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THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF SYRACUSE , NEW YORK TUESDAY february 19, 2013 FREE HI 46° | LO 28 ° INSIDEPULP Love of locale Student creates and sells custom T-shirts inspired by his love of Cape Cod. Page 9 INSIDESPORTS NFL Combine Ryan Nassib, Shamarko Thomas, Justin Pugh and Alec Lemon head to Indianapolis for the NFL Combine. Page 16 INSIDEOPINION Time for compromise Proposals should not be enacted to restrict off- campus living for students. Page 5 INSIDENEWS Stepping up Student group advocates for improvements in education. Page 3 ONLINE Who is Syracuse? Go online and fill out a form to tell us who you think best exemplifies the Syracuse University community. See dailyorange.com Symposia returns for 3rd year Text by Shannon Hazlitt STAFF WRITER Photos by Lauren Murphy STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER F rom solar panels appearing on rooftops to the clanking of construction workers making buildings more sustainable, SUNY- ESF’s progress toward becoming carbon neutral by 2015 is evident all across campus. But this year, students and faculty involved with tracking the progress of the plan are hoping to engage more of the campus community in helping to achieve the goal of carbon neutrality. “Creating a culture of sustainabil- ity takes a lot of time and a lot of work,” said Justin Heavey, a graduate student studying resource and forest manage- ment. “It’s less predictable than tech- nological things, so I think that has been challenging and something we are still working at.” Heavey is a member of the Cam- pus Climate Change Committee, which includes students, faculty, staff and administrators who are helping ensure the State University of New York College of Environmental Sci- ence and Forestry meets its deadline. ESF President Cornelius Murphy signed the American College and Uni- versity Presidents Climate Commit- ment in 2007, committing the school to the 2015 deadline. Carbon neutrality involves offset- ting greenhouse gas emissions by either running and operating renew- able energy sources, or purchasing renewable energy from other institu- tions. ESF is currently working to become only the second college in the nation to achieve carbon neutrality By Kelvin Read CONTRIBUTING WRITER Columbia University professor Jean Howard kicked off the Syracuse Sym- posia with the reading of her essay, looking at the portrayal of rape in William Shakespeare’s early modern- ist-era poem, “Lucrece.” Each year, the Humanities Center fosters scholastic engagement with the annual symposia, which consists of public lectures and presentations. The symposia, currently in its third year, began Feb. 18 and will continue until April 23. The various lectures at the sympo- sia are presented by either graduate fellows or faculty fellows from the College of Arts and Sciences, accord- ing to the center’s website. The Humanities Center offers annual faculty fellowships for the spring semester and dissertation fel- lowships to students of participating doctoral programs in Arts and Sci- ences, according to the symposia’s website. Gregg Lambert, who founded the Humanities Center in 2008, said the annual spring symposia allow the SEE SYMPOSIA PAGE 8 It’s not easy being GREEN SUNY-ESF officials, student groups work to achieve goal of carbon neutrality by 2015 Carbon neutral When there is a net zero carbon footprint or zero carbon emissions. Source: dictionary.com 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 The reeds growing outside of Moon Library are used to create the sustainable woody biomass that will power the Gateway building. The Gateway building is a central component of ESF's carbon neutrality plan. It will be powered by sustainable woody biomass. The new greenhouse on top of Illick Hall will be much more efficient than the previous greenhouse. There are photovoltaic cells (solar panels) on the back of Baker Lab. Carrier Dome Archbold Gymnasium Illick Hall Moon Library Centennial Hall Flanagan Gymnasium Jahn Lab Baker Lab Marshall Hall Bray Hall Walters Hall Gateway Building 1 2 3 4 SEE CARBON NEUTRAL PAGE 4 MORE TO COME The symposia, which began on Feb. 18, will continue until April 23. This week features two more lectures: Interrupting the Lucrece Effect: The Performance of Rape Stories on the Early Modern Stage Where: Tolley 304 When: Tuesday, Feb. 19. 9:30-11:30 a.m. How much: Free Working Group in Critical Theory and The Global: The Politics of Translation Where: Tolley 304 When: Friday, Feb. 22 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. How much: Free

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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

tuesdayfebruary 19, 2013FRee

hi 46° | lo 28°

I N S I D e p u l p

Love of localeStudent creates and sells custom T-shirts inspired by his love of Cape Cod. Page 9

I N S I D e S p o r t S

NFL CombineRyan Nassib, Shamarko Thomas, Justin Pugh and Alec Lemon head to Indianapolis for the NFL Combine. Page 16

I N S I D e o p I N I o N

Time for compromiseProposals should not be enacted to restrict off-campus living for students. Page 5

I N S I D e N e w S

Stepping upStudent group advocates for improvements in education. Page 3

o N l I N e

Who is Syracuse?Go online and fill out a form to tell us who you think best exemplifies the Syracuse University community. See dailyorange.com

Symposia returns for 3rd year

Text by Shannon HazlittSTAFF WRITeR

Photos by Lauren MurphySTAFF PhoToGRAPheR

F rom solar panels appearing on rooftops to the clanking of construction workers making

buildings more sustainable, SUNY-ESF’s progress toward becoming carbon neutral by 2015 is evident all across campus.

But this year, students and faculty involved with tracking the progress of the plan are hoping to engage more of the campus community in helping to achieve the goal of carbon neutrality.

“Creating a culture of sustainabil-ity takes a lot of time and a lot of work,” said Justin Heavey, a graduate student studying resource and forest manage-ment. “It’s less predictable than tech-nological things, so I think that has been challenging and something we are still working at.”

Heavey is a member of the Cam-

pus Climate Change Committee, which includes students, faculty, staff and administrators who are helping ensure the State University of New York College of Environmental Sci-ence and Forestry meets its deadline. ESF President Cornelius Murphy signed the American College and Uni-versity Presidents Climate Commit-ment in 2007, committing the school to the 2015 deadline.

Carbon neutrality involves offset-ting greenhouse gas emissions by either running and operating renew-able energy sources, or purchasing renewable energy from other institu-tions. ESF is currently working to become only the second college in the nation to achieve carbon neutrality

By Kelvin ReadCoNTRIbUTING WRITeR

Columbia University professor Jean Howard kicked off the Syracuse Sym-posia with the reading of her essay, looking at the portrayal of rape in William Shakespeare’s early modern-ist-era poem, “Lucrece.”

