Sept. 29, 2014

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FREE MONDAY sept. 29, 2014 high 80°, low 56° N Funny man Comedian John Mulaney,a for- mer SNL head writer, will perform at SU on Oct. 11. Tickets will go on sale on Monday at the Schine Box Office. Page 3 P Back in the day The award-winning comedy “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike” kicked off Syracuse Stage’s 42nd season on Friday and will run through Oct. 12. Page 9 S Broken mirror Syracuse was outplayed by a Notre Dame offense that looks very similar to the kind of attack it has looked to be this season. Page 16 the independent student newspaper of syracuse, new york | dailyorange.com Out of luck BRISLY ESTIME tries to evade the grasp of Notre Dame safety Elijah Shumate in Syracuse’s 31-15 loss to the Fighting Irish on Saturday at MetLife Stadium. Estime provided an early deep threat for quarterback Terrel Hunt, but the SU offense went stagnant as the game progressed and Hunt’s fourth-quarter rushing touchdown was the Orange’s only offensive score of the day. sam maller staff photographer Frat defies council’s decision, remains active By Justin Mattingly asst. news editor After being denied official recogni- tion last spring, an unofficialy frater- nity isn’t taking no for an answer. This past April, Kappa Sigma, a national fraternity that hasn’t been present at Syracuse University for around 20 years, applied, but was not given an invitation to become officially recognized. This has not stopped the “re-founding fathers” of the fraternity, who are still actively acting as a frater- nity and wish to re-establish Kappa Sigma on campus, despite the risk of jeopardizing their academic standing. “Going into this, I think we all understood that there was some chance we could get in trouble, but in my mind there isn’t really,” said Peter Decarlo, a senior accounting major and president of Kappa Sigma. “We have a good group of guys who have a cumulative GPA of 3.22 and I don’t see how we’ve done anything wrong.” By pretending to be an official fraternity, the SU Interfraternity Council says Kappa Sigma is endan- gering recognized fraternities and sororities, which face judicial consequences if the organizations associate with Kappa Sigma. The council also says Kappa Sigma broke several rules when it applied for official recognition last April. Matt Rose, president of the IFC and a senior public relations and sport management dual major, said that the presence of Kappa Sigma will have no influence on fall frater- nity rush. Formal recruitment is set to take place from Oct. 5–10. Eddie Banks-Crosson, director of the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs, referred all questions to Rose. Bryan Samimi, vice president of Kappa Sigma and a junior accounting major said the group is not actively recruiting people on campus because members know it’s against the rules. But some recruiting is done through word of mouth and prospective mem- bers coming up to them, he said. Kappa Sigma is one of three unoffi- cial greek life organizations at SU, join- ing Zeta Psi Fraternity and Theta Delta Chi Fraternity, according to the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs website. SU’s chapter Kappa Sigma was founded in 1906 and was active up to the mid-1970s. It closed down twice since then due to low recruitment. According to the FASA website, unrecognized organizations that attempt to facilitate member recruit- ment or member activities may be prohibited from participating in any future expansion process at SU. Individual students who are deter- mined to be in violation of this policy may be placed on a disciplinary status up to and including suspension or expulsion, according to the website. By Kait Hobson contributing writer Although the Syracuse University community is preparing to celebrate the latest additions to the S.I. New- house School of Public Communica- tions, students will have to wait to use the new studio space. The new studios were originally expected to be completed by June 2014, but are now not expected to be open to students until January 2015. “Some things went well; other things are still behind, which has been a big problem,” said Neal Coffey, the project manager for the renovations. Newhouse II had not been reno- vated since its construction in 1974. Although the technology is in place, the rest of the building requires work. Walls are unpainted, floors are unfinished and the building awaits certain approvals from the Syracuse Division of Code Enforce- ment. The remainder of this semes- ter will provide the time for faculty to train on the new technology. “I’m filled with both excitement and terror,” said Chris Tuohey, chair of the broadcast and digital jour- nalism department. “We’re going to have to relearn how to do a lot of things, and it’s going to be a little scary at first.” see studios page 8 see fraternity page 6 newhouse Studios to open in January I’m filled with both excitement and terror. We’re going to have to relearn how to do a lot of things, and it’s going to be a little scary at first. Chris Tuohey chair of the broadcast & digital journalism department Kappa Sigma continues to operate after being denied official recognition

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Transcript of Sept. 29, 2014

Page 1: Sept. 29, 2014

free MONDAYsept. 29, 2014high 80°, low 56°

N • Funny manComedian John Mulaney,a for-mer SNL head writer, will perform at SU on Oct. 11. Tickets will go on sale on Monday at the Schine Box Office.Page 3

P • Back in the dayThe award-winning comedy “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike” kicked off Syracuse Stage’s 42nd season on Friday and will run through Oct. 12.Page 9

S • Broken mirrorSyracuse was outplayed by a Notre Dame offense that looks very similar to the kind of attack it has looked to be this season. Page 16

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

Out of luckBRISLY ESTIME tries to evade the grasp of Notre Dame safety Elijah Shumate in Syracuse’s 31-15 loss to the Fighting Irish on Saturday at MetLife Stadium. Estime provided an early deep threat for quarterback Terrel Hunt, but the SU offense went stagnant as the game progressed and Hunt’s fourth-quarter rushing touchdown was the Orange’s only offensive score of the day. sam maller staff photographer

Frat defies council’s decision, remains active

By Justin Mattinglyasst. news editor

After being denied official recogni-tion last spring, an unofficialy frater-nity isn’t taking no for an answer.

This past April, Kappa Sigma, a national fraternity that hasn’t been present at Syracuse University for around 20 years, applied, but was not given an invitation to become officially recognized. This has not stopped the “re-founding fathers” of the fraternity, who are still actively acting as a frater-nity and wish to re-establish Kappa

Sigma on campus, despite the risk of jeopardizing their academic standing.

“Going into this, I think we all understood that there was some chance we could get in trouble, but in my mind there isn’t really,” said Peter Decarlo, a senior accounting major and president of Kappa Sigma. “We have a good group of guys who have a cumulative GPA of 3.22 and I don’t see how we’ve done anything wrong.”

By pretending to be an official fraternity, the SU Interfraternity Council says Kappa Sigma is endan-gering recognized fraternities and sororities, which face judicial consequences if the organizations associate with Kappa Sigma. The council also says Kappa Sigma broke several rules when it applied

for official recognition last April. Matt Rose, president of the IFC

and a senior public relations and sport management dual major, said that the presence of Kappa Sigma will have no influence on fall frater-nity rush. Formal recruitment is set to take place from Oct. 5–10.

Eddie Banks-Crosson, director of the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs, referred all questions to Rose.

Bryan Samimi, vice president of Kappa Sigma and a junior accounting major said the group is not actively recruiting people on campus because members know it’s against the rules. But some recruiting is done through word of mouth and prospective mem-bers coming up to them, he said.

Kappa Sigma is one of three unoffi-

cial greek life organizations at SU, join-ing Zeta Psi Fraternity and Theta Delta Chi Fraternity, according to the Office of Fraternity and Sorority Affairs website. SU’s chapter Kappa Sigma was founded in 1906 and was active up to the mid-1970s. It closed down twice since then due to low recruitment.

According to the FASA website, unrecognized organizations that attempt to facilitate member recruit-ment or member activities may be prohibited from participating in any future expansion process at SU.

Individual students who are deter-mined to be in violation of this policy may be placed on a disciplinary status up to and including suspension or expulsion, according to the website.

By Kait Hobsoncontributing writer

Although the Syracuse University community is preparing to celebrate the latest additions to the S.I. New-house School of Public Communica-tions, students will have to wait to use the new studio space.

The new studios were originally expected to be completed by June 2014, but are now not expected to be open to students until January 2015.

“Some things went well; other things are still behind, which has been a big problem,” said Neal Coffey, the project manager for the renovations.

Newhouse II had not been reno-vated since its construction in 1974. Although the technology is in place, the rest of the building requires work. Walls are unpainted, f loors are unfinished and the building awaits certain approvals from the Syracuse Division of Code Enforce-ment. The remainder of this semes-ter will provide the time for faculty to train on the new technology.

“I’m filled with both excitement and terror,” said Chris Tuohey, chair of the broadcast and digital jour-nalism department. “We’re going to have to relearn how to do a lot of things, and it’s going to be a little scary at first.”

see studios page 8see fraternity page 6

newhouse

Studios to open in January

I’m filled with both excitement and terror. We’re going to have to relearn how to do a lot of things, and it’s going to be a little scary at first.

