposium is part of Peace’s duties as the 2014 Jeannette K. Watson Distinguished Visiting Professor.

As many as 100 people through-out the course of the day are likely to attend the event, said Eric Holz-warth, deputy director of the Renée Crown University Honors Program. Peace’s symposium will focus on disabilities, bioethics and contem-porary medicine. Peace’s lecture is entitled “Bioethics, Disability and Lives Worth Living.”

As someone who has lived with

By Zach Schweikertstaff writer

While most people might associate bartering with early civilizations, a new social project is using the same ideas to foster an exchange of skills between Syracuse University students and residents of the Near West Side.

Barter Day will take place on April 5 at 601 Tully: Center for Engaged Art and Research. The event is part of CampusNeighbor, a project that Gabriel Mugar, a doctoral candidate in the School of Information Studies, started after being a finalist in SU’s Raymond von Dran IDEA competition in 2012. Mugar said this secured him a

spot in the Syracuse Student Sandbox, which aids student entrepreneurs.

CampusNeighbor’s website allows students and residents to create a pro-file which lists the skills they have, as well as skills they want to learn, Mugar said. The website then matches up stu-dents and residents, allowing them to exchange talents and ideas, he added.

Mugar said the Barter Day event gives a chance for these pairs to meet up and work out their trades.

Some examples of services given by the CampusNeighbor website include music and art lessons, tutor-ing, computer tips and family recipes. Although the event focuses mainly on

Restoring resilienceParticipants in The WILDER Compound Project constructed and demonstrated a geodesic greenhouse dome on the Quad Wednesday after-noon. The dome will be delivered to the South West Community Farm in Syracuse on Saturday as one of the project’s six workshops. Spencer Garrison, a sophomore film major and participant in the project, said that the goal is to learn to be a more resilient human being. The project brings people together from different disciplines to collaborate and practice design. The WILDER workshops are designed to help Syracuse Uni-versity and Syracuse high school students practice ways to sustain themselves and their communities. chase gaewski managing editor

It’s tremendous that the chancellor has thought to include students on his inauguration day.Elizabeth Liddydean of the ischool

Feel the earthAn 8.2-magnitude earthquake occurred off of Chile’s northern coast Tuesday, leading to at least five deaths and a tsunami.source: cnn

Fort Hood TragedyA shooter opened fire at Fort Hood in Texas Wednesday. Four people died, including the shooter, and at least 16 people are wounded. source: cnn

Decision makingThe U.S. Supreme Court voted 5-4 on Wednesday to eliminate the cap on donations for political candidates. source: new york times

Up so highSeventy-five percent of Americans believe that marijuana will inevitably be legal in the U.S., according to a Pew Research Center survey.source: associated press

need to know

see fast forward page 8

see barter page 8

see disabilities page 8

Page 4: April 3, 2014

dailyorange.com O [email protected] 4 april 3, 2014

letter to the editor

Author of ‘Coraline’ to speak at Crouse-Hinds Theater this monthHe’s had a hand in writing novels, short stories, comics, graphic novels and audio books as well as films, television shows and theater produc-tions. He’s won some of the most prestigious awards for many of his works.

He’s coming to Syracuse this April. You’re invited, and you should go.

Neil Gaiman — an author, among many other things — will visit Syracuse as part of the nationally-acclaimed Rosamond Gifford Lec-ture Series on Tuesday, April 29. His lecture will be at the Crouse-Hinds Theater — Mulroy Civic Center at 7:30 p.m., and is sure to be one of the most entertaining speakers you’ll see. He’s anything but the boring, monotonous authors that come to mind when students hear the phrase “author lecture.”

You may know him best for his comic book series “The Sandman,” or for his novels “Stardust,” “American Gods,” “The Graveyard Book” or the novel-recently-turned-movie “Coraline.” Maybe you’re one of his astonish-ing 1.97 million followers on Twitter, attracted to his page by the bio that reads “Will eventu-ally grow up. Until then, will keep making things up and writing them down.” Even if you don’t know him or his works well, you should make the trip to see him speak.

Neil Gaiman is for everyone. After begin-ning his career in British journalism, he found a voice for fiction so engaging that fans of all genres and ages assembled — just part of the reason he has an almost cult-like following. Because of this success, he has been able to

write screenplays — he even wrote an episode of “Dr. Who” — and has had his works trans-formed into films and, probably soon, an HBO series. Anyone from readers to film or comic book junkies can find something to like about Gaiman and his works.

Whether you’re a Neil Gaiman fanatic or just interested in him as a person, you should go to see him speak on Tuesday, April 29. Tick-ets are available — with special student pricing — at www.foclsyracuse.org or by visiting www.ticketmaster.com. It’s a great opportunity to see such a highly awarded and entertaining international personality so close to home, and will be an experience you won’t forget.

Andrea MangioneLe Moyne College Class of 2014

Intern, Friends of the Central Library

Letter to the Editor policy

To have a letter to the editor printed in The Daily Orange, use the following guidelines:• Limit your letter to 400 words.• Letters must be submitted by 4 p.m. the day before you would like it to run. The D.O. cannot guarantee publication if it is submit-ted past the deadline.• Emailed to [email protected].• Include your full name, major; year of graduation; or position on campus. If you are not affiliated with SU, please include your town of residence.• Include a phone number and e-mail address where you can be reached.

Page 5: April 3, 2014

OOPINION dailyorange.com @dailyorange april 3, 2014 • PAGE 5

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environment

Anti-whaling laws need compromise

W hales of the Southern Ocean will live without human predation for the

first time in almost three decades. On Monday, the International

Court of Justice in The Hague ruled to halt a long-standing Japanese program that has captured more than 10,000 minke and other whales since 1988.

While this ruling will bring benefits to whale populations and oceanic con-servation, it is important to remember the differences among cultures when working toward conservation.

Though Japan said that it would abide by the ruling, adding that it “regrets and is deeply disappointed by the decision,” the country argues that the suit was an attempt to impose foreign cultural norms on Japan.

Within international decision-making, there must be a middle ground between impositions and working toward the common good. It takes respect on both sides to come to a compromise.

Although the International Whaling Commission has declared a moratorium on commercial whal-ing worldwide since 1986, a number of countries have lodged formal objections and declared themselves exempt, as the IWC is a voluntary international organization with no ability for enforcement.Apart from formal objections to the IWC, other countries or groups of people

continue whaling through legal means — via scientific research or aboriginal subsistence.

Japan is a signatory on the 1986 moratorium, but has continued whal-ing under legal scientific research. This will come to an end with Mon-day’s ruling.

In 2010, Australia sued Japan within the International Court of Jus-tice, citing that though the Japanese government claimed it was whaling for scientific purposes, it was really commercial whaling in disguise. The main evidence supporting the ruling is Japan’s limited scientific output from said research, when thousands of whales were captured for research.

The meat from slaughtered whales is sold commercially in Japan after scientific use of the captured whales.

In the case of Japan’s “scientific research” whaling, the court ruling was necessary to end this pretense and falsity. But the end goal of this debate should not be an outright ban of whaling in Japan. A compromise is needed to balance cultural norms and whale conservation.

Every organism on this planet, including humans, must utilize resources to grow and prosper.

Coupling this with complex social histories and demographic charac-teristics, people across the globe use a variety of different resources. For Japan, its people have historically eaten whale meat.

If Japan can sustainably and humanely hunt whales in and around their country, it should be able to do so. A transparent process can quell international backlash and sustain cultural norms.

Japan does have other options to continue its whaling industry. By accepting this ruling, it can no longer whale in the Southern Ocean and Antarctica, but may continue in other parts of the Pacific, which it should.

Also, Japan can continue whaling if it revises its scientific program and submits it to the IWC. The country also has the option to with-draw from the IWC.

As Japan should accept the ruling and continue whaling to a lesser degree, the international commu-nity must be accepting of cultural norms that may seem out of the ordinary within our own culture. Without creating compromises, we will not be able to come together as one world on broad-scale issues such as international whaling and oceanic conservation.

Meg Callaghan is a senior environ-mental studies major at SUNY-ESF. Her column appears weekly. She can

be reached at [email protected].

The Fast Forward competition is a strong demonstration of Chancellor Kent Syverud’s interest in students and effort to engage with the Syracuse University campus.

Fast Forward, a video-pitch com-petition, will be a part of Syverud’s inauguration on April 11.

Entrants submit videos detailing a personal project, and winners are awarded a grant up to $1,500. Of the 66 entries in the contest, 12 winners will be announced on April 7, leading

up to an in-person pitch on the day of the inauguration.