Each year, the Humanities Center fosters scholastic engagement with the annual symposia, which consists of public lectures and presentations. The symposia, currently in its third year, began Feb. 18 and will continue until April 23.

The various lectures at the sympo-sia are presented by either graduate fellows or faculty fellows from the College of Arts and Sciences, accord-ing to the center’s website.

The Humanities Center offers annual faculty fellowships for the spring semester and dissertation fel-lowships to students of participating doctoral programs in Arts and Sci-ences, according to the symposia’s website.

Gregg Lambert, who founded the Humanities Center in 2008, said the annual spring symposia allow the

see symposia page 8

It’s not easy being

greenSUNY-ESF officials, student groups work to achieve goal of carbon neutrality by 2015

Carbon neutralWhen there is a net zero carbon footprint or zero carbon emissions.Source: dictionary.com

1

2

3

41234

The reeds growing outside of Moon Library are used to create the sustainable woody biomass that will power the Gateway building.

The Gateway building is a central component of eSF's carbon neutrality plan. It will be powered by sustainable woody biomass.

The new greenhouse on top of Illick Hall will be much more efficient than the previous greenhouse.

There are photovoltaic cells (solar panels) on the back of Baker Lab.

Carrier Dome

Archbold Gymnasium

Illick Hall

Moon Library

Centennial Hall

Flanagan Gymnasium

Jahn Lab

Baker LabMarshall Hall

Bray Hall

Walters Hall

Gateway Building

1

2

3

4see carbon neutral page 4

More To CoMeThe symposia, which began on Feb. 18, will continue until April 23. This week features two more lectures:

Interrupting the Lucrece Effect: The Performance of Rape Stories on the Early Modern Stage

Where: Tolley 304When: Tuesday, Feb. 19.9:30-11:30 a.m.How much: Free

Working Group in Critical Theory and The Global: The Politics of Translation

Where: Tolley 304When: Friday, Feb. 2210:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.How much: Free

Page 2: Feb. 19, 2013

n e w s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m2 f e brua r y 1 9 , 2 0 13

A BIT OF HISTORY FROM THE DAILY ORANGE ARCHIVES

Brewster/Boland Residence Halls will become coeducational by alternating floors next fall.

After more than a year of discussions, the Office of Residence Services decided to eliminate the only all-male residence hall on campus, Brewster/Boland Director Patty Christiano said.

Haven remains the only all-female resi-dence hall on campus.

“It was unrealistic to have single-sex resi-dents halls,” Christiano said. “There’s no demand for single-sex housing.”

Brewster allows two female floors this semester on a trial basis, she added. “It was the tester for the final step to go coed.”

Students were pleased with the change and asked for coed housing next semester, she said. “The results were so positive, we knew it was time.”

Besides student approval of the coed housing plan next semester, more females requested on-campus housing, making an all-male Brewster residence hall impractical, she said.

“We have all these women who need housing,” she said. “Females outnumber the males in terms of housing demands.”

The Brewster/Boland administrative staff supports the change, she added. “Most of

us feel it was a long time in coming.” But students living in Brewster said the

alternating coed floors will make no differ-ence to the residents.

“Brewster guys socialize all the time with the Boland girls,” sophomore Todd Brodgin-sky said. “We still won’ be on the same floor. It’s not really a major change.”

The new coed housing policy may encour-age students to stay in Brewster/Boland next year. Freshman Darren Snider said. “I hadn’t planned on living here next year, but now I’ll think about it more.”

Alternating floors will make communi-cation and socializing between men and women easier, freshman Stacye Mayer said. “We’re so isolated the way it is now and it would be great to go coed.”

Men and women need to learn to live with each other in a common environment, fresh-man Nancy Kirstof said. “It’s very important to learn to get along with different people, and coed housing is a step in the right direc-tion.”

—Complied by Erin Kelly assistant copy editor, [email protected]

Feb. 19, 1987BREWSTER/BOLAND TO BECOME COED HALLS

Real world tweetsSyracuse University alumni tweet about their jobs and answer questions from the @workingorange twitter account.

Keeping the faithJewish students must find a new place to practice their religion upon arriving at Syra-cuse University.

One and fun Carmelo Anthony’s lone season in orange gives SU fans goosebumps to this day.

The Daily Orange is published weekdays during the Syr-acuse University academic year by The Daily Orange Corp., 744 Ostrom Ave., Syracuse, NY 13210. All con-tents Copyright 2013 by The Daily Orange Corp. and may not be reprinted without the expressed written permission of the editor in chief. The Daily Orange is distributed on and around campus with the first two copies complimentary. Each additional copy costs $1. The Daily Orange is in no way a subsidy or associated with Syracuse University.

All contents © 2012 The Daily Orange Corporation

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EDITORIAL 315 443 9798 BUSINESS 315 443 2315 GENERAL FAX 315 443 3689 ADVERTISING 315 443 9794 CLASSIFIED ADS 315 443 2869

TOMORROWWEATHER

N E W S

P U L P

S P O R T S

CONTACT US

ONLINEFor this week’s Tattoo Tuesday, Pulp speaks with a junior communication and rhetorical studies major looking to honor her family’s name in ink.

See dailyorange.com

TODAY TOMORROW THURSDAY

H27| L17 H21| L21H43| L24

S TA R T T U E S DA YFROM THE MORGUE

WHO IS SYRACUSE ?The Daily Orange is putting together a series of profiles highlighting individuals who exemplify the Syracuse University community. Everyone — students, faculty, staff, community members and more — is eligible.

Fill out the form online at dailyorange.com to nominate an individual you think answers the question of Who is Syracuse.

The form will be open for nominations from Feb. 17 to March 17, and indi-viduals will be chosen by The Daily Orange editors soon after. The series, “Who is Syracuse,” will be published in The Daily Orange in April.

Please contact [email protected] with any questions.

10 a.m. | Reaching out D.O. Management Find out what’s new at The Daily Orange, in print and on the Web.