Chris Tuoheychair of the broadcast & digital journalism department

Kappa Sigma continues to operate after being denied official recognition

Page 2: Sept. 29, 2014

2 september 29, 2014 dailyorange.com

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Acting student works as model in ArmeniaBy Alex Erdekianasst. copy editor

When Sarineh Garapetian first started modeling at age 14, she was just help-ing her design student friends with an accessories advertisement they were creating as a project.

Since then, the sophomore acting major has modeled for publications such as Armenian Cosmopolitan and Prestige Magazine.

Recently, she passed the first round of a Marc by Marc Jacobs casting call. The brand is recruiting models for its Spring 2015 campaign through social media. To enter, prospective models had to tweet or Instagram a photo with the hashtag, #castmemarc.

After passing the first round, Garape-tian said she she doesn’t know when she will find out if she passed round two.

“I was really excited, but at the same time I’m not trying to get my hopes up,” Garapetian said. “I’m trying to concentrate on what I’m doing now.”

Born in Boston and raised in Armenia, Garapetian said the modeling industries in the United States and in Armenia dif-fer greatly. She described the business in

Armenia as laidback, lacking the struc-ture that agencies in the U.S. provide.

As an acting major, Garapetian is immersed in the performing arts. She applies what she learns acting onstage to posing in front of the camera.

“After going to Syracuse for a year, I got the sense of how my body works and how that can change a scene, and with modeling, how that can change a picture,” Garapetian said.

One of Garapetian’s favorite mem-ories from modeling was doing a photo shoot in a carpet factory in Armenia with one of her friends, who photo-graphed shots from different angles.

“We didn’t know what we were doing, but because we had that relationship, it was a fun process,” she said. “Even though we didn’t get that many shots, the ones that we did have were really good.”

Although she hopes to continue modeling, Garapetian considers it more of a hobby than a career. Acting is the primary passion she hopes to pursue.

“I like to work with photographers and people I can connect with,” Gar-apetian said. “I like the process of it more than the result.”

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MEET monday | sarineh garapetian

SARINEH GARAPETIAN has used what she has learned as an act-ing student to improve her modeling. Garapetian was born in Bos-ton, but raised in Armenia. genevieve pilch staff photographer

INSIDE P • Climbing the charts Billboard Magazine named the Bandier program in the Setnor School of Music one of the top music industry programs. Page 9

S • Been a long time No. 18 Syracuse beat No. 2 Virginia at SU Soccer Stadium on Saturday night, which wasn’t a normal win for the Orange.

Page 16

WAY

WHEN

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dailyorange.com @dailyorange september 29, 2014 • PAGE 3

Going greenSyracuse University has recently invested more in wind power as part of its efforts to go carbon-neutral by 2040.See dailyorange.com

The big OOprah Winfrey will appear at Monday’s dedication of the new studios at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.See Tuesday’s paperN

N E W S

Filling up(FROM LEFT) CHERYL HOLLIS AND DEBBIE SMILEY examine bowls at the Empty Bowls fundraiser on Friday. The event raises money for the Interreligious Food Consortium by selling hand-made bowls and a meal. Hollis and Smiley said they look forward to the fundraiser every year and that they both look for bowls “with character.” amanda piela contributing photographer

Mulaney tickets to go on saleBy Brett Samuelsasst. news editor

Tickets to see comedian John Mulaney perform at Syracuse Uni-versity on Oct. 11 go on sale Monday.

Tickets are $5 for students and $7 for faculty and staff and are available at the Schine Box Office.

“An Evening with John Mulaney,” will take place at 8 p.m. in Goldstein Auditorium, and is presented by the Traditions Commission as part of Orange Central 2014. It’s the first time the Traditions Commission has hosted a comedy show during Orange Cen-tral, SU’s annual homecoming event, according to an SU News release.

Mulaney’s new show “Mulaney,” premieres on FOX on Oct. 5. He was previously named one of Variety’s 10 Comics to Watch in 2008, and he began working at Saturday Night Live the same year. Mulaney worked as a writer at SNL, where, with the help of former cast member Bill Hader, he helped create the character Stefon.

Mulaney has also released two stand-up specials. His first special, “The Top Part,” was released in 2009. “New in Town,” which aired on Comedy Central, premiered in 2012.

[email protected]

maxwell

Grant to help create consortium

Here is a round-up of criminal activity near campus during the past weekend:

ROBBERY

A student reported he was robbed, according to the Department of Public Safety. A man attempted to steal the student’s cellphone but the student pushed him away. The student’s sun-glasses then fell to the ground and the man grabbed them and ran away. The student was not injured, DPS said. where: Sunday at 3:30 p.m. where: Vincent Street

FAILURE TO DISPLAY A LICENSE A Syracuse man, 30, was arrested on a charge of failure to display a taxicab driver’s license, according to a police bulletin. where: Saturday at 1:59 a.m. where: University Avenue

—Compiled by Dylan Segelbaum, staff writer, [email protected] |

@dylan_segelbaum

crime briefs

By Jake Cappuccinocontributing writer

The Carnegie Corporation of New York has awarded $1 million to Syracuse University’s Maxwell School of Citi-zenship and Public Affairs to develop a program to narrow the gap between policymaking and academics.

The grant will help create the Carnegie International Policy Scholars Consortium and Network which will bring together pol-icy makers and academics into a network of scholars, said Francis Gavin, professor at the Massachu-setts Institute of Technology and one of the leaders of the consor-tium. Gavin credited Maxwell Dean James Steinberg with the idea.

“Dean Steinberg’s essential insight is that this situation is not optimal for the students, the nation or policy-making. Creating a situation where students can do both (academia and policy) will be better for the Maxwell School and all universities,” he said.

The scholars in the consortium will work with and mentor a class of fellows. While this will require some meetings and conferences on location, the consortium leaders plan to lever-age online technology to make and maintain the network, Gavin said.

To this end, Maxwell will create a laboratory, like a virtual boardroom, which will enable real-time commu-nication and collaboration between institutions. This collaborative lab-oratory, or collaboratory, will allow students to efficiently seek expertise and guidance, Gavin said.

Maxwell’s grant proposal grew out of another Carnegie grant to explore program ideas that could help bring academics and policymakers closer together. The grant then competed

against grants from other schools in the Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs.

An outside panel of experts and the entire Carnegie International Peace and Security program staff reviewed the proposals. Selected finalists then

offered full proposals to the reviewers who then made recommendations to senior management and the Board of Trustees, said Stephen Del Rosso, the Carnegie Corporation program director for international peace and security, in an email.

The grant will cover the cost for the first two years of the consortium. After that point, the university will have to decide whether or not to continue the program. The grant is still in the plan-ning stage, which means many things

Creating a situation where students can do both (academia and policy) will be better for the Maxwell School and all universities.Francis Gavinmit professor

see maxwell page 8

@JNicole1908Tomorrow will be the most epic day ever...Oprah, 50th anni-versary celebration, new Dick Clark Studios, Beth Mowins..yay #Newhouse

Page 4: Sept. 29, 2014

4 september 29, 2014 dailyorange.com [email protected]

I’m writing in response to Georgie Silvarole’s well-intentioned but misguided opinion piece about the Fat Acceptance Movement, in which she expresses her “concern” over FA and perpetu-ates some myths about what FA is and isn’t.

Silvarole grossly misrepresents both FA and “Health at Every Size.” Neither of these social justice movements proclaim that one can be “healthy” (whatever that means — who’s judging, and what are the criteria?) at any size. They do promote the fact that people can engage in healthy behaviors at any size. (And don’t we want to encourage positive, life-affirming behav-iors from everyone?) They promote good health,

which can look different for different people.You cannot tell how healthy someone is by

looking at her or him. Many, many thin people do not get regular exercise, eat well, etc. Many, many fat people do. Including myself.

The links between weight and health are far more complex than Silvarole’s commentary suggests. For instance, the lowest mortality rates (chances of dying prematurely) are found among people whose BMI is considered overweight or mildly obese.