By pairing this competition with his inauguration, Syverud set the tone for the type of focus he hopes to have dur-ing his chancellorship at SU. It shows that his goals and ambitions for the campus are student-centric, and that he is engaged with the community.

When it was first announced that Syverud would become chancellor, he indicated he was still trying to figure out what his main goals would be. By

incorporating this competition into his inauguration, it displays that working with students and building stronger relationships with them is a large part of Syverud’s goals.

The video entries are a unique way for Syverud to learn about students on campus and their personal projects. It allows students to directly show their personality to the chancellor, along with their passions.

This competition demonstrates that Syverud recognizes the entre-

preneurial and creative nature of SU. Syverud spent his first day as chancellor meeting with student entrepreneurs and visiting the Syracuse Tech Garden. He’s applying what he’s learned from the students into his initiatives. With SU’s rank-ing as the fourth-best college for entrepreneurship according to the Princeton Review, Syverud is making this aspect of SU a significant part of the school’s identity.

By promoting this initiative,

Syverud is showing that education at SU is about more than sitting in a classroom. The competition is encour-aging students to learn in the best way: personal experiences. It encourages them to pursue their dreams and take advantage of what SU can offer.

This competition sets a positive tone for Syverud’s first semester as chancellor. He should continue having events and competitions like Fast Forward that keep him in direct con-nection with students on campus.

editorial | by the daily orange editorial board

Fast Forward competition shows Syverud’s student-focused initiatives

scribble

MEG CALLAGHAN21ST CENTURY TREE HUGGER

Free moneyConservative columnist Rami

Jackson discusses how guaran-teed minimum incomes could solve issues with the U.S. welfare system. See dailyorange.com

Uncoupling fiascoPop Culture columnist Erin

Jensen talks about actress Gwe-nyth Paltrow’s backlash on Twitter from her “conscious uncoupling.” See dailyorange.com

Page 6: April 3, 2014

PERRY BIBLE FELLOWSHIP by nicholas gurewitch | pbfcomics.com

LAST DITCH EFFORT by john kroes | lde-online

COMICS&CROSSWORDdailyorange.com

SATUDAY MORNING BREAKFAST CEREALby zach weiner | smbc-comics.com

9 8 51 6 8 7

2 89 2 6

4 8 3 73 9 7

4 24 5 8 38 1 4

LIKE COMICS?

DRAWING?

WANT TO BE ART DIRECTOR?

EMAIL [email protected] FOR MORE INFORMATION

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beyond the hillevery thursday in news dailyorange.com @dailyorange april 3, 2014 • page 7

By Claire Moranstaff writer

At the University of Alabama, about 27 percent of the college’s more than 34,000 students are involved in a greek

organization.Cathy Andreen, director of media relations

for the school, said the university is committed to inclusion, and as a result has one of the most diverse greek systems in the nation.

But last fall, the University of Alabama fell under criticism after a female student was not given a bid to any of the sororities she rushed on account of her skin color. The student is African American.

Now, some members of Alabama’s student government are taking a stand on bias in the greek system.

But other members are meeting them with resistance.

The student senate voted to send “A Resolution Supporting the Complete Integration of Fraterni-ties and Sororities on the University of Alabama Campus” to the committee. The resolution was proposed on the last day of the senate session and cannot be carried over to the new term. As a result, this form of the resolution will not pass.

Katie Smith, one of the co-authors of the resolution who presented it on the senate floor and fielded questions about it, said she was sur-prised by the reception the resolution received.

“Maybe some senators didn’t want to take a stand,” Smith said. “Some don’t think that this is SGA’s place, and I totally disagree with that. I feel like this is our place. We’re student government. We should be talking about these things.”

Smith said she did not propose the resolu-tion earlier because she feared retaliation from “The Machine,” an underground organization that allegedly influences the University of Ala-bama’s student government. Smith said that members of “The Machine” approached her and told her not to propose the resolution.

The student senators’ concerns about the reso-lution were that it called for “necessary action” to address segregation in greek life, which other sen-ators feared implied the need for a quota system, according to a March 26 Huffington Post article.

“Given the history of the University of Ala-bama in the civil rights movement, it is impera-tive that the campus takes every necessary action to remove the stigma that currently surrounds this campus regarding its legacy of segregation,” the measure read in the article.

Chisolm Allenlundy, one of the co-authors of the bill, said that any resolution by the student government is non-binding. He said it was only meant to show the student government’s support of integration.

“This resolution was an attempt to basically allow the SGA to take an affirmative stand to encourage integration and to demonstrate to the rest of the country essentially that the stu-dent body has support,” Allenlundy said.

Andreen added that the SGA Senate does not determine institutional policies and procedures. She said the university has developed and imple-mented plans for future recruitment periods that will help ensure progress in increasing diversity.

Allenlundy said the University of Alabama has a reputation as a racist campus and that, overall, it’s not. He said he hoped that this resolution would help to declare the student government’s support for greek life integration and portray it as an organization that, like the majority of the student body, is not racist. Allenlundy said that other senators are hoping to propose a similar resolution during the next senate session.

“The students at this university by and large are not racist,” Allenlundy said. “They fully support an integrated greek system, but they have no way of channeling their voice through student government. When this resolution is shot down, what it really means is that those students are not being represented.”

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changingUniversity of Alabama Student

Government Association fails to pass resolution promoting greek life integration

illustration by natalie riess art director

Tides

Page 8: April 3, 2014

dailyorange.com N [email protected] 8 april 3, 2014

Walas, the undergraduate program manager at the iSchool. The panel includes faculty, staff and students.

“A few categories the videos will be judged on include the strength of the idea, creativity and originality, and whether the idea is feasi-ble,” Walas said. “It needs to have an impact on the campus and community.”

The 12 winners will have the opportunity to pitch their ideas at the inauguration. Mentors from the entrepreneurship department in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management will help the students refine their presentations, Liddy said.

“I think it’s tremendous that the chancellor has thought to include students on his inaugu-ration day,” she said.

Sierra Pizzola, a freshman advertising major, and her alternative spring break group applied for the grant for funding and recognition.

“We’re not an official student organization so we don’t receive funding from the school,” she said. “Making the video means we get people talking, we generate interest. We want to show people who we are, what we’re doing and how they can help.”

Pizzola and her group’s video focuses on issues such as homelessness and hunger. She said her Spring Break trip to Washington, D.C. and speaking to a homeless person influenced her positively. She has no doubt that this move-ment will influence others.

“We see it as opportunity. We have been

given the opportunity to educate and inspire people and we are giving them the opportunity to give back, help out and become passionate about something,” she said.

Walas said she hopes to see many students at the inauguration, supporting their classmates during the Fast Forward segment.

“After the winners present at the inaugura-tion, they will help lead the implementation of their idea, including the promise of the chancellor,” she said.

By the end of December, the winning ideas will be implemented with the help of $1,500, Walas said.

Said Liddy: “This is something that demon-strates how SU students can have an impact on the university or world as a whole.”

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skills, objects of personal significance could also be traded, Mugar said.

Mugar said a Gallup-Knight Foundation report inspired him to start CampusNeighbor. According to the report, titled “Knight Soul of the Commu-nity,” cities with residents who had pride in their communities had a higher gross domestic product.

“A great way to get people to feel good about where they live and to connect with people

around them is to get them to interact with each other in such ways that build trust,” Mugar said. “One way to do that is bartering.”

CampusNeighbor is itself part of a 601 Tully exhibition called “Getting to Know You: Artists Explore Authentic Connections in the Digital Age,” said Jillian Nakornthap, the exhibit’s cura-tor. The exhibit explores how people connect with and without the Internet, especially as young adults move away from using Facebook and onto other sites, she added.

Nakornthap said she and Mugar met last fall to discuss including CampusNeighbor in the exhibit.

“I think it’s a great way to try to break down that town and gown divide that you see so often in so many university towns,” Nakornthap said.

In addition to the event, Barter Day will also feature an exhibit with visual and audio elements, Mugar said. Anda French, an assistant professor in the School of Architecture, designed a computer installation that is part of the exhibit. Visitors can use the computer installation to record them-selves explaining the skills they possess and those they desire to have, Mugar said.

Syeisha Byrd, Hendricks Chapel’s director of engagement programs, said residents and students have a lot to share with one another in this bartering event.

“A lot of people just assume that students don’t want to come down there, or residents don’t have anything to share, when they have a wealth of knowledge of skills that they could give back to students, and vice versa,” Byrd said.

Byrd, who grew up on the Lower West Side of Syracuse, said she often didn’t have the oppor-tunity to pursue skills that could now be taught through bartering.