10:15 to 11:15 a.m. | All the tools you need in your toolbox With AJ Chavar (The Washington Post), Brittney Davies (The Star-Ledger), Kathleen Ronayne (Concord Monitor), Mike Rothstein (ESPN.com) A panel about best practices to make oneself the best candidate for a job as he or she leaves SU.

11:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. | Producing in-depth, investigative journalism in a 24-hour news cycle With Rose Ciotta (via Skype, The Phila-delphia Inquirer), Brittney Davies Media outlets work 24/7 looking

for the latest tip, scoop and break-ing news. This session discusses how journlaists can remain com-mitted to producing quality jour-nalism in the around-the-clock news cycle.

12:15 to 1:30 p.m. | Lunch

1:30 to 2:15 p.m. Choose one session

• Transitioning to non-newspaper jobsWith Sean Branagan (Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship), Doug Levy (wedding photographer), Craig Weinstein (attorney) Panelists will discuss how jour-nalism and communication skills learned at The D.O. translate to other careers.

• The new new media With Steven Kovach (Business Insider)We are in a period of extreme ex-perimentation. Chances are many students will not be at a traditional newspaper by the time they gradu-ate, and there’s a lot to prepare for, including photo essays, interactive graphics and HTML5 storytelling.

• Best practices for beat reporting With Jeanne Albanese (former beat reporter for The Post-Standard,

freelance writer), Mike Rothstein The best enterprise writing and stories come from beat reporters. What are the best ways to cover a beat? How do you build and maintain relation-ships with sources, and how do you immerse yourself in the team or topic?

2:15 to 3 p.m. Choose one session

• Designing for the futureDesigners will use this hands-on workshop to create mock designs for The D.O’s print redesign.

• Media and the law With Craig Weinstein What types of legal issues do publications need to watch out for both in print and online? This dis-cussion covers the biggest issues and controversies to look out for that could lead to libel lawsuits or other legal issues.

• Social media overload With AJ Chavar Journalists are required to tweet, take photos, provide live blog updates, and utilize live chats and Facebook. How can individual jour-nalists and publications best make use of their social media resources to engage with an audience?

Palooza— 2013 —

Feb. 23

Join The Daily Orange’s staff and alumni this Saturday during DO Palooza. Pan-els begin at 10 a.m. and are located in Newhouse 1, room 409

Page 3: Feb. 19, 2013

n e w s pa g e 3the daily orange

t u e s d ayfebruary 19, 2013

By Eashaa ParekhContributing Writer

Undergraduates for a Better Edu-cation, a group that advocates for improved education through commu-nication with university administra-tion, has returned to campus after an eight-year hiatus.

The group began in the 1980s and has continued to operate sporadically since then, said William Coplin, fac-ulty advisor of UBE and professor of public policy at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.

In the past, the group has gar-nered national attention in The New York Times and on The Today Show. Former Chancellor Kenneth “Buzz” Shaw worked to help UBE be a con-structive force at Syracuse University in the 1990s, Coplin said.

Emily Ballard, president of UBE and sophomore political science major, said UBE was a national orga-nization that used surveys, among other things, to bring certain issues to the attention of the administration.

The group’s last survey was conduct-ed in 2005, after which the organization gradually disintegrated, she said.

Last year, Ballard and some class-mates surveyed several College of Arts and Sciences students to get a general idea of feedback on education at SU, said Sawyer Cresap, a fresh-man political science major.

“Based on the horror stories they heard, and on their own, they decided to bring (UBE) back,” she said. “Even though I am only a freshman, I had some horror stories that I would like to be addressed, which sparked my interest in this group.”

Today, UBE is a research and inter-est group that seeks to encourage students, administrators and faculty to improve undergraduate education at SU, Coplin said.

UBE currently consists of six members, Ballard said. The six mem-bers are Ballard, Cresap and sopho-more political science majors Mahlet Makonnen, Jessica Rapp, Carolina Vignola and John Prudente.

While UBE plans to further expand next year, it is currently conducting informal meetings with students and gathering “horror sto-ries” in order to address these issues, Ballard said.

The main difference between UBE in the 1980s and UBE now is that students were more radical in their approach in the past. UBE now works more with the administration, Cresap said.

Advocacy club comes back to SU

By Debbie Truongenterprise editor

Eight students from four colleges were voted into the Student Asso-ciation after being elected to various positions within Syracuse Univer-sity’s student government.

Despite debate about the qualifica-tions and dedication of some candi-dates, six representatives were elected to represent four colleges Monday eve-ning in Maxwell Auditorium. Addi-tionally, two members were added to the Finance Board, the branch of SA that oversees more than $1.5 million in student activity fee money.

For the most part, the assembly moved swiftly through elections as two students were elected to repre-sent both the College of Arts and Sciences and the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry. The Martin J. Whitman School of Management and School of Education each grew by one representative. Additionally, Whit-man sophomores Moises DeLeon and Michael George were each named to the Finance Board.

The most extensive discussions about candidates were launched

michelle yan | contributing photographer(from left) taylor della rocco, anthony lezama and eugene law, a freshman at sunY-esF, an undecided freshman in the College of Arts and science and a fifth-year sunY-esF student, respectively, were elected to positions in the general assembly Monday.

s t u d e n t a s s o c i a t i o n

General assembly approves 8 students to positions

Experts to lead panel discussion on gun control By Max Antonucci

stAFF Writer

A nonpartisan panel discussion on gun control and gun violence in the United States, called “Guns and America: Joining the Conversation,” will be held in Hendricks Chapel on Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.

The event will feature 2012 alum-nus Stephen Barton as the keynote speaker. Barton is the policy and out-reach assistant for Mayors Against Illegal Guns in New York City, and a

victim of the July 2012 theater shoot-ing in Aurora, Colo.

A diverse panel of experts on gun control and violence will speak in the first of many events this semes-ter to encourage involvement in the

national conversation on guns. The panel consists of Scott Arm-

strong, political communications consultant and former New York state lobbyist for the National Rifle Association; Helen Hudson, past president of Mothers Against Gun Violence; James Knoll, director of the Forensic Psychiatry Fellowship Program at the State University of New York Upstate Medical Univer-sity; Langston McKinney, retired

Guns and America: Joining the ConversationWhere: Hendricks ChapelWhen: today, 6 p.m.How much: Free

see UBE page 8 see gUns in amErica page 4

BiG nUmBEr

53

HEroSUNY-ESFthe university has filled four of its representative seats, the most in recent memory.