Another example: People who are overweight or obese actually fare better and live longer than “normal-weight” people with certain chronic

diseases like type 2 diabetes and heart failure.In this country we spend more than $61 billion

a year on weight-loss. That’s big business. And your chance of losing weight and keeping it off long-term is the same as your chance of surviving metastatic lung cancer: 5 percent. We do more harm to ourselves by losing and regaining weight (yo-yo dieting or weight cycling) than we’d do by remaining at higher but stable weights. So when Silvarole writes that being obese is “in most cases changeable,” she is simply parroting the popular but inaccurate notions we’ve bought into. 

On this campus, many students struggle with anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder

and other eating disorders. A lot of those were triggered by the longing to be thin and by dieting. And, ironically, one long-term effect of dieting is obesity. Every time you lose weight and regain it, you wind up heavier than when you started.

For most people, significant long-term weight loss is not possible. But improving health is, whether you’re thin, fat or in between. That’s what both the FA movement and Health at Every Size are all about. 

 Harriet Brown Associate Professor, Magazine Journalism

S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications

letter to the editor

‘Sex and Health’ columnist expresses misguided opinions in column

In the Sept. 25 Daily Orange article, “Students protest man preaching on Waverly” an SU stu-dent is quoted as having said that the protest of Jim Deferio, a Syracuse resident who was preaching homophobic and racist ideologies, is reflective of “the attitude on campus [being] supportive and positive.”

I couldn’t disagree more. A few students did a good thing on Wednes-

day by actively and publicly protesting hateful language; however, this is not demonstrative of the larger campus climate. By assuming so, we risk ignoring the experiences of students with marginalized identities. 

When I am interrogated about my identity by

my peers, it doesn’t feel positive. When my friends are called “f*ggot” by other

students as they walk home, I don’t think that’s supportive. 

When comments such as “queers shouldn’t have children” go unchallenged in the classroom, I don’t find that positive.

When professors refer to my community as “the LGB-whatever,” that is certainly not supportive.

It is easy to stand up against someone you have never met, whose ideas seem so foreign to you. Students must understand that, for many of their peers on this campus, homophobia and trans-phobia are daily, subtle struggles perpetrated by

friends, family, classmates and professors. Often it is people we love, respect, or who have authority over us who make it possible for hate and apathy to take root in spaces that are touted as “safe.”

As Albus Dumbledore, from J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series, once said, “It takes a great deal of bravery to stand up to our enemies, but just as much to stand up to our friends.”

Protesting hate speech is sometimes as simple as asking your friend to stop using the phrase “That’s so gay.” Or asking a professor to correct students who use words like “tranny” or “he-she.” It is awkward and sometimes embar-rassing to be the one fish swimming against the current, but it is necessary if we wish to see

a transformation from pockets of safe spaces scattered across campus, to the entire Syracuse University community being one safe space for all students.

When we make space for hateful attitudes and language, we also make space for physical violence. There are histories of burning and killing and raping behind these words; they must be as unacceptable from your friends as they are from some guy on the street.

Farrell Greenwald BrennerClass of 2017

Citizenship & Civic Engagement and Wom-en’s & Gender Studies Majors

Editor-in-Chief of The OutCrowd Magazine

letter to the editor

Student disagrees with classmate’s quote featured in protest article

Page 5: Sept. 29, 2014

dailyorange.com @dailyorange september 29, 2014 • PAGE 5

OOPINION

In order to gain national recognition for its football team, Syracuse University should continue its relationship with MetLife Stadium — the home of the New York Giants and New York Jets.

Although all students and local Syr-acuse residents might not have had the opportunity to attend the game against Notre Dame in East Rutherford, New Jersey, on Saturday, the pros of playing a game outside of Syracuse outweighed the cons.

This weekend’s game against Notre Dame was one of three high-profile games SU has played at MetLife Stadi-um in the past three years. Though the Syracuse football team lost on Satur-day, the opportunity to play at MetLife Stadium has brought SU Athletics more revenue and has also provided recruiting benefits.

Playing football games at MetLife Stadium has brought SU the oppor-

tunity to play against premier teams that it would not have been able to play at the Carrier Dome, including Southern California, Penn State and most recently Notre Dame. Games at MetLife Stadium have also given alumni and potential recruits in the New York City and New Jersey area the chance to attend SU football games without traveling far from home.

Currently, SU does not have plans to play in MetLife Stadium until 2016, against Notre Dame again, but the Orange will square off with Louisiana State University in the Carrier Dome in 2015. Before Syracuse joined the Atlantic Coast Conference, it was uncommon for ranked teams to visit the Carrier Dome. Now teams like Clemson and Florida State will regu-larly visit central New York, and main-taining a relationship with MetLife Stadium will only strengthen future

football schedules. Though some students and local

residents might feel they missed out on one of the biggest home games of the season, hosting high-profile games at MetLife Stadium will pay off for the program in the long run. To continue on the path to national recognition, SU should continue to aim to have games at the NFL venue.

editorial board

MetLife relationship should continue

Letter to the Editor policyTo 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 submitted past the deadline.• Indicate what date you would like the letter to run in The Daily Orange.• Emailed to [email protected].• Include your full name, major; year of graduation; or position on campus.

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This past Wednesday was the unveiling of Nabisco’s newest cookie creation: the Pumpkin

Spice Oreo. Every fall more and more companies are injecting faux-pump-kin into all of their edible delicacies. And this year, the Oreo caved under the pressure of conformity.

While this is far from the first time Oreo has altered its original recipe, this newest addition has gone too far. Nabisco has a great thing going for them; the black cookie sandwich with the white cream is a harmonious couple that has been deemed milk’s favorite cookie. And it is an integral component of Cookies and Cream ice cream. We all owe Oreo one, but enough is enough.

The Oreo is a household staple. It was invented in 1912 and has since

become the top selling cookie in the United States. When the Oreo was first introduced, it was nearly identical to the traditional Oreo today.For the most part, the recipe remained largely intact. In 1975, the Double Stuffed Oreo was introduced; in 1987, it was Fudge Covered Oreos; and in 1991 and 1995, Halloween and Christmas Oreos originated, respectively. But these all kept the same flavor. Halloween and Christmas Oreos just meant orange and red cream rather than white.

Then around the turn of the mil-lennia, Oreo abandoned what we had come to understand as the traditional

Oreo design and expanded its cookie varieties. The Uh-Oh Oreo, that has since been rebranded to Golden Choco-late Oreos, was introduced in 2003 and opened the floodgates. Head to your local Wegmans and you can buy Peanut Butter, Banana Split, Limeade, Berry, Mint, Cookie Dough, Coconut, Straw-berry Milk Shake, Chocolate, Water-melon, Fruit Punch, Triple Double and Head or Tails Oreos, to name a few.

There seems to be no limit to the possibilities of flavor combinations. In fact this new Pumpkin Spice Oreo was debuted with another fall variation, Caramel Apple Oreo, which is sold exclusively at Target.

Some of these Oreo oddities are tantalizing and others are utterly repulsive. There isn’t a real consis-tency. The Pumpkin Spice Oreos are

tasty and worth a try, but have some questionable attributes. To be com-pletely honest, the pumpkin flavor in these cookies is minimal, more along the lines of generic fall spice. And the pumpkin cream is a hue of intense orange that would raise the eyebrows of even the biggest Syracuse fan. Only if you’re not already satisfied with Star-bucks’ Pumpkin Spice Latte, Dogfish Head Pumpkin Ale, Chobani’s Pump-kin Spice Yogurt, Extra’s Pumpkin Spice Gum and nearly all the products at Dunkin Donuts, would I recommend grabbing a pack.

While Nabisco may think these flavors are going to keep their Oreo products new and fresh, its attempt is getting old. America’s favorite cookie is the classic no fuss Double Stuff Oreo. None of these varieties are going to top

the recipe they already have.Nabisco getting sucked into the del-

uge of pumpkin spice is disheartening. Falling victim to this trend suggests that Oreo’s ventures to come will not be for the sole purpose of exploring the capacities for this delightful cookie, but instead jumping on the bandwagon and following suit of what’s already been done. The Oreo is better than this flash in the pan trends. It is an American classic that has been around for more than 100 years. These new variations can’t compete.

Nabisco, please keep the Oreo the Oreo.

Erin G. Kelly is a senior broad-cast and digital journalism major.

Her column appears weekly. She can be reached at [email protected] and

followed on Twitter @egknew.