In the future, Mugar hopes to expand Campus-Neighbor to include different groups in Syracuse. He said he is working with the Community Folk Art Center, the Tech Garden and other local orga-nizations to establish future sites where people could barter on their own time.

“People are not just going to be the recipients of something,” he said. “It’s about creating a real strong relationship, and it’s a way to get to know the surrounding community too.”

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from page 3

barter

from page 3

fast forward

paralysis for years, Peace said that he has experienced its social stigma firsthand.

“It’s day in and day out, it’s death by a thousand social cuts,” he said. “It’s just a revo-lutionary style of wearing down and it takes steel will to just sometimes, literally just walk out your door, because you know you’re going

to have a negative social experience.”Stephen Kuusisto, director of the honors pro-

gram, said the professorship is one of the initia-tives supported by the Tolley Humanities Center. The professor comes to Syracuse University for 10 days in the spring semester and delivers a lecture, visits classrooms and is available for scholars and students in their area of expertise.

Previous hosts of the Watson Sympo-

sium include humanities scholars like Nobel Prize and Pulitzer Prize winner Toni Mor-rison. Karen Ortega, program coordinator of the Tolley Humanities Center, said the position is held every spring semester and is based on submitted proposals by faculty and departments on campus.

In addition to Peace’s lecture, there will also be lectures by Brenda Brueggemann, professor of English and director of com-position at the University of Louisville; Barbara Farlow, a researcher and writer on bioethics, and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sheri Fink.

Holzwarth said he hopes that the lecture from Fink to close the symposium will help increase turnout. Fink’s closing keynote pre-sentation will include a reading from her book “Five Days at Memorial: Life and Death in a Storm-Ravaged Hospital,” a book that details the events at Memorial Medical Center after Hurricane Katrina and the euthanasia that happened there.

“Who gets saved first during a disaster is a question of values as much as medicine, and I’d like attendees to understand more about how disability plays into these decisions,” Fink said in an email.

In addition to the Watson Symposium and his academic work, Peace runs a blog known as “Bad Cripple” and uses this platform to reach out to others. He hopes the symposium will expand his connection with the disabled community.

Said Peace: “It’s part of what I sense as a moral obligation — to reach other people with disability who don’t have the advantages I have.”

[email protected]

from page 3

disabilities

I think it’s a great way to try to break down that town and gown divide that you see so often in so many university towns.

Jillian Nakornthapexhibit curator

By Anna Merodstaff writer

The Maxwell School of Citizenship and Pub-lic Affairs held an open dialogue presentation inspiring students to understand the challenges within the recent wave of the feminist movement.

The presentation, held in Maxwell Hall, was part of the Peer-to-Peer speaker series for Maxwell.

Karla Dominguez-Gonzalez and Andrea Sva-kova, who are both members of the Hubert H. Humphrey Fellowship Program, led the discus-sion. The fellowship program is designed to bring professionals from designated countries to the U.S. for a year to develop international, professional collaboration skills.

Dominguez-Gonzalez and Svakova are roommates, and the presentation on post-mod-ern feminism was a “great way” to share the discussions they have about feminism at home, Dominguez-Gonzalez said.

Svakova said it is important to question issues

of post-modern feminism because feminist ideals could fix a variety of social problems across nations.

“There are new problems evolving in our society and I think feminism has the tools to solve some of these problems,” said Svakova.

Their presentation began by reviewing the history of the feminist movement’s three waves.

The first wave of feminism began in the 19th century and continued through the beginning of the 20th century when women were demanding the right to vote, Dominguez-Gonzalez said. The second wave of feminism emerged in the 1960s when women began to challenge social construc-tions and the idea of patriarchy, she said.

“It was not about only realizing materialis-tic differences, but about building awareness of these differences,” Dominguez-Gonzalez said.

She added that the third wave of feminism, known as the “post-feminist era” began in the 1990s and continues today. In the post-fem-inist era, Dominguez-Gonzalez said, people often question whether or not feminism is still

needed in a society where women have made progress in the workplace.

American women on average earn 81 percent of what men earn in the work force, Domin-guez-Gonzalez said. She added that women make up 60 percent of the world’s poorest populations and 35 percent of women world-wide have experienced violence.

“The problem is not solved,” Svakova said.Svakova and Dominguez-Gonzalez said the

book “Lean In” by Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook, created some controversy about what barriers still exist for women in the workplace.

Dominguez-Gonzalez said that in Sandberg’s book, Sandberg says a glass ceiling no longer exists and women have been taught to not “lean in.” Now, women just need to be more accountable for their ambition to be as successful as men, she said.

Women should also work to have the right to ‘lean back’ and not be held to the societal expectation of being both a good mother and a

successful businesswoman, she said.“The ‘lean in’ thing will not work if you do

not change the social structure, and we need the right to lean back because we cannot be a super woman,” Dominguez-Gonzalez said.

Svakova ended the presentation by asking the audience to think about the feminist tools they can use to better society as they approach leadership positions.

“The question is: is feminism dead? How do you see yourself helping these issues?” Svakova said.

Bridget Walsh, a senior anthropology major, said she hopes one day to apply these ideas to her goal to open a non-profit providing art education for impoverished children in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

“It’s always interesting to hear from a differ-ent setting how I can apply feminist concepts to the kind of work that I want to go into,” Walsh said, “ and the whole concept of ‘leaning in’ and changing the social construction — that’s totally applicable to what I want to do.”

[email protected]

Presentation emphasizes importance of feminist leadership

It’s just a revolutionary style of wearing down and it takes steel will to just sometimes, literally just walk out your door, because you know you’re going to have a negative social experience.William Peacewatson symposium host

TIMELINE

March 31: Deadline for entries April 7: Winners of Fast Forward will be notified.

April 11: Entries will be show-cased in the Joyce Hergenhan Auditorium as part of Chancellor Kent Syverud’s inauguration.

Dec. 31: Winners must have completed their projects.

Page 9: April 3, 2014

@kellibeniniBruh bruh was dope

tonight, thanks for coming to Syracuse @xdannyxbrownx !!! We love ya!

Walk onFor full weekend coverage

dailyorange.com @dailyorange april 3, 2014 • PAGE 9

PPULP

Text by Tom Sharkeystaff writer

Photos by Josh Romeroasst. photo editor

Set to embark on a nationwide tour to promote his recent album “Old,” Danny Brown

brought his unique style to Syracuse on Wednesday night to perform hits from his critically acclaimed album in front of a sold-out crowd.

The show, hosted at the Schine Underground on Wednes-day night, was the first stop on

Brown’s “The Old Danny Brown Tour” and was the latest install-ment of University Union’s Band-ersnatch Music Series.

“Danny’s name has been buzz-ing around the UU office for a while now,” said Blair Schulman, co-director of the Bandersnatch series. “We were able to secure a date in early April, and the timing was perfect.”

Detroit native ZelooperZ opened the show for Brown with an energetic performance that was full of surprises. Brown and

ZelooperZ recently linked up through Twitter, and Brown said he wants to be a mentor to the 20-year-old artist.

Before the concert, Brown dis-cussed the start of his new tour and his history of performing on college campuses.

“I’m excited to be back on tour to keep getting the word out about ‘Old,’” Brown said. “We have fun everywhere we go, but I used to play college shows a lot when I was first coming up in the game.”

By Zach Gipsoncontributing writer

Syracuse University’s Relay For Life always has a vast turnout, and this year has been no exception, with nearly 1,500 participants working toward a goal of raising $100,000.

“Participants have raised nearly $60,000 this year, which is just amaz-ing,” said Sara Curtin, this year’s event coordinator. All proceeds go to the American Cancer Society.

The relay will take place in the Carrier Dome on Friday from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. Teams will camp out throughout the night and take turns walking around the dome. All cancer survivors take the first lap around the track, called the Survivors Lap.

Teams come together to raise funds with help from sponsors and donors to participate in the relay. Here’s a look at the three individuals who emerged as this year’s top contributors and their stories.

Sara FreundFor Sara Freund, participating in Relay For Life is an annual affair. The senior writing and rhetoric major has been involved for nearly a decade.

“I’ve done Relay For Life since middle school, continued in high school and now college. My parents have always supported and encour-aged me to do it,” Freund said.

During the past few years, Freund has been personally affected by can-cer within her own family. Not only have both her grandfather and father battled cancer, but her mother was also diagnosed with cervical cancer just two years ago.

“I was witnessing it firsthand with someone that I’m really close to, and it was just that one moment when I realized everything I had been doing was so important,” Freund said.