ZEroThe College of Visual and Performing ArtsVpA has the lowest representation within sA with four seats unfilled.

THEy SAid iT“Pineapple, because I’m sweet, but if you eat too much of me, there’s a tang.”

Taylor Della RocconeWlY eleCted esF representAtiVe, desCribing

tHe sAlAd bAr iteM He’d CHoose to be in response to A ligHtHeArted question posed bY publiC relAtions CoMMittee

Co-CHAir Colin CroWleY during one oF MondAY’s rounds oF questioning.

the number of assembly seats that have been filled.

PowEr of THE PEnin January, syracuse university Chancellor nancy Cantor joined more than 250 other college presidents to sign an open let-ter to president barack obama, pledging to lead campus discussions on gun violence. in response to the shooting in newtown, Conn., the let-ter offered the support and resources of academic commu-nities in calling attention to the accessibility of assault weapons and mental health issues. lee pelton, president of emerson College, drafted the letter.

see sa page 4

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carbon neutralf r o m p a g e 1

by using only renewable energy sources, said Andrea Webster, a sustainability coordinator at ESF.

When Heavey was a junior in 2009, he and others helped create the Climate Action Plan, which outlines specific ways ESF can achieve climate neutrality by June 30, 2015. These mea-sures mostly focused on ways ESF could change its buildings to become more energy efficient, particularly by installing new sources of renew-able energy from wind, solar and a unique form of biomass, he said.

Although ESF has been progressively devel-oping ways to make its buildings more sustain-able, becoming carbon neutral requires dif-ficult behavior changes for students and faculty, Heavey said. Some of these measures are harder to adapt to than others, such as using more energy-efficient transportation to get to and from the university.

But Heavey said some ESF student groups have been successful in encouraging eco-friend-ly habits outside of the classroom. The Green Campus Initiative, for example, has helped with some energy audits that were used to track ESF’s progress toward carbon neutrality, he said.

The audits completed by the Green Campus Initiative stemmed from its work removing unnecessary lighting around the ESF campus to save energy. Specifically, the group removed every other bulb from lights in Illick Hall,

Heavey said. Woody biomass

is another source of renewable energy ESF is developing, Heavey said. This energy source, which is grow-ing in popularity and efficiency, doesn’t pro-duce air pollution since it has a very rapid life

cycle, and can quickly store a lot of carbon dioxide and other pollutants.

A major element of ESF’s carbon neutrality plan is the Gateway building, which will run on woody biomass and emit zero waste once it opens in March, Heavey said.

President Murphy said once the Gateway building opens, it will have the largest near-term impact on helping ESF reach its carbon neutral goal.

The building will provide power and heat for many of the university’s other buildings from woody biomass, as well as reduce ESF’s overall reliance on less efficient forms of energy by about 60 percent, Murphy said.

“This project is a cornerstone to us becoming carbon neutral,” Murphy said.

For the last five years, ESF has reduced its carbon footprint by working with the New York

Power Authority to add more photovoltaic solar panels to the cam-pus, such as those on the back of Baker Labo-ratory, Murphy said.

He added that ESF has added an average 25 kilowatts of photo-voltaic per year.

Murphy also said although he announced last December that he will step down as presi-dent within a year, he does not think this will affect ESF’s goal of carbon neutrality.

“I would assume that given the passion of the students to reach carbon neutrality or get as close as we can, there is a very high probability we will continue down that path,” Murphy said. “There is nothing I am aware of that would change the plan.”

Murphy said ESF is a member of the American

College and University Climate Commitment, an organization that promotes sustainability leader-ship among universities. ESF must submit yearly reports to this organization to ensure it is on the path to becoming carbon neutral.

Students in EST 427: “Environmental and Energy Auditing” class help create these yearly reports that are then presented to Murphy and ESF’s sustainability department, said Richard Smardon, the professor who teaches the class.

Students use a spreadsheet called Clean Air Cool Planet, and Mike Kelleher, the head of ESF’s sustainability and energy department, checks through the information the students have found, Smardon said.

Since 1999, one of the groups is designated to create a report that shows ESF’s progress toward completely counteracting its carbon footprint by 2015, Smardon said.

The amount of carbon dioxide ESF produced when the class first started doing the audits was more than 12,000 metric tons, Smardon said. The most recent audit done in 2012 shows that amount dropped to 11,451 metric tons, he said.

But ESF’s increasing enrollment has made reducing its carbon footprint more difficult dur-ing the past few years, Smardon said.

“The problem is that we have more and more students, so are not reducing by very much,” he said.

But Smardon said he thinks student groups on ESF’s campus such as the Green Campus Initiative have played a vital role in helping the university reduce its carbon footprint, despite its growing population. The area of personal behav-ior is one that his students often find hardest to measure and reduce in their calculations, he said.

“A lot of the movement, if you look around campus and the country, is among students pressuring faculty and administrations,” Smardon said.

Yusuf Abdul-Qadir, a graduate student study-ing sustainable enterprise, is in Smardon’s class, and is working with a group of five stu-dents to create the most recent report on ESF’s carbon footprint. He said, after analyzing previ-ous reports, he found they seemed to lack infor-mation about students’ travel and behavioral patterns because many students neglected to take the surveys.

“In the last report, we found that there was not much student involvement and we find that highly important,” he said.

Abdul-Qadir said he and his teammates are hoping to get more students involved in ESF’s plan to become carbon neutral by filling out sur-veys about their behavior outside of academics, such as traveling to and from campus.

They have considered giving students incen-tives for filling out the surveys, such as hosting get-togethers with pizza and challenging them to meet benchmarks to change certain bad habits, he said.

Abdul-Qadir said his group has also considered making its findings about ESF’s carbon footprint more accessible to students on campus using new technology such as social media, and allowing stu-dents to fill out surveys on iPads for convenience.