ERIN G. KELLYMASS MEDIATED

pop culture

Oreo should stick to basics, stop allowing trends to influence flavor

In the Bush Conservative columnist Rami Jackson discusses Jeb Bush’s potential strengths as a presidential contender. See dailyorange.com

Sinking shipBusiness columnist Phil Kramer explains why low federal interest rates on loans are necessary in a sinking economy.See dailyorange.com

Page 6: Sept. 29, 2014

6 september 29, 2014 dailyorange.com [email protected]

Rose said the IFC has informed all of the presidents of greek organizations that they cannot associate with Kappa Sigma or they too will face judicial consequences.

“They’re trying to participate as if they’re a recognized group and that’s concerning because people don’t know that they can’t interact with them,” he said.

Safety is one of the biggest concerns with the presence of Kappa Sigma, said Panhellenic Council President Ashlee Newman.

“All of our organizations are monitored and advised by the FASA office, so when you have an organization that is unrecognized, we aren’t able to provide the help and the assistance and that puts students at risk,” Newman said.

Rose added that since Kappa Sigma isn’t a recognized fraternity, the organization doesn’t follow the rules that the IFC chapters have established, specifically in terms of security.

In order to become an officially recog-nized greek organization on SU’s campus, the president of each of the greek councils sits on the expansion committee and grades the prospective organizations with a rubric. If an organization hits a certain metric, it is permitted an interview.

First, representatives meet with the expan-sion committee and do a presentation for all the different greek councils and anyone who wants to listen. Then the expansion committee votes on whether or not it wants to extend an invitation to come to campus. Organiza-tions are not allowed to bring interest groups, defined as any organized group of prospective members, to the expansion committee.

If an invitation is extended, there is a three-year period before the organization can come to campus, Rose said.

“The point of the three-year process is so we can provide you with all of the resources you need, your alumni can help you prepare and you can come and be contributing members right away,” Rose said.

Rose added that Kappa Sigma broke rules during the application process.

“You can’t have an interest group,” he said. “It’s against Syracuse’s greek rules and they had all these kids show up in suits and ties on the day of the expansion committee.”

During the expansion committee, Rose said the representatives of Kappa Sigma claimed they had no contact with an interest group and said “they went as far as to say that 60 kids coincidentally showed up in suits and ties at 10:30 a.m. on a Friday.” He said Kappa Sigma

changed its story and indicated different levels of contact with the interest group.

Samimi, the vice president of Kappa Sigma, said the group didn’t fully understand the concept of an interest group prior to the expansion committee.

“We thought if we just showed up and explained ourselves, they would totally under-stand and say, ‘Oh look, there’s so many people who want to join this group, we should let them on campus,’” he said.

Samimi said the group couldn’t wait for the three-year waiting period because most of them would have graduated, so it wanted to immediately become an official organization.

Decarlo, Kappa Sigma’s president, said the group received a letter notifying them that it would not be given an invitation to become an official SU greek organization, and outlining the basis for that decision.

Any new chapter must be prepared to work with the rest of the community and Kappa Sigma is not a team player, Rose said.

“They said they would consider colonizing at Syracuse, even if they’re not granted permis-sion,” Rose said. “That demonstrates they feel they’re above our rules and regulations. What actions would they take if they were sanctioned and did not agree?”

Decarlo said after Kappa Sigma received the official decision, it “made the choice to continue forward without the school.”

He added that Kappa Sigma is unlikely to re-ap-ply this year to become a recognized organization because of a mandatory year waiting period.

“I feel like if this was a club sports team or another organization, we would have been up and running, but I guess fraternities are a little differ-ent here,” Decarlo said.

[email protected]

from page 1

fraternity

Page 7: Sept. 29, 2014

By Erin McDonaldstaff writer

First Year Players, a group of Syracuse University students dedicated to the performing art of musical theater, has

chosen “The Addams Family” for its spring production.

The process for deciding the spring musi-cal started months ago. Prior to summer break, members of the FYP executive board each chose their top three choices for the musical. They were researched over the vaca-tion, and upon return to campus, the top six shows were presented to the staff for debate, said Andrew Martini, a sophomore public relations major and the assistant producer of the show. The show was then announced on Sept. 21. Past shows have included “The Wedding Singer” and “Rent.”

The staff played a part in choosing the show by creating lengthy pro and con lists for each of the options. That gave everyone the ability to see the strengths of each show as well as the entire staff’s opinion, said Cath-erine Bauman, a junior vocal performance major and a member of the Mentor/Mentee team for FYP.

The group unanimously decided on “The Addams Family,” and the following week, per tradition, members of FYP gathered at the Spa-ghetti Warehouse and watched a skit in which the decision of the play was revealed, said Sam McAllister, one of the show’s producers.

The executive board was pleased with the choice of show, especially with its emphasis on the idea of family, which is symbolic of the family-like atmosphere that FYP takes pride in, McAllister said.

“At the end of the day we are all a family,” she said, reflecting the group’s motto of find-ing one’s place.

Drew Muller, a senior advertising major and a producer of the show, said there were many reasons the staff chose “The Addams Family” as its spring musical, but one of the reasons was because the show’s quirky, dark-humor was a nice transition from the group’s powerful performance of “Rent” last spring.

Another big aspect in deciding on the best possible musical was how feasible it would

be for all of the teams to produce. This is something that was brought up in the dis-cussion held with the staff prior to the deci-sion. It includes the acting, dancing, singing, stage management and public relations teams, as well as many others, each with their own responsibilities for making the show a reality, Muller said.

“The staff is starting to grind creative wheels together,” said show director Mike Liebenson, adding that they are beginning to block the show and plan the general direction

in which the musical is headed. Each member of the staff is responsible

for his or her own portion of next semester’s performance. In the make-up department, prototypes have to be made and approved by the head of the art department. Everything is a creative process that doesn’t stop until the goal of a successful image of the show is reached, said Katie Mangol, the make-up artist for the show and a sophomore retail management and marketing management major.

In the months ahead, FYP will hold general interest meetings and workshops in singing, dancing and acting to help interested fresh-men become acquainted with the skills that the organization is looking for in auditions that are held next semester, right after winter break, Muller said. The staff is particular-ly looking forward to the casting that takes place in January.

Said Muller: “I’m most excited to blow the show out of the water and make it our own.”

[email protected]

on campus dailyorange.com @dailyorange september 29, 2014 • PAGE 7every monday in news

MonsterMASH

Students rehearse for First Year Players’ production of “Rent” last spring. FYP has chosen “The Addams Family” as this year’s spring production and members say the show’s dark, quirky humor is one reason the group chose the show. courtesy of emma fierberg

FYP to perform ‘The Addams Family’

for spring musical

At the end of the day we are all a family.

Sam McAllisterfyp producer

PAST PLAYERSHere are the past five spring musicals performed by First Year Players:

“Rent” — 2014“The Wedding Singer” — 2013“The Drowsy Chaperone” — 2012“The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” — 2011“Dirty Rotten Scoundrels” — 2010

Page 8: Sept. 29, 2014

8 september 29, 2014 dailyorange.com [email protected]

Tuohey said that previously it was a challenge to produce professional-looking content with the technology in the old Newhouse studios. Now, he said, students will be able to produce work that has more polish.

“It gives the students a much more contem-porary experience for what they’ll do in the real world,” he said.

Professor Douglas Quin, co-director of the Audio Arts program, added that the renovations won’t just be useful from a production stand-point, but from a learning perspective as well.

“It was a challenge because the equipment was so antiquated and we were doing a lot of field production,” Quin said. “This renovation will open up new avenues for us to teach.”

Space was an important feature in the new renovation for Andy Robinson, a television, radio and film professor. He said that the new space will allow students to learn collabora-tively in studios that are three times larger than a traditional television studio.

The open architecture of the studio meets the demands of the curriculum, where stu-dents can film multi-camera sitcoms, game shows and build sets, Coffey said. Curtain hangers ensure that the space can be broken up into different working stations.

Coffey began his role five years ago when a committee was formed to explore the possibility of renovating the facility. He officially assumed his position as manager in July, just as new tech-nology was being installed in the facility.

Coffey helped design teaching carts, or mobile television screens, that can be used by professors to display their lectures, control cameras and

route signals throughout the building. “I wanted to bring the classroom into the

studio so I helped to design both flexibility and enough space for students to work and learn within the stages and control rooms,” he said.

The most important technological improve-ment, however, lies in the heart of the studio where routers, hard drives and storage systems line the room from floor to ceiling, Coffey said.