When Freund came to Syracuse, she realized that Relay For Life was a big part of the philanthropic scene. During her freshman year, she started a team with her sisters in Kappa Alpha Theta. This year, she is acting as the fundrais-ing chair on the executive board.

Freund has raised nearly $1,000.

Todd LongTodd Long, a law student, has never participated in Relay For Life, but that did not stop him from raising nearly $1,200 this year for his team.

This isn’t Long’s first time fundrais-ing, though. In 2011, after losing his mother to glioblastoma multiforme,

Top Relay donators speak out

see danny brown page 12 see relay page 14

LIKE ‘OLD’

Danny Brown kicks off new tour with a bang at Schine Underground

DANNY BROWN, a hip-hop artist and Detroit native, brought his eclectic rap style to the Schine Underground on Wednesday night. Brown released his critically acclaimed album “Old” last year, and performed hits from both his most recent album and previous record “XXX.”

ZELOOPERZ, an upstart young rapper and member of Danny Brown’s Bruiser Brigade, opened for Danny Brown during Wednesday night’s Bandersnatch Music Series concert.

TIMESWhen you’re trying to make it, you’ll do a show whenever there’s a crowd. I’ve learned a lot over the years.Danny Brownrapper

of this Relay for Life event at the Carrier Dome, see dailyorange.com

Page 10: April 3, 2014

dailyorange.com N N dailyorange.com [email protected]

april 3, 2014 11 [email protected]

10 april 3, 2014

8 a.m.Salute to Service Recognition event for staff service of more than 25 yearsSheraton University and Hotel Conference Center, Regency Ballroom

10 a.m.Meeting with senior leadership regarding Board of Trustees meetingChancellor’s office, Crouse-Hinds Hall

10:30 a.m. Standing meeting with Vice Chancellor and Provost Eric SpinaChancellor’s office, Crouse-Hinds Hall

11:30 a.m.Meeting with Chancellor’s office staffChancellor’s office, Crouse-Hinds Hall

Noon 2014 School and College Marshals LuncheonGoldstein Alumni and Faculty Center

1:30 p.m.Visit and tour of Peck Hall601 East Genesee St.

3 p.m.

Meeting with Lil O’Rourke, secretary to Board of Trustees and vice president principal giftsChancellor’s office, Crouse-Hinds Hall

3:45 p.m.

Meeting with Don McPherson Chancellor’s office, Crouse-Hinds Hall

7:30 p.m. Attend Student Association meetingMaxwell Auditorium

Syverud prefers to stand there and work rather than sit — he jokes it’s his way of avoiding the Freshman 15. And right below the computers lays a small, yellow sticker.

It reads: “…this will help the students because…”

A day in the life of Kent Syverud consists of shaking a lot of hands — today it was 287. It’s a day where he writes notes in his black Moleskine notebook and converses with SU employees who, all together, have worked more years than there are feet in a mile. It’s a day where he observes the life of a student, catch-ing a presentation in Peck Hall. It’s a day where he discusses with students how he can better communicate with the younger generation.

He wears a black suit, with a white shirt and a tie — on Monday, its gold with little bumble-bees. The chancellor’s day is mostly consumed with meetings — ranging from senior leader-ship to office staff to alumni to campus events. But he sees students every day, especially since the move to his new home: the chancellor’s residence on Comstock Avenue.

“I feel like I’m the only person over the age of 30 in a ten block radius,” Syverud says, laughing. “But everyone has been really great. I love seeing stu-dents early in the morning when I walk my dog.”

His day begins with breakfast at the Shera-ton Syracuse University Hotel & Conference Center with SU employees being recognized for more than 25 years of service. He was slated to arrive at 8 a.m., but Syverud arrives early, meeting everyone at every table. He wears a nametag and introduces himself every time.

Like every speech he would go on to give that day, he opened with a quick joke and thanked everyone who made the event possible. He mentioned the employees at the Sheraton, who had taken care of him and his wife and who had hosted many SU events. He thanked the employees for their work, which “is often taken for granted in the background.”

“I’ve learned that this place is really held together by people for whom this is not a job just, but a calling. This is a community that matters to them, and it matters to them to do a job well day after day, chancellor after chancellor,” he said. “I haven’t been to a university where people stick with it loyally as a career as frequently as Syracuse. I think that’s one thing that makes us stand apart and makes us better than our peers.”

When the breakfast ends, Syverud shakes some more hands and hugs those who helped plan the event. He walks back to his office — he walks almost everywhere on campus.

His first official meeting of the day is with the university’s senior leadership, where they prepare for the upcoming Board of Trustees meeting. Syverud sits at the head of the table — that same table he wants to get rid of — with Eric Spina, vice chancellor and provost, sitting to his left and Lou Marcoccia, executive vice president and chief financial officer, on his right.

While Spina talks about the logistics of the meeting, Syverud slowly scans the draft of the agenda with his orange pen. Every so often, he writes down notes in his Moleskine notebook and takes a sip of his coffee.

When the meeting ends, Spina stays for a one-on-one meeting with the chancellor. It’s a standing meeting, as they try to meet fre-quently to talk about different aspects of the university, such as the ongoing search for the College of Arts and Sciences dean and how to better career services.

At noon, Syverud is scheduled to attend a

luncheon for the 2014 class marshals at Gold-stein Alumni & Faculty Center. He’s excited because Faculty is one of the few places on campus where he hasn’t eaten yet.

He walks to the luncheon with Spina. Syver-ud walks quickly not because he’s running late, but because he likes to be early. That’s what the university gets, he says, when it has a Norwe-gian chancellor. Punctuality is important.

As he walks down University Place, students stare at Syverud, recognizing the familiar face. One student takes her headphones off and asks out loud, “Wait, was that the chancellor?”

He opens the door of Faculty, as the differ-ent students and staff filter in. And like before, he walks into the dining room, introducing himself to the different student marshals. This time, he spots his wife among the crowd and begins introducing her as ‘Dr. Chen’ to the oth-ers in the room.

During the luncheon, Syverud talks about the student’s role as marshals and how impressed he was with all of their accomplishments.

“For all of us on this hill, we exist to serve, and inspire you to serve, and mentor you after you’re here,” he says. “And I really hope we read your stories and the stories of this univer-sity going forward.

“We’re very proud of you. Many people in this room are very eager to meet your fami-lies and loved ones at commencement, and tell them how much you’ve meant to us and how much you’ve inspired us. So you’re on orders, introduce them to us. Find the time or moment; we are not offended, we are not busy. This is what we live for.”

Ruth Chen — Syverud’s wife and now a professor of practice at the L.C. Smith College of Engineering and Computer

Science — accompanies the chancellor to a majority of the different campus events and college tours. Like her husband, Chen keeps her style simple: wearing a black suit, orange blouse, realistic and comfortable shoes to walk in, all accompanied by shiny pearl earrings and necklace.

She laughs at her husband’s jokes, and he laughs at hers.

She lingers when on the tour of Peck Hall — home to David B. Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamic’s Department of Marriage and Family Therapy — with her husband. She takes time to look at the photos on the wall, and peeks her head into different windows and classrooms. She observes the small details of the old building, but doesn’t ask a lot of questions.

It’s Syverud who’s asking them. On the tour, he asks about student safety,

as well as student and faculty morale since

the department moved into the building about a year ago. He pops into the offices of fac-ulty members, and introduces himself to every single one with his firm handshake. He wants to know everyone who works in the office, and his or her role.

“The desks are so clean, they must have known I was coming,” he jokes.

He listens to Dean Diane Lyden Murphy talk about the department’s move in the old, historic building and its national recognition. Impressed, Syverud asks about where the students take classes, where they hang out between classes and the projects they’re working on.

“Would you want to see some of the stu-dents?” Murphy asks. “It’s probably the only time they’ll see you till graduation.”

Syverud and Chen are shown into a class-room of about 35 students. He apologizes for interrupting a student’s presentation.

“Hi everyone, I just wanted to introduce myself. I’m Kent Syverud, the university’s chancellor.” As he looks to the PowerPoint presentation slide about signs of facing midlife depression, he jokes, “Oh wow, I hope this proj-ect isn’t about me.”

He and Chen then lean against a table in the back of the classroom, listening to the student’s presentation.

As they quietly leave the classroom about five minutes later, Syverud asks Thom deLara, the department chair and leader of the tour, where deLara came from and how he got here.

“Wait, like me personally?” deLara asks.DeLara then talks to Syverud about his

career before Syracuse and his different degrees, as they walk into the conference room. Syverud passes up sitting at the head of the conference table, giving the seat to the dean instead. It’s her building, not his.