“I think it’s phenomenal that a group of stu-dents is leading this project, and that as students, we can get other students involved in creative ways to show that young people are interested and have a stake in this,” Abdul-Qadir said. “You just need to find the right ways to engage them.”

[email protected]

about undecided Arts and Sciences freshman Anthony Lezama and sophomore School of Education student Daniel Hernandez.

Concern about Lezama centered around his lack of experience within the organization and his inability to name a specific initiative within SA that he’d like to work on. But SA Vice President Duane Ford vouched for the freshman, citing his own personal inexperi-ence as a rookie member.

“When I came into SA, I had no clue what I was talking about,” Ford said. “Just because you don’t know what you’re doing in the begin-ning doesn’t mean you can’t learn.”

Assembly representative Sean Dinan expressed similar support by referencing Lezama’s letter of intent, which was previ-ously emailed to the assembly. In the letter, Lezama pointed to specific issues, including campus safety, which SA is already working on, Dinan said.

Likewise, the general assembly spent an extended amount of time examining the quali-fications of Hernandez, who was eventually approved as a School of Education represen-tative. During his introduction, Hernandez mentioned he currently serves on all of SA’s committees as a non-assembly member, a point that faced criticism when the sophomore stepped out from the room and the assembly discussed his commitments.

Multiple former and current committee heads that have worked with Hernandez, including Chair of Student Engagement Janine Savage, Chair of Academic Affairs Jenny Choi and Chair of the Student Life Com-mittee Ivan Rosales, voiced concern about Her-nandez’s ability to manage initiatives when spread so thin among the various committees.

“For the most part, his attendance within the committee hasn’t been too consistent,”

Choi said. “When he does come, he gives his update when he has it, then leaves.”

Offering a counterpoint, Vice President Ford said in addition to his experience on various committees, Hernandez would bring a valuable voice to Monday night meetings.

Despite the concerns, Lezama and Hernan-dez were two of six representatives elected Monday. Additionally, junior policy studies major Taylor Bold was named as an Arts and Sciences representative, and sophomore marketing major Emily Bordieri was named a Whitman representative.

ESF also filled two representative seats with freshman Taylor Della Rocco and Eugene Law, a fifth-year environmental resources engineer-ing and environmental biology major who pre-viously served as SA’s parliamentarian.

After the meeting, SA President Allie Cur-tis said this is the highest number of seats ESF has filled during a session in her time with the organization.

For his part, Law attributed his return to a desire to maintain a bond that has developed between the two campuses in his time at SU.

Said Law: “We’ve made some good move-ment in integrating in the two student govern-ments in the last three or four years, and I don’t want that to fall away.”

other business discussed• The assembly approved $2,937 in pro-

gramming funding for four separate student organizations.

• Daily copies of The New York Times and USA Today will be made available to Universi-ty College students, an amenity already offered to full-time SU students, Curtis announced.

• The Student Engagement Committee con-ducted its first little impact by hosting a blood drive in February. Little impacts will occur monthly leading up to the weeklong Impact Week in the fall.

[email protected]

@debbietruong

saf r o m p a g e 3

Syracuse City Court Judge; and Robert Spitzer, chair of the political science department at SUNY-Cortland, according to a Feb. 14 SU News release.

The event will begin with Barton and each panel member giving their opening statements before taking questions from the audience. Questions will be written on cards beforehand or asked from Twitter at any time using the hashtag #SUguntalk.

Grant Reeher, political science professor at Syracuse University and director of the Alan Campbell Public Affairs Institute, will moder-ate the discussion.

Reeher emphasized this event doesn’t try to draw a line between both sides of the issue, and is instead aimed at exposing students to a variety of different ideas.

“It is not a debate, full stop, end of sentence,” Reeher said. “It is a discussion and a sharing of perspectives.”

Armstrong, one of the panel members, feels it is extremely important to discuss the topic of gun control in this format, since many people are driven by emotion and not rational arguments.

“This arena of policy is not short on opin-ion, but it is short on education,” Armstrong said. “There are a lot of people that talk about gun issues but really don’t know a lot about firearms.”

Thomas Wolfe, dean of student affairs at SU and the main organizer of the event, said the chancellor asked him to gather a planning group. He said this was because SU was one of many colleges whose president signed an open

letter to President Barack Obama, urging him to take action to curb gun violence.

While the letter has a clear message for more gun control, Wolfe emphasized the let-ter’s additional call for an active, honest dis-cussion on the issue without a specific agenda.

“We call it dialogue,” Wolfe said. “That’s where constructive things happen. That’s where conversations become rich.”

Wolfe said he wanted this first event to act as a starting point for a conversation that will cover a broad range of topics, and that events later this year would focus on more specific areas of the discussion.

“We felt if we narrowed it too much and only made it about policy, or only made it about the law, or only made it about mental health, we wouldn’t engage a broad array of people,” Wolfe said.

Future events, he said, will focus on more specific topics such as mental health, the cul-ture of gun violence, bullying, national policy and a student-run panel on students carrying guns on campus.

Wolfe said he was hoping to organize, with Hudson from the panel, an event downtown on the gun issues the Syracuse community faces. They are also working on an official debate as a part of an ongoing series moderated by Reeher, called “the Campbell Debates.”

Like Reeher, Wolfe said he hopes students come to the event Tuesday ready to join the conversation, which he feels will never end in the United States, but is still important to have.

“I would hope they would come with an open mind. I would hope they would come in the spirit of dialogue,” Wolfe said. “Dialogue is as much listening as it is speaking.”

[email protected]

guns in americaf r o m p a g e 3

Woody biomassthe byproduct of hazardous fuel reduction or ecological restoration actives that are undertaken to restore the ecological integrity of forested ecosystems.source: forestguild.org

Photovoltaicsthe method of creating electrical power by converting solar radiation into direct current electricity using semiconductors.source: dictionary.com

“There is nothing I am aware of that would change the plan.”