The router is the backbone of the studio

and it routes about 80 miles of cable. It has the potential to take a signal from anywhere on campus and route it to the studio, he said.

Shared data storage in a state-of-the-art hard drive system allows for real-time video editing from anywhere in the studio, which means no more portable hard-drives for New-house students, Coffey said.

“We’ve built the system thinking ahead,” he said. “So that we won’t need to spend another $18 million renovating in the near future.”

But Tuohey said what makes Newhouse one of the best schools in the country is the quality of the students and faculty, not the technology.

“No level of technology can make up for a lack of talent or ability,” Tuohey said. “Now that we have both, the sky is the limit.”

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university union

Hip-hop artist to co-headline 1st Bandersnatch concertBy Justin Mattinglyasst. news editor

Rapper GoldLink will co-headline with electronic dance music artist Trippy Turtle in the first show of this year’s Bandersnatch Music Series, Univer-sity Union announced on Twitter Sunday night.

The show will take place on Oct. 14 in Schine Underground. Tickets are currently on sale at the Schine Box Office. Tickets are $5 and are available to Syracuse University and SUNY-ESF students. Doors for the event will open at 7 p.m. and a valid SU ID is required to enter.

GoldLink is a 20-year-old rapper from Wash-

ington, D.C. who released his first six songs to his SoundCloud page last year. Each of the songs received more than 100,000 plays, according to a UU press release. In April, GoldLink released his debut album The God Complex. Following his performance at SU, GoldLink will make an appearance at New York City’s CMJ Music Mara-thon before beginning his first Australian tour in the winter, according to the release.

Trippy Turtle signed with Mad Decent record label in 2013. On Sept. 12, Trippy Turtle headlined his largest show to date at New York City’s Web-ster Hall, where he played to a crowd of 1,400.

[email protected]

still need to be determined. But according to the initial budget schedule, the collaboratory should be built by the spring of 2016 and students should be attending classes by the fall of 2016.

Margaret Hermann, director of Maxwell’s Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs and co-lead-er of the consortium, said one of the reasons she came to Maxwell was to support the connection between policy and academic theory.

“This is something I believe in and have worked across my career to try to do,” she said. “I truly believe we have the capability here to be interdisci-plinary and to move between these two domains.”

If the program is successful, it could potential-ly grow beyond the initial grant and consortium to include more institutions and scholars. Duke University, University of Virginia, the Center for Strategic and International Studies and a few oth-ers have agreed to participate in and collectively govern the consortium.

Hermann said she is optimistic about the future of the project.

“I think it’s exciting and I think it’s critically important for the future of both the academy and the policymaking community,” she said. “I think Carnegie really is to be congratulated for seeing this as a problem and trying to do something about it.”

[email protected]

from page 3

maxwell

from page 1

studios

VIEWING PARTIESHere is where you can watch a livestream of the dedication ceremony:

Joyce Hergenhan Auditorium andSchine UndergroundStarts at 12:30 p.m.Doors open at noonSeats will be filled on a first come, first served basis.

Page 9: Sept. 29, 2014

dailyorange.com @dailyorange september 29, 2014 • PAGE 9

PPULP

Blog it outFashion columnist Zoe Malliaros discusses how fashion bloggers create new brands and connect customers to stores. See dailyorange.com

Metlife saverTailgate cook Bob McKeon unknowingly saved his friend and fellow Notre Dame fan from being paralyzed from the neck down.See dailyorange.com

WAY

WHENBy Clare Ramirezasst. feature editor

Spike won’t zip his zipper up all the way. Not just yet.

“I’m going to leave the zip-per a little undone because I know I’m going to tuck my shirt in when I get to putting that on,” said Spike, a character in the play “Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike,” seduc-tively after putting his pants on.

The character then stands on some furniture, grinning and wink-ing as he drags his belt back and forth between his crotch.

Scenes like this ensured that no more than a few minutes passed without audience members laugh-ing in their seats during the show, which opened on Friday. “Vanya

and Sonia and Masha and Spike” kicked off Syracuse Stage’s 42nd season and will run through Oct. 12. The comedy was written by Chris-topher Durang and won the 2013 Tony Award for Best Play.

The scene with Ben Chase, who plays Spike, doing his reverse striptease was no exception, as the crowd cheered and whistled as he waved his shirt in the air in a circu-lar motion.

“The script only has the lines,” Chase said after the play. “It gives us actors the chance to really find the character and do really fun things with it.”

The fairytale, cottage-like stage design complemented the setting of rural, modern-day Pennsyl-vania. Larry Paulsen plays the

practical-minded Vanya, who is more or less resigned to his life and lives with his adopted sister Sonia, played by Dori Legg. Sonia is frustrated and regretful at the unsatisfying life she’s lived.

It’s not until their narcissistic sister, Masha — a washed up Hol-

lywood actress — visits their home with her much younger boy-toy Spike, that their uneventful lives are shaken up.

Masha announces she wants to sell their childhood home, which comes as a shock to Vanya and Sonia. The two of them spend the remainder of the play trying to con-vince Masha to change her mind, and in the process of contemplating their futures, all of them realize that change is necessary to appreci-ate the past.

“(Masha) goes through her mon-ster phase in the beginning, but she realizes how much she loves her family,” said Nance Williamson, who plays Masha, in an interview after the play. “I love everything about her character, even the mon-

ster phase.”Other than the main roles, the

cast includes only two more char-acters. Lisa Renee Pitts plays Cas-sandra, Vanya and Sonia’s psychic housekeeper, and Midori Iwama rounds up the cast as Nina, a young aspiring actress who worships Masha’s B-list career.

“Just playing and acting with my castmates and the director has been great,” Iwama said. “There are obstacles sometimes, but you know, we work hard and we play hard.”

Sophomore acting major Alex Griffin, who attended Friday’s per-formance, said his favorite part of the performance was when Sonia received a phone call from Joe, a man she met at a party, asking her

Billboard ranks Bandier in top 11 music industry programsBy Jessica Berensoncontributing writer

The Bandier Program for Music and the Entertainment Industries strives to prepare students for the competi-tive music industry after college. And it works — 90 percent of students who come out of this program work in the industry upon graduation.

Last Monday, Billboard magazine named Syracuse University’s Band-ier Program in the Setnor School of Music as one of the top 11 schools to

attend in order to learn about and start a career in the music industry.

Redesigned in 2007, the selective Bandier Program prepares 25 stu-dents per year for success in the music industry through a multidisciplinary curriculum. Students graduate as qualified experts in the businesses of television, drama, film and visual arts.

The ranking was not much of a surprise to the directors of the pro-gram, David Rezak and Ulf Oesterle. Almost a year ago, Billboard’s Editor Bill Werde tweeted at a prospective

student that the Bandier Program and the Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music at New York Univer-sity were the top two programs for music industry.

“We have to be as good at our business acumen as the artists are with their artistic talent,” Rezak said. “(We are) preparing young people to work in the business in any art form.”

What sets Bandier apart from other programs of its kind is its active role in the industry. The program conducts a weekly lecture

series featuring the biggest players in the business. The program also presents students with internship opportunities and an experienced alumni base.

“Hearing people speak at the Soyars Lecture Series and getting the oppor-tunity to meet them after class and before class is huge,” said Andrew Spal-ter, a senior in the Bandier Program.

With the financial aid of Martin Bandier, a 1962 Syracuse alumnus and Sony/ATV Music Publishing Chairman and CEO, students are

also flown to various music conven-tions including College Music Jour-nal, the Billboard Touring Confer-ence and South by Southwest.

These opportunities bring stu-dents into direct contact with the biggest names in the industry, including Rob Light of Creative Art-ists Agency and John Sykes, co-cre-ator of MTV, both of whom are SU alumni.

“You can hear what they have to say and ask them questions and talk

see bandier page 10

see syracuse stage page 10

Syracuse Stage opens 42nd season with ‘Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike’ (FROM LEFT) LISA RENEE PITTS, DORI LEGG AND LARRY PAULSEN star in Syracuse Stage’s “Vanya and

Sonia and Masha and Spike.” The play opened Friday and runs through Oct. 12. michael cole staff photographer

(The script) gives us actors the chance to really find the character and do really fun things with it.

Ben Chaseactor in vanya and sonia and mashaand spike

@babsbayesHeading to Syracuse Stage to see Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike. Fantastically funny play! #Chekov

BACK

Page 10: Sept. 29, 2014

10 september 29, 2014 dailyorange.com [email protected]

out to dinner. “It was very human and genuine,” Griffin

said. “I could just imagine what it was like on the other end of the phone call because it felt real.”