Syverud hasn’t quite grasped how to communicate to students in 140 charac-ters — despite urging from his sons. For

someone his age, he admits, being on Twitter could be creepy.

But yes, he’s aware of all of the fake Syverud accounts roaming the Twittersphere.

For now, he’s content with communicat-ing with students through email. The univer-sity, he says, needs to improve communication amongst administrators, students and staff. His sons came up with the idea of sending out a weekly email to the SU community. Though to them, Syverud says, having a five-paragraph

email is way too long. Part of learning how to improve commu-

nication involves attending a Student Asso-ciation meeting. The 7:30 p.m. meeting was the first he attended as chancellor.

“I’ve realized I’ve discovered more when I listen than when I talk,” he says to the student assembly members in Maxwell Auditorium. In the 75 days he has been chancellor, Syver-ud says he’s found that students are usually shocked when he asks for their advice.

Of the 50 minutes Syverud speaks, 10 were his opening comments about his time at SU so far and the major problems the university is facing. The other 40 were designated for hearing from the students.

As he answers the questions — ranging from increased tuition to how he plans to connect the different colleges — Syverud casually leans against the podium, making eye contact with each student speaking. His demeanor is more of a professor in a discussion with his students than a leader speaking to his followers.

One student in particular asks how he would feel about having the two student representa-tives on the Board of Trustees be voting mem-bers. Currently, they are not voting members.

“I doubt I will want to change that. But yes, I should just say that really bluntly,” Syverud replies. “Sorry to give you that bad news. But when it’s bad news, I’ll tell you.”

After he finishes answering students’ ques-tions, Syverud returns to his seat and stays for the entire meeting.

And as the meeting comes to a close around 9 p.m., so does the chancellor’s day.

He walks back to his new home at the chan-cellor’s residence, and the on way passes the illuminated campus buildings. But as he makes his way through the quiet campus, he isn’t alone; he walks alongside a student, giving him advice about life after Syracuse.

Fifteen hours after he started his day, it still wasn’t about the man at the top.

[email protected] | @MerNewman93

For all of us on this Hill, we exist to serve,

and inspire you to serve, and mentor you

after you’re here.Kent Syverud

RUTH CHEN, the wife of Chancellor Kent Syverud, looks around a counseling room while Syverud tours an observation room. Syverud stands on the other side of a two-way mirror in Peck Hall, home to the department of marriage and family therapy.

SYVERUD walks home and gives advice to a student on Monday night. He usually begins his day at 7 a.m. and leaves campus around 9 p.m.

DIANE LYDEN MURPHY AND SYVERUD, the dean of Falk College and the SU chancellor, respectively, observe the buildings surrounding Peck Hall. Murphy and Syverud discussed the college’s national recognition and projects students are currently working on.

CHEN, THOM DELARA, DIANE LYDEN MURPHY AND SYVERUD discuss the department of marriage and family therapy’s recent move to Peck Hall, on Genesee Street. On the tour, Syverud visited the facilities and met a class of students in the college.

LONNIE REEDER AND SYVERUD shake hands as he awards Reeder, an SU maintenance man, a Tiffany and Co. plate for his work at the university. On Monday, Syverud spoke at a breakfast, honoring employees who had worked at SU for more than 25 years.

from page 1

Chancellor

a day in the life of the chancellor a day in the life of the chancellor

Monday, March 31

For videos and more photos from a day in the life of Chancellor Kent Syverud, seedailyorange.com

Page 11: April 3, 2014

dailyorange.com P [email protected] 12 april 3, 2014

Brown recounted stories of taking a Grey-hound bus to any campus that would pay him $500 at the very start of his career. With “The Old Danny Brown Tour,” Brown said he’s doing shows in front of bigger crowds that can reach up to 2,000 fans.

Although Wednesday night was the first show on his new tour, Brown wasn’t rusty at all on stage — he recently performed at South By Southwest with ZelooperZ, and their perfor-mance had many buzzing, particularly about ZelooperZ’s promising talent.

“Man, that was crazy. I could just tell the crowd was really feeling me, and I try to focus on bringing something new into my perfor-mances,” ZelooperZ said. “I can’t believe I’m really on tour now, it’s awesome.”

It was clear right away when ZelooperZ took the stage that his performance style goes against the grain. Parts of his set were abra-sive, but he kept the audience by his side for the ride, and the result was refreshing and wholly impressive.

A fter a short break, Brow n took the stage and kept the energy level elevated the entire time. Debuting a new green hairstyle, Brown performed hits like “Handstand,” “25 Bucks” and “Kush Coma,” all of which appear on “Old.”

Considering his famously rapid deliv-er y and eclectic f low, Brown’s execution on stage was remarkable. He rapped tech-nically challenging verses with precision throughout the set before closing out the show with an invigorating performance of his hit single “Dip.”

It has been a long road filled with hard work for Brown, who turned 33 last month. He said that touring has always been a big part of his career, and he recalled playing nine shows in one week at SXSW a few years ago.

“When you’re trying to make it, you’ll do a show whenever there’s a crowd. I’ve learned a lot over the years,” Brown said. “I want to be a mentor for Z to help him on the journey and make sure he doesn’t make the same mistakes I did.”

ZelooperZ said that Brown has treated him like a brother since he starting hanging out with him and his Bruiser Brigade crew. The rookie joined Brown on stage for most of his set, and their chemistry together was clearly apparent.

While Brown continues to promote “Old” to fans across the U.S., ZelooperZ plans on focus-ing on his new album, “HELP.”

“The album is done, and it ’s going to surprise a lot of people,” ZelooperZ said. “Right now I just want to enjoy the moment and put on dope performances for people on this tour.”

If the opening show of “The Old Danny

Brown Tour” was any indication, both Brown and ZelooperZ have promising futures ahead. Brown has become a favorite among critics, notably for his sophomore album “XXX” and now with “Old.”

Both rappers have abandoned the status

quo in their genre to introduce new sounds and styles to fans. Brown serves as a prime example of how working hard can pay off, and ZelooperZ stands to benefit from learning from the “Old,” wise rapper.

[email protected]

DANNY BROWN sported a new green hairstyle during his headlining set at the Schine Underground. The 33-year-old rapper put on an energetic, entertaining set and played a mix of new songs with older fan-favorites. joshuah romero asst. photo editor

from page 9

danny brown

Page 12: April 3, 2014

From the

calendarevery thursday in pulp

“The Glass Menagerie”Where: Syracuse Stage, 820 E. Genesee St.When: April 2–27How Much: $30–52

dailyorange.com @dailyorange april 3, 2014 • PAGE 13

By Erik van Rheenenasst. feature editor

Syracuse Stage’s mission is to boldly inter-pret the plays it produces, and even a play-wright as iconic to American theater as

Tennessee Williams is no exception to the rule.From opening night on April 2 to April 27, Syra-

cuse Stage will present “The Glass Menagerie,” the play that sparked Williams’ prolific career.

“‘The Glass Menagerie’ made Tennessee Williams a theatrical star,” said Kyle Bass, Syracuse Stage’s resident dramaturge, or play researcher and developer.

Part of that interpretation involves pro-jecting images and text onto the stage, Bass said. The play marks the last show of Syracuse Stage’s 2013-2014 season.

Syracuse Stage is no stranger to Williams’

productions — the theater has done renditions of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Southern playwright’s celebrated works, including “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof” and “A Streetcar Named Desire.” It’s also revisiting the classic play: Syracuse Stage did a production of “The Glass Menagerie” back in 1999.

As dramaturge for the production, Bass was charged with interpreting William’s original work for Syracuse Stage’s play.

“It’s exciting,” Bass said. “If you do a play the same way all the time, it’s the quickest way to have it die.”

Of Williams’ lengthy list of writing credits, “The Glass Menagerie” is one of the most semi-biographical, featuring characters based on his mother, his sister and himself. But Bass stressed that the play is not an all-out autobiography.

“We’re not telling the story of Tennessee Williams,” he said. “We’re telling the story of Tom Wingfield. It’s a play about memory, not

just a historical point in time.”The plot recounts narrator Tom Wingfield’s

recollections about his mother Amanda’s fixa-tion on finding a suitor for his insecure sister, Laura. The show first premiered in 1944 before making the leap to Broadway in 1945, bringing Williams with it into the limelight.

Timothy Bond, the producing artistic director of Syracuse Stage and SU Drama, will direct the play’s cast of four. The cast features Joseph Midy-ett as Tom Wingfield, Elizabeth Hess as Amanda Wingfield, Adriana Gaviria as Laura Wingfield and Michael Kirby as the Gentleman Caller.