Cornelius MurphyesF President On whether his stePPing

dOwn wiLL aFFect the PrOject

Page 5: Feb. 19, 2013

OPI N IONSI D E A S

T U E S D AYfebruary 19, 2013

PA G E 5the daily orange

General Manager Peter WaackIT Director Mike EscalanteIT Assistant Alec ColemanAdvertising Manager William LeonardAdvertising Representative Jeanne Cloyd Advertising Representative Carolina GarciaAdvertising Representative Paula VallinaAdvertising Representative Sam WeinbergAdvertising Design Manager Abby LeggeAdvertising Designer Olivia Accardo

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

Laurence Leveille MANAGING EDITOR

Mark Cooper EDITOR IN CHIEF

News Editor Casey FabrisEditorial Editor Rachael Barillari Sports Editor Chris IsemanFeature Editor Chelsea DeBaisePresentation Director Lizzie HartPhoto Editor Chase GaewskiCopy Chief Maddy BernerArt Director Micah BensonDevelopment Editor Dara McBrideEnterprise Editor Debbie TruongSocial Media Producer Danielle OdiamarVideo Editor Allie BerubeWeb Developer Chris VollAsst. News Editor Nicki GornyAsst. News Editor Jessica IannettaAsst. News Editor Meredith NewmanAsst. Feature Editor Claire Dunderman

Advertising Intern Mike FriedmanAdvertising Intern Gonzalo GarciaAdvertising Intern Emily MyersAdvertising Intern Elaina PowlessAdvertising Intern Ruitong ZhouBusiness Intern Tim BennettCirculation Manager Harold HeronCirculation Alexander BushCirculation Chris FreemanCirculation Alexandra KoskorisCirculation Matt LaFlairCirculation Arianna Rogers Circulation Suzanne SirianniCirculation Charis SlueJob Coach/Circulation Charlie PlumptonSpecial Projects Runsu HuangStreet Team Captain Justice Jones

Asst. Feature Editor Kristin RossAsst. Sports Editor Jacob KlingerAsst. Sports Editor David WilsonAsst. Photo Editor Sam MallerAsst. Photo Editor Luke RaffertyDesign Editor Marwa EltagouriDesign Editor Beth FritzingerDesign Editor Becca McGovernDesign Editor Ankur PatankarDesign Editor Cheryl SeligmanDesign Editor Michelle SczpanskiAsst. Copy Editor Phil D’AbbraccioAsst. Copy Editor Avery HartmansAsst. Copy Editor Trevor HassAsst. Copy Editor Joe Infantino Asst. Copy Editor Erin Kelly Asst. Copy Editor Dylan Segelbaum

R ecently, a BuzzFeed article kept showing up on my Facebook newsfeed called,

“What It’s Like To Be A Twenty-something, As Told By ‘Mean Girls,’ ‘Bridesmaids,’ and ‘Girls.’” It was basically a collection of .gifs extolling how special and tortured we are as 20-somethings. The overall point? Being in your 20s is a beautiful tragedy on the level of an Allen Ginsberg poem.

“If you’re a twenty-something, you probably feel like this,” the writer wrote, coupled with a picture of Allison Williams from “Girls” saying she’s never been more miser-able in her life.

Seriously? Never more miserable in your life? Wait until you hit 80, Allison, because I bet that sucks.

Though this article is only a minor annoyance, it appears it is the symptom of a greater problem. Our generation is experiencing a Thought Catalog overload – blogs, television shows, books – every-thing is about how difficult it is to be young and entitled.

I happen to think this is a ridicu-lous notion, because who wouldn’t want to be young and entitled, really? Apparently a lot of people, because this article was all over my social media feeds for a solid week.

This, I cannot fathom. I cannot understand an outlook that says, “Man, having no responsibilities beyond my own well being and hav-ing tons of energy to party and work out and not be old is horrible.”

Is that a rational mindset? Do people really not enjoy being young?

I know we get tagged as a genera-tion that takes things for granted, but old people always say things like that. Old people have been grip-ing about young people since the 15th century.

Unfortunately, this time, I think the old folks probably have a point, because we have managed to complain about being young, cool and awesome.

Wow, guys. We are unpredictable, I will give us that much.

I’m compelled to wonder what the people who enjoyed and reposted this article would prefer as an alternative to being 20 years old. Would you rather be a child?

Let’s be honest, being a kid is terrible. You can’t drive, you can’t see R-rated movies or do literally anything that is fun or interesting. You’re just a short idiot who’s at the mercy of your parents.

And what about being old? Being 30? 40? 50? I don’t think I need to delve into the reasons why aging is a bad thing. You wrinkle. Can’t move very fast. Forget things. Have responsibilities.

Ever wonder why old people long for their youth again? Yeah, it’s because this time, right now, is probably one of the best times of your life.

Stop whining about how hard it is to be young and fun, everybody. It is absolutely the most ridiculous thing, ever. Go outside and run around or something. You can actu-ally do whatever you want, because nobody cares and you have nothing to worry about. Also, you have time to make tons of mistakes without any long-term consequences. How cool is that?

Or, you can post some sad articles about what an artsy, suf-fering 20-something you are until you turn 30 and the world ends. Your call.

Kevin Slack is a senior television, radio and film major. His column

appears weekly. He can be reached at [email protected] and followed

on Twitter at @kevinhslack.

g e n e r a t i o n y

Young people should enjoy, appreciate time in their 20s

K E V I N S L A C K

world on a string

Proposed legislation to regulate the number of student residents in the University Hill area should not be approved by the Syracuse Common Council. Students should be able to take advantage of living opportunities supplied by the off-campus neigh-borhoods surrounding the areas of Syracuse University.

The proposed legislation is a licensing system that would require landlords to register new properties, including student resident names and the universities they attend. Its purpose is to lessen the spread of students into the Special Neighbor-hood District in close proximity to the university.

For students from SU and other nearby colleges, following through with this proposal would prove unjust. This neighborhood is an important option for many students wishing to live off campus because

of its close location to SU’s main campus. Being in close walking dis-tance is a necessity for students who may not have cars and need to access campus easily and safely.

Though non-student residents may not favor living among young people exhibiting characteristics of a college lifestyle, this location is the most logical for students to live in.

Restricting students completely from living in specific neighborhood areas like Berkeley Park was also proposed in the legislation. But acting upon this would wrongfully hinder students’ right to choose in which neighborhood they wish to live, as well as the landlords’ ability to purchase property in this area for student housing.