Legg said she tried to stay in the moment while performing that scene as Sonia. She described the phone call as “a window to Sonia’s life,” as her character had never experienced anything as simple as a man asking her to dinner.

“It’s something that she’s kept squashed inside of her that people now start to see change,” Legg said after the play. “It was like oxygen for her.”

Like Griffin, sophomore musical theater major Tristen Buettel said she loved Sonia’s phone call scene, saying that Legg portrayed the human feel elegantly.

But she also added that the play, though it kept her laughing all night long, hit some thought-provoking points.

“It makes you really stop and think about things that make you want to take on the world,” Buettel said,

She was referring to Paulsen’s monologue

toward the end of the play when Vanya, who is afraid of the changes happening both in society and in his life, exploded into an impromptu speech.

Full of ‘50s references to shows such as “The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet,” “The Ed Sullivan Show” and “Howdy Doody,” Paulsen’s monologue was characterized by his disappointment in today’s society, a longing for the past and the constant fear of big changes.

“We licked postage stamps,” the actor repeated during the performance. “We ate Spam, just like the soldiers in World War II did. We didn’t play video games in some vir-tual reality, where we would kill policemen and prostitutes as if that was some sort of entertainment.”

Because of the ‘50s and ‘60s references, particularly in Vanya’s speech, William-son, who plays Masha, said there might be things that younger audience members don’t understand that older generations do. But she added that everyone can relate to the idea that change is sometimes very scary.

“It reminds us to never give up hope,” Williamson said. “As imperfect as it is, the past is still beautiful.”

[email protected]@clareramirez_

from page 9

syracuse stage

to them and network,” Spalter said.Syracuse’s location doesn’t stop the Bandi-

er Program from the influx of opportunities it presents to students.

“We have to do a little bit more. We have to keep the music industry engaged,” Rezak said. “We’re very conscious of our geographic disadvantage and we mitigate that by bringing the industry here.”

Students also have the opportunity to take a semester in Los Angeles and London, and oth-ers choose to create their own semester-abroad programs in New York and Nashville.

Oesterle pushes students to get involved, make connections and find fulfillment both on and off campus during their time at SU.

“We have a philosophy of ‘Do It Now,’” he said. “While you’re a student, there’s no reason why you can’t start following your passion to work in this business, whether it’s managing artists, starting your own record label, working in music video or editing (or) being in a band.”

Because of the constant evolution of the music industry, the executives behind the Ban-dier Program find that a hands-on approach is

the most effective way to learn. By requiring students to work in three internships, the pro-fessional world becomes a classroom of its own.

“It’s not a business where you can use a textbook anymore because by the time the ink dries something has changed,” Oesterle said.

The Bandier Program is reaching a tipping point as alumni begin to outnumber current students in the program. Opportunities can only expand, growing the program’s reputa-tion and influence in the industry. Rezak said the graduates are “absolutely killing it.”

Said Oesterle: “It’s a big upside to be able to walk into virtually any music business related company and have a connection to the Bandier Program one day; that’s what I would love to see.”

[email protected]

from page 9

bandier

Hearing people speak at the Soyars Lecture Series and getting the opportunity to meet them after class and before class is huge.

Andrew Spaltersenior bandier major

Page 11: Sept. 29, 2014

From the

kitchen every monday in pulp

Jamie’s Pastries and Restaurant523 Marcellus St. (315) 676-2828Mon.: 8 a.m.–3 p.m.Tue.–Fri.: 8 a.m.–5:30 p.m. Sat.: 8 a.m.–4 p.m.

Taste: 3/5 Quality: 3/5

Scene: 4/5 Service: 4/5

Price: 2/5 Total: 3/5

dailyorange.com @dailyorange september 29, 2014 • PAGE 11

By Rohan Thakorestaff writer

A bright two-tone yellow building, quietly perched in Syracuse’s Near Westside has been transformed into a cozy neigh-

borhood spot. Resembling a house more than a restaurant, Jamie’s Pastries and Restaurant serves up tasty Puerto Rican entrees and des-serts in an atmosphere that was filled with art, pride and culture.

Jamie’s sits on a small corner plot of land, with uneven sidewalks and overgrown weeds taking over the entrance. The front of the build-ing has a rectangular sign featuring an image of a mural with the Puerto Rican flag painted on it.

The building itself is hard to miss, though, since its eclectic color scheme makes it visible from quite a distance. Orange, yellow, purple and lime green all make up the exterior color palette.

Inside is much of the same. A red ceiling with purple light fixtures seems to compliment the purple and red wooden chairs at each table. Neon green walls contain a blue and white backsplash

and a flower pattern lines the perimeter of the wall. Adding to the charm was a display of golf trophies on an empty table and daytime television flooding the background noise.

But toward the back of the restaurant, the atmosphere becomes all about the food. An open counter showcases staples like beans and rice, while a display case behind the counter offers up sweet treats.

The handwritten menu is simple and straightforward, with only a few items avail-able. It includes a taco bowl, quesadilla, a mixed platter, empanadas, fried haddock and a seafood salad, with the last two being specials on Friday. They also offer subs and sandwiches with a daily assortment of meats.

Eager to try a range of offerings, I ordered the taco bowl, beef quesadilla, haddock and three different empanadas.

The bowl, consisting of a crunchy taco shell, had too much going on. Lettuce, cheese, chicken, tomato, salsa, sour cream, jalapeños and even macaroni and cheese were thrown into the dish. The result was more of a garbage

plate than a taco bowl. It tasted OK, though not as authentic as I would have liked, with all the ingredients somehow coming together. The shell was probably my favorite part, since it was simply a deep fried tortilla chip. Overall, though, I was hoping for a bit more authenticity in the dish.

The quesadilla and the haddock fared a little better. The beef quesadilla had pretty much all the components of the taco bowl, minus the mac and cheese, and tasted pretty much like any good quesadilla, but nothing special. It had a generous amount of cheese, tasty beef and a good outer tortilla crust. It was a solid choice.

The haddock also tasted great, with its crunchy outer breading that hid the soft, tender white fish, which was seasoned nicely. A gen-erous and delicious portion of rice, beans and potatoes, sat in a pile next to the fish and kept me full for most of the day afterwards.

My favorite menu items, however, were the empanadas. The beef, chicken and pork were cooked perfectly and mixed with cheese. The

mixture was rolled into a empanada shell, deep fried and served bubbling and warm. The cheese melted thoroughly, and the meats were salty and flavorful. And for little more than a dollar each, I could have eaten these all day and felt content.

All the entrees were washed down with Tro-pi-Cola, a champagne soda that tasted artificial and overly sweet. The taste was similar to liquid bubblegum and coconut extract, and it was a little too strong to offer much refreshment.

Jamie’s Restaurant was interesting. The décor, inside and out, was energetic and alive. The food, for the most part, was tasty and fill-ing. But overall, something was missing. Maybe it wasn’t as authentic as it could have been, or the choice of menu items was limiting. Puerto Rican staples like mofongo, or fried plantains, and yucca, a root vegetable, were missing from the menu. I think I was looking to be transport-ed to Jamie’s home, to experience a meal that defines Puerto Rico — its food, culture, and people — but wasn’t.

[email protected]

The taco bowl at Jamie’s Pastries and Restaurant combines lettuce, cheese, chicken, tomato salsa, macaroni and cheese, sour cream and jalapeños in a crunchy taco shell. The restaurant features flavorful food and an energetic scene. However, it lacks Puerto Rican authenticity. jackie barr staff photographer

ingredientJamie’s Pastries and Restaurant provides tasty food, lacks authenticitymissing

Page 12: Sept. 29, 2014

12 september 29, 2014 dailyorange.com

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

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dailyorange.com september 29, 2014 13 CLASSIFIEDAPARTMENTS FOR RENT APARTMENTS FOR RENTAPARTMENTS FOR RENTAPARTMENTS AVAILABLE

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[email protected]

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D.N. Drucker, Ltd315-445-1229

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Available for 2015 -2016Fully Furnished, Laundry, ParkingFull Time Maintenance and ManagementWall to Wall Carpet and/or Refinished Hardwood FloorsRemodeled Kitchens and BathsBest Value on Campus

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Page 14: Sept. 29, 2014

14 september 29, 2014 dailyorange.com [email protected]

Stadium. In front of 76,802 fans on Saturday night, SU got beat by the kind of team it aspires to be and could be, someday.