When “The Glass Menagerie” became Wil-liams’ first major hit, the playwright gave half of the royalties to his mother. The play was a reimagining of Williams’ “Portrait of a Girl in Glass,” a short story he penned in 1943 before being published in 1948,

Tickets for Syracuse Stage’s production of “The Glass Menagerie” range from $30–52. Rush tickets will also be available on performance days for $18 for theatergoers with valid student IDs.

Bass said Syracuse Stage explored the diversity of the play as part of its interpretation, though the show still follows the story, setting and themes established by Williams in its original form.

“The play really speaks about the human truth,” Bass said.

[email protected] | @TheRealVandyMan

rabbit in the rye

Where: The Westcott Theater, 524 West-cott St.When: Friday, April 4, 8 p.m.How much: $10

The folk rock trio from Hamilton, N.Y. will hit the stage on Friday. The unsigned band, now residing in Brooklyn, created their five-track EP “Tabled Fables” at Subcat Studios in Syracuse. In March, the upcom-ing band won the Brian Bourke award for Best New Artist at the Syracuse Area Music Awards. Rabbit in the Rye made their first Westcott Theater appearance in January.

diavolo dance theaterWhere: Landmark Theatre, 362 S. Salina St.When: Friday, April 4, 7 p.m.How much: $15

The internationally recognized acrobatic dance company — founded in 1992 by French choreographer Jacques Heim — will dance the night away at the Landmark Theatre on Friday. They call their dancing “architecture in motion,” since the com-pany’s choreography takes them over huge sets and structures. Diavolo will perform two pieces, “Fluid Infinities” and “Trajec-toire.” “Trajectoire,” set to Philip Glass’s Symphony No. 3, was co-commissioned by SU Arts Engage.

thumbs upstate improv festival

Where: Central New York Playhouse, 3649 Erie Blvd. E.When: Friday, April 4 – Saturday, April 5, 7 p.m.

How much: $5

Get ready to laugh your a** off. Thumbs UPstate is bringing 18 improv teams and one sketch comedy team to the Central New York Playhouse. The teams come from across Upstate New York and range from pro teams to high school teams. Dur-ing the festival, the audience can also take workshops to learn how to properly impro-vise. Anyone can join the festival, and according to Thumbs UPstate’s website, sword-eaters are in demand.

GLASS ACTSyracuse Stage interprets classic Tennessee Williams play “The Glass Menagerie”

MICHAEL KIRBY AND ADRIANA GAVIRIA, as The Gentleman Caller and Laura, respectively, in the Syracuse Stage production of The Glass Menagerie. The play, written by historic Southern playwright Tennessee Williams, features only four cast members. courtesy of michael davis

Page 13: April 3, 2014

dailyorange.com P [email protected] 14 april 3, 2014

Waking up Wednesday was like wak-ing up from a fantastic, incredible dream and realizing you didn’t

actually win a million dollars and have a torrid affair with David Beckham. Instead, you’re still living in your off-campus, heat-deprived apartment, sleeping in a Beckham-less bed.

When I heard Google’s April 1 announce-ment, I set about rearranging my life now that I had the opportunity to make my dreams come true.

“This is it! It’s happening!” I screamed at my housemate as I frantically packed my bag with everything I would need for my journey — a file-a-fax full of Pokémon cards and my smartphone with the upgraded version of Google Maps.

I ran up to my boss and quit on the spot. I ran to Hall of Languages and dropped out of all of my classes for the remainder of the year. I yelled “Suck it, everyone!” as I left the building, which I imme-

diately felt was too much and instantly regretted. But no matter — I was finally going to fulfill

my dream of becoming a Pokémon master.I wrote my parents a letter (despite my

Google Maps savvy, I am inexplicably unable to use my phone’s email or text message function) and told them I didn’t know where I’d be for the next few months. Take care of Grandma for me, I said. This had to happen now.

But as I turned on my laptop, ready to write my farewell Facebook status to the world as I embarked on my magnum opus of epic journeys to catch ‘em all, I saw a status that troubled me.

“Did you see the Google Maps April Fools’ prank? Genius.”

I felt my insides burn with a rage I shan’t be able to describe. A prank? How could this be? Was it too late to re-register into all of my classes and get my job back? Didn’t Google know they were playing with my hopes and dreams with this so-called prank, dangling this opportunity of a lifetime in front of us, taunting us?

Something else began troubling me at this point. If this faux-excursion had all just been a ruse, what else was out there? Could no one be trusted on this day of days? They said beware of the ides of March, but no one had fully pre-pared me for the horror of the first of April.

Defeated, I logged into my LinkedIn account with a heavy heart. Sure enough, I found that the profiles of all of my newfound connections, all of whom were cats, were falsified. In fact, the entire new program, known as LinkedIn CYMK, or Cats You May Know, was nothing but a sick joke

from someone who deliberately wanted to toy with my emotions.

As it turned out, I hadn’t met any of these cats, and it seemed unlikely they were ever going to help me make any professional connec-tions in the feline industry. The Pokémon hunt-ing game was out, and my foolproof plan B just swirled down the drain before my very eyes.

So, as I reevaluate my entire life over the next few days, I will just warn people of one thing: If you are pulling April Fools’ Day jokes, try not to make them so outrageously hilarious and awe-some as those of Google and LinkedIn. My heart is still broken.

Chelsea DeBaise is a senior writing major. Her friend pointed out to her that there would be no water Pokémon hiding in her hometown

of Rochester because nothing can survive in the Genesee River. She can be reached via email at

[email protected] or on Twitter @CDeBaise124.

humor

Google prank dashes columnist’s dreams of being Pokémon Master

an aggressive form of brain cancer, he and his brother organized an independent run in her

memory.Soliciting donations from family, friends and

local businesses for the National Brain Tumor Society, the duo set a fundraising goal of $5,000. In just two months, they managed to accumu-late more than $6,000 in funds.

“We called it ‘We Ran the Long Way’ because our last name is Long,” he said.

Long is this year’s fundraising chair for the Syracuse University College of Law team. The team has raised almost $2,000.

This year, Long plans to wear a weight vest for two hours during the full 12-hour walk as a reminder of the people he’s walking for.

Said Long: “By doing that, it makes donors feel like they’re actually participating by coax-ing me ahead.”

Marisa StarkWhen Marisa Stark was younger, she would often collect books and winter clothes to donate to kids in need. She has continued her giving ways as a col-lege student, serving as Alpha Xi Delta’s internal philanthropy chair. And, like many others partici-pating this year, Stark has been affected by cancer.

“I feel like almost everyone has been touched by cancer. My family has been, family friends — it’s like that sixth degree of separation, but smaller,” said Stark, a junior advertising major.

The most successful team this year has been Alpha Xi Delta’s, which has raised more than $5,500 in donations. Stark is the driving force behind the efforts, raising more than $2,500 on her own.

“I’m floored at how unbelievably generous people have been,” Stark said. “Watching that little bar fill up on our page has been unreal.”

Stark said she is excited to be participating in the Luminaria Walk — her favorite part of the relay — by commemorating those who have passed with lanterns.

Said Stark: “It’s a beautiful and emotional event. Everyone is there for each other. It’s great to be a part of.”

[email protected]

CHELSEA DEBAISELET’S GET WEIRD

from page 9

relay

Page 14: April 3, 2014

By Connor Grossmanstaff writer

Q.It’s not as commonplace as batting average

or on-base percentage, but the statistic Q is just as highly regarded in the Syracuse program.

It’s a calculation that SU hitting coach Matt Nandin jots down in a scorebook to keep track of his players’ quality at-bats each game.

Quality at-bats are something Syracuse (13-16, 6-5 Atlantic Coast) prides itself on and strives to achieve with each trip to the plate. The Orange will look to accumulate as many Qs as it can as it pre-

pares to face North Carolina State (20-10, 10-4) in a three-game series on Saturday and Sunday.

“The mentality for us is quality,” head coach Leigh Ross said. “The mentality for us is going deep in the count, fouling everything off to find a good pitch.”

The designation of the Q for each at-bat is not just the discretion of Nandin, but rather is defined by a set of specific circumstances in which a player can achieve a quality at-bat.

A player will earn a Q during an at-bat if she gets a base hit, walks, gets hit by pitch, advances a runner from second to third with nobody out, sacrifice bunts, hits a sacrifice fly, records an RBI, hits a ball with gusto or has an at-bat that lasts eight pitches or longer.

In a game where failure 7-of-10 times is deemed a success, the formula behind a qual-ity at-bat reflects just that. Only one circum-

stance of the eight involves succeeding with a hit, while everything else could be deemed a lesser accomplishment.