Instead of restricting students and landlords who rent houses to student tenants, a family-oriented atmosphere should be enforced in these areas.

Student and non-student resi-dents should enter into a contract stipulating that college-style parties and similar behavior must be con-strained to the area, especially since this neighborhood is located near Edward Smith Elementary School.

SU does not have enough space to house all of its graduate and undergraduate students. When adult students make the decision to live off campus, they lessen the strain on university resources.

The university contributes greatly to the city of Syracuse and its communities. This fact, and the need for students to live off and close to campus, should be considered by those wishing to enact this restric-tive proposal.

Proposal to restrict off-campus living unfairE D I T O R I A L

by the daily orange

S C R I B B L E

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COMIC STRIP by mike burns | burnscomicstrip.blogspot.com

LAST-DITCH EFFORT by john kroes | lde-online.com

ONCE UPON A SATURDAY by carlos raus | onceuponasaturday.com ONCE

PERRY BIBLE FELLOWSHIP by nicholas gurewitch | pbfcomics.com

SATURDAY MORNING BREAKFAST CEREAL by zach weiner | smbc-comics.com

CHECK OUT @HARRYSSYRACUSE FOR DRINK SPECIALS!

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SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGYevery tuesday in news

By Jared RosenStaff Writer

Students looking to get better control of their inbox may have a new application to help stem the daily flood of emails.

The newly released Mailbox app is designed to keep the user’s mailbox empty at all times. Mailbox’s notable feature gives users the ability to “snooze” certain emails. This means that if an email indicates an appointment is scheduled for the next Monday, Mailbox will remind the user a few days later, closer to the appointment date. Reducing the amount of clutter in the inbox allows the user to sort through more information in less time, according to a Jan. 22 Mashable article.

“I’m really bad at checking my email. I find it challenging to set push notifications,” said Rachel Mohler, a sophomore photojournalism major and contributing photographer for The Daily Orange. “It’s hard to compartmentalize them on your phone because the screen is so small.”

Generic email mobile apps often leave the user with an endless stream of messages, largely unorganized and unsearchable for minute details, according to a Feb. 12 by Wired magazine.

“Email is something that needs to be done.

I never read the school email because it’s not relevant, hard to browse and because it’s not specialized,” said Michael Lima, a sophomore architecture major.

But students hoping to download the app may have to wait a while. More than 750,000 people have already signed up for the app, which is being released in stages. The excitement for the app has led some anxious users to take to Twitter to show the world their position in line to download it, according to the Wired article.

Although Mailbox allows users to be remind-ed of future appointments, some students believe calendars are a more suitable option for organizing their schedule than email.

“I use my calendar to organize my priorities rather than reorganizing my email,” said Jason Evanko, a sophomore film major.

There are several gesture-based features to Mailbox that allow users to swipe to save a particular message to a designated folder, or swipe in the opposite direction in order to delete the email.

Gentry Underwood, CEO of Orchestra, the parent company of Mailbox, said in the Mash-able article that it is unfortunate that many email providers force users to adapt to a minia-ture desktop version of the conventional email.

By optimizing the user experience, especially for mobile devices, the hope is that more people will be able to quickly manage the often unbear-able influx of daily emails.

This new way of reinventing the smartphone mailbox was forged with dynamic research from Stanford University behavioral research-er BJ Fogg. Mailbox is effectively a balancing act between a user’s ability to complete an action and their motivation to actually do it. This gives users the ability to shrink their mailbox by postponing tasks that need attention at a later date, according to a Feb. 17 article by Forbes magazine.

Mailbox lacks several key features that its competitors have. Sparrow, an email app com-petitor, affords the user with a greater number of gestures that speed up the navigation of email. Sparrow also allows pictures to be added to contacts, thus personalizing the user inter-face, according to Mashable.

The differentiation factor of Mailbox is its ability to “snooze” messages that do not need immediate attention. According to Mashable, the Mailbox team is already working on the next great innovation for email: automated organization and location incorporation.

[email protected]

inbox insightWith the Mailbox app, iOS 6.0 users can easily organize emails from their apple device. Gesture-based features allow users to archive, delete or save emails for a later time.

archivein addition to saving emails, users can add emails to built-in lists such as “to watch” and “to buy.”

snoozethe most interesting feature of Mailbox allows users to postpone emails for later. Users can then choose when to have the email resent to their inbox.

deleteUnwanted emails can be deleted with the swipe of a finger.

App helps users clear inbox

clutter, causes lengthy wait

list to form

Sources: mailboxapp.com, mashable.comgraphic by becca mcgovern | design editor

Zeroing in

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university to highlight its faculty and fellows. “This symposia allows me to talk about my

research while engaging other scholars,” said Rinku Chatterjee, one of the graduate fellows. “I can generate conversation in conjunction with the topic.”

The symposia is a part of a larger initiative by The Central New York Humanities Corridor, which is made up of Syracuse University, Cornell University, the University of Rochester and several other regional liberal arts colleges, said Lambert.

The Humanities Corridor, which was initially led by Cathryn Newton, dean emerita of Arts and Sciences, established the symposia’s three basic principles of scholarly strength, connecting various faculty networks and creating potential regional collaboration, according to the website.

The symposia also allow the faculty to bring in national or international speakers to discuss the work on the subject they are researching. Multiple organizations, including the Humanities Corri-dor, have partnered with the event, Lambert said.

“This is definitely the biggest symposia so far,” said Lambert. “It’s all focused on research, and specifically research that the faculty is doing here.”

Fourteen public lectures are scheduled, with professors coming from Arizona State Univer-sity, the University of Minnesota and Cornell University, among other research institutions. The Humanities Center and lectures are funded by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Founda-tion, which is a part of SU’s Billion Dollar Campaign, according to the website.

Freshman biology major Ella D’Amico, who attended Monday evening’s lecture, said after seeing the first symposium that she was inter-ested in seeing future presentations.

“I think it that it is interesting to hear from somebody who has thought about something so interesting and specific,” D’Amico said. “It’s really great to hear from a point of view from a different perspective.”

[email protected]

8 f e brua r y 1 9 , 2 0 13

symposiaf r o m p a g e 1

While the goals of UBE remain constant, its method of tackling these goals has changed, Ballard said.