The Fighting Irish threw screens at Syra-cuse all game. With good reason, SU couldn’t stop them. Orange quarterback Terrel Hunt threw screens all game long, too.

“Yeah, the problem is on the first drive we missed two,” SU quarterbacks coach Tim Lester said.

Notre Dame opened the game with four screen passes, two off-tackle runs and a quarterback scramble that took the Fight-ing Irish from its own 18 to the Syracuse 23-yard line. There, UND quarterback Ever-ett Golson fumbled to Brandon Reddish.

Hunt hit back with a 38-yard completion to Brisly Estime down the right sideline, only to suck the momentum out of the drive by overthrowing a pair of screens. He didn’t find SU’s fastest receiving threat downfield for the rest of the game.

Despite forcing five turnovers, SU couldn’t count on its defense to keep taking

the ball from Notre Dame. The Orange couldn’t catch Golson. He caught the ball out of the shotgun and released it too fast. Hunt caught the ball out of the shotgun and threw it too high, low or behind his receivers.

“The defense did a great job, they gave us the ball, the offense fell short a couple times,” Hunt said. “I put that on myself.”

On its third drive of the game, in a still-scoreless contest, Syracuse jumped offside on third-and-2 on its own 24. On third-and-7, Ben Lewis cut into the middle third of the field, open, with space to run into, but Hunt threw the ball 3 yards behind him.

At the time, Golson was three passes away from starting his streak of 25 straight completions that locked SU out of the game.

It’s hard to know if Lewis and Jarrod West could make the same play UND wideout Corey Robinson did, to catch a touchdown pass with 9:39 left in the third quarter.

Where Golson zipped screens and swing passes, Hunt left SU receivers reaching for passes they couldn’t catch or waiting to clutch the ball just to hold onto it. The Orange’s offensive linemen didn’t do a good enough job of staying onside.

“We just did not execute anything that we did today,” SU running back Prince-Ty-son Gulley said.

The stadium-record crowd for a colle-giate game could have been treated to a duel between a pair of quick-hit spread attacks.

But there was only one. And it wasn’t the Orange.

Jacob Klinger is an assistant sports edi-tor at The Daily Orange, where his column

appears occasionally. He can be reached at [email protected] or on Twitter at

@Jacob_Klinger_.

foreshadowingEverett Golson had just beat the

entire SU defensive line by himself as he scrambled to the Orange 21-yard line before fumbling on a hit by Dyshawn Davis. Syracuse recovered, but punted four plays and one minute later.

the big three

27 yards, 0 pointsWith 2:54 to play in the first

quarter, Brandon Reddish picked off Golson. The interception cut Notre Dame’s drive off at one play and seven seconds. The game was scoreless, but a false start began to kill the drive off at second-and-7 on the Irish 35. SU ended up punting from the UND 33.

extra pointlessTrailing by 18 with 2:29 left in the

third quarter, Notre Dame’s Greg Bry-ant fumbled to Durell Eskridge. It gave the Orange the ball at its own 28. Syra-cuse actually scored its only offensive points of the game on the drive before Cole Murphy’s extra point attempt was blocked, when SU’s left guard slipped.

1

2 3

postgame playbook

Three Notre Dame turnovers – out of five total – that Syracuse didn’t take advantage of when the game was still in reach.

the game — and just one in the first half.“Notre Dame was really disciplined in what

they were doing,” senior running back Prince-Ty-son Gulley said. “We didn’t get the job done.”

The Notre Dame defensive ends, SU quar-terback Terrel Hunt said, kept to the outside like the Orange expected them to. Hunt said he knew he wouldn’t be able to run as much — he took off seven times Saturday compared to his 36 attempts in SU’s previous two games.

Midway through the third quarter, SU failed to get enough push up front twice, on carries by Adonis Ameen-Moore and Hunt. From just outside the red zone, SU turned it over on downs with just 1 yard to gain to move the chains, trailing 21-3.

Hunt, whose 7-yard touchdown run accounted for Syracuse’s only offensive score, said he “left it up” to the Orange’s tailbacks to carry the load of the running game.

They finally started to carry it, but by then the scoreboard called for a change of plans.

“Once we finally figured it out, we started moving the ball in the running game and then we had to abandon it,” left tackle Sean Hickey said. “We just have to communicate what they’re doing earlier and correct it earlier, so it doesn’t have to come to that.”

Golson picks apart shorthanded SU secondary Julian Whigham didn’t realize Everett Golson threw 25 straight completions.

“He had 20 straight completions?” the SU cornerback said when asked about them. “… Wow. Good for him.”

They came quick. And while the Syracuse secondary largely limited Notre Dame’s passing attack to short passes to the outside, time on the field with Golson took its toll. Being shorthanded

in Wayne Morgan’s absence and the defensive line not getting enough pressure on Golson tore at the SU secondary enough for Notre Dame to get 362 yards and four touchdowns through the air.

“That’s going to happen if you don’t get consistent pressure on the quarterback,” SU defensive line coach Tim Daoust said.

Brandon Reddish had an interception in the first quarter and recovered a fumble, but he also got beat by Corey Robinson for a touch-down, despite tugging the Fighting Irish wide receiver’s jersey off his shoulder pads.

Will Fuller torched Corey Winfield for 72 yards and a score in the second quarter. Winfield slid into the No. 3 corner spot as Morgan missed the game with a knee injury.

“The depth part was difficult,” Whigham said. “Obviously me and (Reddish) took a few more plays and that took a toll.”

UND’s next longest pass was a 23-yarder, but the consistent stream of short passes was potent enough for the Fighting Irish. Whigham said the Irish simply took what they could get against SU’s softer zone.

And when Notre Dame did go deep it was against tired defensive backs, contributing to three defensive holding penalties and two pass interference calls.

As Syracuse prepares for Louisville, it’ll be looking to reinforce the secondary.

“I think Corey (Winfield) did a good job, got his feet wet,” Whigham paused, laughing. “He got his feet wet and I think he’s confident though. He’s feeling good. He finally got some game action and that’ll really be beneficial to us going down the road.”

[email protected] | @[email protected] | @Jacob_Klinger_

from page 16

notebook

PRINCE-TYSON GULLEY advances downfield as Notre Dame safety Max Redfield prepares to make the tackle. SU’s run game was largely ineffective on Saturday, as punter Riley Dixon led the team with 42 yards on the ground. sam maller staff photographer

from page 16

klinger

Here’s a look at Syracuse and Notre Dame’s first downs in the first and second half.

full circle

10

12

SYRACUSE

NOTRE DAME

stat to know

The defense did a great job, they gave us the ball, the offense fell short a couple times. I put that on myself.

Terrel Huntsu quarterback

Thirty-six teams played in games involv-ing Top-25 teams this weekend, including Syracuse against No. 8 UND. Punter Riley Dixon was the only non running back or quarterback to lead his team in rushing yards, and did so with 42.

punter: 1 teamquarterback: 2 teams

running back: 33 teams

first half

second half

7

17

Page 15: Sept. 29, 2014

september 29, 2014 15 dailyorange.com [email protected]

beat two SU defenders before Bono tipped away a would-be goal. A minute after that, Rozhansky shot at the near post and Bono tipped it again.

The game flashed before Syracuse’s eyes in a matter of three minutes, but the defense of Jordan Murrell, Thomas and Tyler Hilliard was able to weather an early storm.

The hosts had their own bevy of semi-threats, but after a half hour of knocking on the door, Thomas used his height to his advan-

tage on a corner kick.Julian Buescher whipped in a corner from the

right side and the 6-foot-3 Thomas mounted two Virginia defenders before heading the ball into the top-left corner to give Syracuse the lead.

“We’ve been working on that all week, all year actually, probably my whole college career,” Thomas said. “… working on crossing and finish-ing and hopefully I finally got it down.”

With a minute remaining in the first half, Alex Halis directed the ball to the far-right corner from close range past the dive of UVA goalie Calle Brown, but Pablo Aguilar stuck

out his hand to stop the ball from crossing the line, to which no penalty was given.

It was a microcosm of the second half for SU, as Nick Perea, Chris Nanco and Halis all threat-ened to extend the lead but were unable to do so.

On a day when SU could’ve blown UVA out, it was the defense that held onto the shutout.