Nandin said using this new avenue to mea-sure success is a move to boost confidence, which he claims is imperative to any hitter.

“It’s silly to have a couple of bad hits like bloop singles and feel better than if you hit three line drives and they were all caught for

outs,” he said. “You did everything correctly, but didn’t succeed statistically.

“The more confident you are hitting, the easier it is.”

Certain elements of a quality at-bat could stand to be improved by the Orange. This sea-son SU has a total of 11 sacrifice hits, toward

the bottom of the ACC. In addition, hitters Mary Dombrowski, Shirley Daniels and Sydney O’Hara are leading the ACC in strikeouts.

Ross isn’t trying to preach a “small ball” style of play. Q is simply a way of reminding the team that success can come without collecting a hit.

“If you get out and don’t see a “Q” next to your name on the roster,” junior outfielder Mary Dombrowski said via email, “you know you have to change your approach for your next at-bat.”

For SU, it’s all about trying to find a balance to achieve success. A balance in the different kinds of quality at-bats is the mantra instilled in the players’ heads.

Syracuse — which leads the ACC in strike-outs and places fourth in home runs — looks to

be far from balanced, but focusing on achieving a Q each at-bat is helping the cause.

“A balanced offense with an even number of hits, to strikeouts, to walks, to sacrifice bunts, is really important,” sophomore shortstop Cor-rine Ozanne said. “Home runs will come and all, but its more important than anything to balance out the offense.”

The Orange hopes the balance will come as it continues playing out its season. For now, veterans on the team like Dombrowski are ensuring every player seizes each at-bat to produce quality results.

Said Dombrowski: “It’s about bettering yourself with each and every opportunity you are given.”

[email protected]

Orange uses Q statistic to measure quality plate appearancessoftballS dailyorange.com april 3, 2014 15

[email protected]

• Gets a base hit

• Walks

• Gets hit by pitch

• Advances a runner from second to third

with no outs

• Sacrifice bunts

• Hits a sacrifice fly

• Records an RBI

• Hits a ball with gusto

• Has an at-bat that lasts eight pitches or

longer

WHAT IS Q?A player will earn a Q during an at-bat if she:

up nextVS Maryland (DH)@ College Park, Md.Saturday, 1 p.m.

Page 15: April 3, 2014

After mitigating some early-season ques-tion marks in a convincing win over the Fight-ing Irish, the Orange nearly suffered a letdown loss to a lesser team that has played well this season, but also lost by a combined 45-16 mar-gin in its last three trips up Interstate-81.

“They came out fired up,” SU midfielder Scott Loy said, “and they really played us well.”

In addition to Syracuse holding a significant talent advantage over the visitors, Binghamton was — for much of the game — a shorthanded version of the team that lost to No. 16 Colgate by one and No. 2 Cornell by six earlier this season.

Starting goalie Max Schefler did not play due to a death in his family, giving way to freshman Tanner Cosens. And faceoff specialist Alex Doerflein left with a hamstring injury in the first quarter after winning the game’s first four draws, and didn’t return.

But the Bearcats received strong perfor-mances from Cosens and Dan Mazurek at the faceoff X, leaving head coach Scott Nelson won-dering what could have transpired had his team been at full strength.

“There’s going to be a lot of what if, especially when I look at the film,” Nelson said. “But they’re going to do the same thing. I’m sure they’re say-ing they could have played a lot better.”

What Nelson will see is that his team didn’t just stick with the top-flight Orange, but broke its offensive rhythm and had multiple chances to capture an upset win.

Syracuse trailed by one after the first quarter, with a compact Bearcats defense forcing it into sloppy play. The usual pace of the Orange attack was absent. Its normally crisp passing was replaced by consistent fumbling and errant turnovers.

SU carried a meek one-goal lead into half-time, and Binghamton rode a jolt of energy to start the third quarter to take a 6-5 lead. Goals by Johnny Maher and Kelly Donigan came in a two-minute span, each igniting an on-field cel-ebration as well as a sizable Binghamton crowd

behind the visitor’s bench.“They were patient offensively,” Desko said.

“I think they’re used to playing tight games and they didn’t panic.”

In the days leading up to the game, Desko talked with his players about avoiding a drop off in their performance. And while the Bearcats stayed even-keeled in an up-and-down second half, it seemed that Syracuse was heading in that direction.

Michael Antinozzi drew the Bearcats within one with 7:22 remaining, and the Orange followed with three straight turnovers that breathed life into Binghamton while sucking it out of the Dome.

The crowd was quiet and all that could be heard was the communication on the field. Only did the stadium liven when celebratory music followed Rice’s empty netter. But even then, the Orange only lightly jogged onto the field.

In a year full of games against premier, Top-10 opponents, a game that was supposed to be a breath of fresh air was anything but.

“For both teams, you’re coming off a big game and then you only have a couple days to prepare,” Desko said. “It’s not an excuse for us and it’s not an excuse for them, but you have what you have.”

[email protected] | @Dougherty_Jesse

dailyorange.com S [email protected] 16 april 3, 2014

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Gait said. “Kelsey’s one of them and she’s done a great job.”

Richardson started the second half in SU’s win against Duke on Saturday, holding the Blue Devils scoreless for about 14 minutes as the Orange went on an 8-1 run to put the game out of reach.

But even with her strong play — against Duke and on the season — she’s been forced to share the in-goal duties with Costantino. They both tend to play half the game, with the starter role changing game-to-game.

“It’s definitely been challenging at times,” Richardson said.

But despite mending her approach and sharing the goal more than she did last season, Richardson has played well. Gait, who has employed the two-goalie system for a few years, doesn’t have any plans to change it with his team sporting one of the nation’s top records.

Richardson said all she cares about is doing her job once her name is called, and stays prepared by practicing against some of the country’s best attacks. She often bounces ideas off of SU’s leading scorer Kayla Treanor, and gives her advice in return.

And even if it’s hard to defend against their scoring ability, the practice experience has helped her make tactical and mental adjust-ments, and excel in games.

“It’s definitely easier to get to know the player’s tendencies once you’re with them all year round,” Richardson said. “We have some of the best shooters in the country and I think that only helps us as goalies to get even better.”

[email protected] | @SamBlum3

from page 20

richardson

from page 20

binghamton

Page 16: April 3, 2014

dailyorange.com april 3, 2014 17

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dailyorange.com S [email protected] 18 april 3, 2014

By Jesse Dougherty and Josh Hyber the daily orange

Nicky Galasso has spent much of this season adjusting to the midfield.

The junior — who transferred from North Carolina and sat on the Syracuse sideline with a foot injury for all of last season — has moved from his natural attack position to the Orange’s midfield and displayed the strides he’s taken against Binghamton on Wednesday night.

“I had a little setback in the beginning of the year and it just takes a little bit of time,” Galasso said. “But I feel like I’m getting more and more comfortable as practice goes on. The first midfield line keeps helping me out during practice and it’s key.

“Now when we get to the games I’m just more and more comfortable and ready to play.”

Galasso was a working part of the offense for much of Syracuse’s (6-3, 1-3 Atlantic Coast) 10-8 win over the Bearcats (3-6, 1-0 America East) and tallied one goal when he knotted the score at 6-6 in the third quarter. On the heels of that goal, the Orange built a three-goal lead that it wouldn’t relinquish, which underscored Galasso’s importance as a versatile scorer on SU’s second midfield line.

“We started getting more movement,” SU midfielder Scott Loy said of the stretch follow-ing Galasso’s goal, “and started putting the ball in the back of the net.”

The second midfield line  — consisting of Galasso, Randy Staats and Billy Ward — didn’t see the field for the first six minutes of the

game, but gained a strong foothold in the lineup as the game moved on.

Each player is a converted attack and it was Galasso who showcased that. While he’s waded into the midfield this season, most of his shots have been from distance.

But after collecting a feed behind the net, a defender overplayed him and he took advan-tage. He swooped in to the left side of the cage and released a low shot that bounced past Binghamton goalie Tanner Cosens and into the back of the net.

It was a move he has rarely used this season, but certainly isn’t foreign to him.

Galasso said: “I used to be an attackman. I’m pretty used to doing that.”

Seven players score for balanced SU attack Proving just how deep and balanced the Syra-cuse attack is, seven different players scored the team’s first seven goals.

When the game ended, no Syracuse play-er had scored more than two goals in the

Orange’s victory. “That’s the way we like to play, the ball

doesn’t really get stuck on anybody’s stick for too long,” Syracuse head coach John Desko said. “We share it and we kind of take what they give us. The way we run the offense, teams have to slide. And sometimes different players get the short sticks, which we try to take advantage of.”