“We have eight wins this season and every single one of our wins has been a shutout, which is massive for our defense, massive for our entire team front to back,” Bono said. “If we won 1-0 every single game, I can’t say I would mind that.”

McIntyre noted how his team was tired of being second-best to top-tier opponents. He referenced last year’s games against Notre Dame and Virginia as ones that stuck out.

This time though, he didn’t have to harp on falling just short.

“I can’t comment on respect on a national stage, but in our locker room, we know we’ve got a very honest, hard-working group,” McIn-tyre said. “Not just to nick a game — to play well tonight, yes it was close, but we played some good soccer.”

[email protected] | @matt_schneidman

By Liam Sullivanstaff writer

With 36 seconds left in the game, Jackie Firenze dribbled down the field until she got close enough to fire a desperation shot that sailed wide left of the goal.

Pittsburgh goalie Tay-lor Francis secured the ball and with it, the win.

The play echoed the recurring theme for the Orange — missed opportunities. With none of Syracuse’s seven shots finding the back of the net, Syracuse failed to capitalize when it couldn’t afford to. The team failed to score a goal and a Roosa Arvas penalty kick goal was all Pittsburgh (5-6, 1-2 Atlantic Coast) needed to top Syracuse (4-5-3, 1-2 ACC), 1-0, at SU Soccer Stadium on Sunday afternoon.

“To have the amount of opportunities we

had, good opportunities we had, and to not come away with a win is unacceptable,” said SU head coach Phil Wheddon.

Just 10 minutes into the game, Emma Firenze dribbled a wide open shot right to Francis. In the 24th minute and again about three minutes later, Alex Lamontagne shot but didn’t score.

In the first opportunity the freshman for-ward won a one-on-one battle and the second shot was wide open within the six-yard box, but Francis made another easy save.

“I just think the problem is focus and the pressure,” Lamontagne said. “We just need to work on putting the ball in the corners and where the goalie isn’t.”

The team also nearly scored off a corner kick with eight minutes left in the first half, but sophomore Maddie Damm’s shot from 25 yards out just missed the top-left corner of the goal.

That made five first-half shots that didn’t

find the back of the Pittsburgh net.While missed shots were a problem in the

first frame, Syracuse was only able to generate two total shots — only one of which was on goal — in the second.

A shot by freshman Eva Gordon a little over 10 minutes into the half and Firenze’s last attempt were the only real late chances.

Wheddon was disappointed after the loss and noted that it wasn’t necessarily the Panthers playing well, but rather his team failing to score goals. He noted that SU was able to get in behind Pittsburgh’s defense often because of its slightly higher back line, which led to opportunities.

“How we’re not able to put these balls away, I don’t know,” said Wheddon. “I don’t think it’s tactical, I don’t think it personnel, I think it’s just composure in front of goal. We have good players. We just have to be more composed.”

In front of the goal is not the only place Syr-

acuse could have used composure. The team totaled seven offside penalties throughout the game, some coming at critical times.

Twice in the game, the team was able to advance the ball up the field to Alexis Koval, but the senior forward was unable to score.

“Offsides penalties killed us today,” Damm said. “Pitt is good on set pieces, they’re good on corners and that’s how they scored their goals.”

Wheddon and the team will need to work out the difficulties and do so quickly. With the toughest opponents on their schedule still to come, the team is going to need to be able to not just score, but score often.

And moving forward, Damm has a more intangible solution for her coach.

“Everyone on this team has the skill to do it,” Damm said. “It honestly just comes down to pas-sion and heart when wanting to finish the game.”

[email protected]

women’s soccer

Orange squanders numerous chances in 1-0 loss to Pittsburgh

from page 16

virginia

syracuse 0pittsburgh 1

Page 16: Sept. 29, 2014

NOTRE DAME 31, SYRACUSE 15SSPORTS dailyorange.com @dailyorange september 29, 2014 • PAGE 16

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Notre Dame stretched Syracuse’s defense to both

ends of the field, punching through the thinned unit and gaining chunks of yardage, practically at will. The Fighting Irish were going to throw screens and slants. It was going to work. There was only so much the Orange could do about it.

The Fighting Irish could pull up,

screw up and give the ball up without consequence.

It was like watching a cocky point guard dribble his defender to the asphalt, only to back off and do it again without scoring anything, just

to torment his opponent. But this was football on a professional stage. And it was only the first quarter. That’s not how it’s supposed to work.

With its own series of short passes to the perimeter mixed in with the occasional deep ball, Syracuse tried to beat Notre Dame at its own game. In that game, though, the Fighting Irish had the polish of a runway model.

Syracuse was more like a tipsy

freshman trying to win a wet T-shirt contest on spring break. It was kind of fun to watch — an attractive idea — but it ended poorly. While No. 8 Notre Dame (4-0) could get away with its turnovers, SU lacked the execution the Fighting Irish used to punish Syracuse’s mistakes as the Orange (2-2) fell to a 31-15 loss at MetLife

By Phil D’Abbraccio and Jacob Klingerthe daily orange

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. —  With one brilliantly executed fake punt in the third quarter, Riley Dixon nearly matched Syracuse’s rushing yards total from the first half.

With that one carry, he also finished the game as the Orange’s leading rusher.

The senior punter’s takeoff on a fourth-and-7 accounted for 42 of Syra-cuse’s 135 yards on the ground in SU’s 31-15 loss to No. 8 Notre Dame on Sat-urday at MetLife Stadium. The Fighting Irish (4-0) flexed its muscle as one of the country’s Top-10 run defenses, limiting SU (2-2) — aside from Dixon’s high-light-reel dash — to 3.2 yards per carry.

SU head coach Scott Shafer said UND effectively threw various fronts at the Orange that disguised where pressure was coming from.

“Just kept us off balance and we didn’t do a good job maintaining and sustaining our blocks up front at times and they got off their blocks,” Shafer said. “They did a hell of a job.”

It was a far cry from the Orange’s outing against Maryland on Sept. 20, during which SU slashed the Terrap-ins for 370 total rushing yards.

The Orange broke just three runs, including Dixon’s, longer than 10 yards against UND. Unable to establish the ground game early on, Syracuse often faced difficult third-down situations and converted just 3-of-15 of them in

By Matt Schneidman asst. copy editor

Juuso Pasanen turned to the stands as the clock ticked down in the final seconds, pumping his arms up and down to motion for the raucous

home crowd to stand up.

It was a feeling no Syracuse team has expe-

rienced since Oct. 17, 2001, when the Orange beat then-No. 8 Rutgers in overtime. It took 13 years and 16 tries, but SU  knocked off a Top-10 opponent on Saturday night.

“It puts us at that table with all those big-time teams,” junior goal-keeper Alex Bono said. “(Virginia is) a final four team and for us to come out and make a statement like that is definitely a big deal for us.”

After a Skylar Thomas header goal put SU ahead with 15 minutes remaining in the first half, the back three buckled down to post its eighth shutout of the year as No. 18 Syracuse (8-1, 2-1 Atlantic Coast) took down No. 2 Virginia (4-3-1, 1-1-1), 1-0, at SU Soccer Stadium in front of 2,019 fans.

The Orange has come close to knocking off national powerhouses, most recently in a 1-0 loss against

then-No. 4 Notre Dame on Sept. 13, but it was finally able to edge a team SU head coach Ian McIntyre thinks can win the national title.

“Tonight, it kind of validates what you’re doing,” McIntyre said.

Ten minutes into the game,  Vir-ginia’s Ryan Zinkhan fired just wide of the left post from close range. Less than a minute later, Jake Rozhansky

men’s soccer

No. 18 Syracuse upsets No. 2 Virginia with 8th shutout of season

Syracuse struggles on ground

syracuse 1virginia 0

see virginia page 15

see notebook page 14see klinger page 14

ERVIN PHILIPS is brought down by a Notre Dame defender during Syracuse’s 31-15 loss to No. 8 Notre Dame on Saturday at MetLife Stadium. Despite forcing five turnovers, the Orange was unable to generate any momentum on the offensive end. sam maller staff photographer

NOTRE DAMNED

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Days between Syracuse wins over Top-10 teams

Current SU players who were at least 10 years old the last time SU

beat a Top-10 team

Different goal scorers for the Orange in between Oct. 17, 2001 and Sept. 27, 2014

SU chases around Notre Dame offense it could beJACOB KLINGERCLEAR EYES, ONE HEART