Three of the first seven goals were scored by the second-line midfield — with one each from Staats, Ward and Galasso. Two came from the first-line attack — Dylan Donahue and Kevin Rice— and two came from the first-line mid-field of Loy and Hakeem Lecky.

Seven different players scored SU’s 10 total goals, with Rice, Staats and Donahue each netting two.

“That’s how our offense always is,” Loy said. “We’re very unselfish and we like to share the ball. Whoever’s open is going to shoot.”

Of Syracuse’s 31 shots, 13 came from the second-line midfield — the most of any Syra-cuse group. Staats and Ward tied for the team lead with six shots apiece, and Galasso scored on his only attempt.

The first-line attack unit of Rice, Donahue and Derek Maltz and the first-line midfield of Lecky, Loy and Henry Schoonmaker each had nine shots.

Said Desko: “I think some of the other games the attack will score more and in other games the middies will score more due to the type of defense we’re seeing in individual play.”

[email protected] | @dougherty_jesse [email protected]

men’s lacrosse

Galasso excels in midfield; 7 SU players score

The first five or six just got

out of hand and got away

from me. I just kind of came

off after that and calmed

myself down a little bit and

just tried to go out there

confident, like it never hap-

pened.

We started getting more movement and started putting the ball in the back of the net.Scott Loysu midfielder

Page 18: April 3, 2014

After winning 15-of-24 draws in Syracuse’s 11-10 win last Saturday against Notre Dame, Daddio was inconsistent at the X on Wednesday night, winning just 10-of-22. The senior lost the game’s first for draws against Alex Doer-flein, and the Bearcats took early 1-0, 3-2 and 4-3 leads.

But it could have easily gone much worse for Syracuse. Doerflein pulled his hamstring midway through the first quarter and didn’t play for the rest of the night.

Doerflein was replaced by freshman Dan

Mazurek, who finished the night 8-of-18.“The first five or six just got out of hand and

got away from me,” Daddio said. “I just kind of came off after that and calmed myself down a little bit and just tried to go out there confident, like it never happened.”

Daddio earned his first win after Mazurek was called for an illegal-procedure penalty to start the second quarter. Though he won three of last four faceoffs of the half, Syracuse didn’t gain any momentum. There was an eight min-ute gap — from 9:04 to 1:25 — with no faceoffs.

Against Notre Dame, Daddio took advantage of drawing the ball back to wings Peter Macart-ney and Matt Harris. Although Macartney finished Wednesday with three groundballs —

second only to Daddio’s seven — they all came in different quarters.

Nothing was continuous for Syracuse until the Galasso goal.

That’s when Daddio won three straight draws — which Mazurek credited to Daddio doing a good job timing the referee’s whistle — and Syracuse scored four straight goals over a five-minute span.

“I thought the six-minute spurt in the third quarter really hurt us when they got up by three,” Nelson said.

Scott Loy fired a shot past Bearcats keeper Tanner Cosens to give the Orange the lead. In a man-advantage situation, Dylan Donahue gave the Orange its biggest lead of the night– a

two-goal lead at 8-6.Randy Staats completed the stretch with a

goal to extend the lead to 9-6.In the fourth quarter Daddio did just

enough, winning half of the draws.For Daddio, it was the second game in a

row he’s taken all of the team’s faceoffs. While the player taking the draws is consistent, the results have been anything but.

But for one key stretch, Daddio was, and it propelled Syracuse to a win.

Said Desko: “It seemed like when we got the faceoffs and Chris got it out, I think he relaxed and started to get it down. That helped us at the offensive end of the field.”

[email protected]

CHRIS DADDIO picks up a faceoff in SU’s 10-8 win over Binghamton. After going 0-for-6 at the X in the first quarter, he finished 10-for-22. spencer bodian staff photograhper

S dailyorange.com april 3, 2014 19 [email protected]

from page 20

faceoffs

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Syracuse

Binghamton

Quarter

Fac

eo

ffs

wo

n

1 2 3 4

coming in spurtsChris Daddio struggled at the faceoff X for the start and end, but heated up in the middle quarters to help SU to the win.

Page 19: April 3, 2014

7 syracuse 10, binghamton 8dailyorange.com @dailyorange april 3, 2014 • PAGE 20

SSPORTS

ALMOST UNBEARABLE

Syracuse stumbles to lackadaisical win over Binghamton, narrowly avoiding upset loss

Daddio lifts SU at X in 3rd quarter

women’s lacrosse

Richardson adjusts stance in net, succeeds in reduced timeBy Sam Blum asst. copy editor

Kelsey Richardson was the only option. Growing up, her two older, lacrosse-

playing brothers, who both played attack presented her with a problem.

There was no goalie for them to shoot on. So they had her suit up and stand in the goal in their front yard and save their shots.

“It was a challenge and it was fun,”

Richardson said. “I think it definitely helped me now because they shoot

a lot harder than some of the girls that I face now.

“I fell in love with it.”

R i c h -ardson has carried that passion to Syracuse, where she is one of the Orange’s two starting goalies along-

side Alyssa Costantino. After playing more minutes and

earning All-Tournament honors last year, Richardson is playing less and taking a different strategy to the net this season. But she’s adjusted well and compiled a .380 save percent-age while helping to captain a strong defense for No. 3 Syracuse (11-1, 3-1 Atlantic Coast), which will look to continue its hot start at Virginia Tech (6-5, 0-3) on Saturday.

“Kelsey’s always really well pre-pared,” SU defender Mallory Vehar said. “She knows the personnel, knows where to go. Has great vision. That’s a big thing the goalie has an advantage of is kind of seeing the entire field from the goal.”

SU head coach Gary Gait and assis-tant coach Brett Queener came to Rich-ardson about changing her approach in goal this season. They looked at where they were at and the direction the team

was headed, and decided that an adjust-ment needed to be made.

So they had Richardson step out more to take away shooters’ angles. In doing so, Gait hoped that Richard-son would force shooters to either hit the top corner of the cage or have to step around the goalie.

“I appreciate players that two, three years into it that are willing to make adjustments to their game,”

By Jesse Doughertyasst. sports editor

Four days after Syracuse stormed onto the field in emphatic fash-ion after beating Notre Dame,

its second straight post-win celebra-

tion was subdued.Kevin Rice drifted past a Bing-

hamton defender and in front of an empty net before bouncing in the game-icing goal, then slowly walked into a crowd of teammates where shy fist bumps awaited.

The line of Syracuse bench players — which usually breaks out in a pseudo mosh pit — stood in place and lightly clapped, and the crowd — which usu-ally greets every goal with an ovation — was only dotted by standing fans.

“Would we have liked to have been

a little more fired up? Yes,” SU head coach John Desko said. “But we’ve gone through that and it was a big win.”

At the onset of the game, the stage was set for No. 7 Syracuse (6-3, 1-3 Atlantic Coast) to put another strong win on its spotted schedule after cap-

turing its first-ever ACC victory on Sat-urday. But it had a hard time matching Binghamton’s (3-6, 1-0 America East) intensity on both ends of the field in an eventual 10-8 win in front of 1,847 in the Carrier Dome on Wednesday night.

By Josh Hyberstaff writer

Syracuse trailed Binghamton by a goal early in the third quarter. The Bearcats had won 9-of-14 faceoffs to that point, and led the Orange 6-5.

But with one flick of the wrist, everything changed. Nicky Galasso’s goal with 9:17 left in the third quarter tied the score at six. Syracuse faceoff specialist Chris Daddio won three straight faceoffs, and SU went from trailing 6-5 to leading 9-6.

It was that small burst that led No. 7 Syracuse (6-3, 1-3 ACC) to a 10-8 victory over Binghamton (3-6, 1-0 America East) on Wednesday night in front of 1,847 at the Carrier Dome. Both Syracuse head coach John Desko and Binghamton head coach Scott Nelson said that the game’s flow went as faceoff flow went.

“It was a pretty poor start on my part,” Daddio said. “It kept them in the game. I mean, they stayed in the game the entire time. And then toward the middle of the game I got in a little bit of a rhythm there, winning some, and we started pulling away.”RANDY STAATS eyes a Binghamton defender in Syracuse’s 10-8 win over the Bearcats at the Carrier Dome on Wednesday. Staats scored two goals,

but the seventh-ranked Orange couldn’t break away. SU used a four-goal second-half spurt to get the win. spencer bodian staff photographer

see binghamton page 16

see faceoffs page 19

see richardson page 16

up nextVS Virginia Tech@ Blacksburg, Va.Saturday, 1 p.m.