“It is much easier to get in touch with a broad base of students now, thanks to technol-ogy,” she said. “In addition to that, the uni-

versity structure is now more simplified with fewer levels of administrators, thus making it easier for us to get in touch with them.”

It is important that administrators are aware of the problems they are unable to see, Ballard said. It is even more important that students realize they are consumers of this education, and they have the right to demand the product that fits their needs.

[email protected]

UBEf r o m p a g e 3

“This is definitely the biggest symposia so far. It’s all focused on research, and specifically research that the faculty is doing here.”

Gregg Lambertfounder of the humanities Center

Page 9: Feb. 19, 2013

PA G E 9the daily orange

the sweet stuff in the middle

O ne of the things people asked me most frequently when I decided to come

to Jordan was what I would have to wear and how I’d be expected to dress. I always responded the same way: “No, I don’t have to wear a headscarf, but I’ll have to wear more modest clothes, long skirts, long-sleeved shirts and things that really cover me up.”

Based on what I was told by my program, I came to Jordan with a suitcase full of neutral maxi skirts and plain long-sleeved T-shirts. To date, I only have two pairs of pants, including the jeans I wore on the

plane here.But to my surprise, what I’ve seen

on campus is far from the plainly dressed girls I expected. Instead, what I witness every day is a mix of fashion statements even more diverse than what we see on campuses in the United States.

The majority of Arab women who inhabit my campus are far from drab or devoid of style. Many dress to impress in clothes any fashion-conscious American girl would envy. Their high heels and tall boots click as they walk up the steps to their classes, and their skinny jeans perfectly flatter their

covered-up figures.Despite the fact that their arms

and collar bones are covered, they look effortlessly chic and not at all old-fashioned. They take pride in their appearance, and emphasize their Arab features with carefully applied, dramatic makeup. Even the

less-flashy girls here look meticu-lously put-together.

Never underestimate the power of a hijab as an accessory. While it’s often seen as a sign of modesty in the United States, I can’t help but view it as a greater form of expression for Jordanian women.

Don’t get me wrong, there are still some girls I see who stick to the basics — plain scarves of neu-tral colors and long skirts or dress-es. However, the vast majority of headscarves I see are not tame, but rather statement pieces that center around an entire outfit. These scarves are beautifully patterned

works of art with bright, contrast-ing colors and intricate designs. They are carefully wrapped in a way that adds volume, and the result looks more like a striking headpiece than an attempt to fade into the background.

I’ve definitely gotten a different perspective of what wearing the hijab entails. In the United States, we have a tendency to view it as a sign of reli-gious piety, and in some cases, even religious oppression.

But having lived on this campus for a month now, I must disagree. If anything, the young women here

T U E S D AYfebruary 19, 2013

L A R A S O R O K A N I C H

dude, where’s my camel?

SEE ABROAD PAGE 10

a b r o a d

Hijabs represent fashion opportunities for many, not religious oppression

ON

sam maller | asst. photo editor

TYLER POYANT, a sophomore illustration major, wears one of his custom-designed shirts. Poyant combined his love of art with his appreciation for his hometown, Cape Cod, Mass., in the design of his T-shirts, that he now sells.

Student grows up with passion for art, turns it into business of custom T-shirts

SEE CAPE COD PAGE 10

THE MAPBy Austin Pollack

STAFF WRITER

W hen sophomore illustration major Tyler Poyant was in high school, he took a geo-graphical image of Cape Cod, Mass., rotated

it into an “L” shape, added a little love and his business of custom T-shirts and stickers emerged.

Tyler’s success story begins as a child, growing up on a pond in East Wareham, Mass. At an early age, he fell in love with the Cape Cod life. One of his first pieces of art was a lighthouse, which he created for a custodian at his elementary school.

Tyler began to capture the outdoor scenery of Cape Cod. He would watch Canadian geese and ducks on his pond and turn it into art. At only 12 years old, he became interested in sharing his work with the public.

His father, Rene, recalls this first instance.“He asked me to bring him down to a local gift

shop,” Rene said. “He did all the talking. They let him set up a table outside the store and they wouldn’t just sell them, but they let him sell it himself. I think he enjoyed telling people about his artwork.”

Tyler said he enjoys art because it allows him to tell a story by creating a picture. He said he likes illustration because of the contact the pencil makes with the paper, and how he has always been good at it.

When people began to notice and comment on his work at My Sister’s Gallery in Sandwich, Mass., Rene began to realize his son had something special.

“I thought, ‘He’s got something here that’s a tal-ent,’” Rene said.

The relationship Tyler built with My Sister’s Gallery helped put him on the shelves of America’s bookstores.

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Cape Cod Life magazine wanted to inter-view emerging artists. It interviewed Tyler and a profile about him and his art was printed in the publication.

“The Cape Cod Life magazine really took me to the next level,” Tyler said. “I was featured as Cape Cod’s emerging artist with all of Cape Cod’s famous artists.”

As Tyler grew, his work and ideas became more and more sophisticated. In high school, he began drawing designs with hearts. The designs made themselves onto T-shirts and his company, I Heart It, was born.

Rene was a proud father when his son came up with the idea of a Cape Cod logo for a business.

“I gave him a hug and told him to get it trademarked because it was such a great idea,” he said.

Sophomore management major Melissa Clawges and Tyler lived together on the same floor in Flint Hall their freshman year. During the year they became close friends and have remained that way.

“It’s cool that he really focuses on Cape Cod where he is from because you can tell he really

loves it,” she said.Tyler is the sole owner of the company.

He controls its daily operations, from web design, production, inventory, customer ser-vice and marketing.

He says it is challenging but rewarding because it’s his own company.

“I always had an entrepreneurial spirit since I was 12,” Tyler said. “It’s all me. I love it. I’m in control of it all. But it’s annoying at times because you don’t have anyone to throw the work on.”

Although Tyler controls the company, his parents are still available to offer any support they can provide.

Rene says he and his wife help Tyler open up, and give him the tools he needs to build his business.

“We try to open up opportunities for him,” Rene said. “Be positive. Allow him to grow in the art industry that he loves so much.”

Tyler’s friends caught onto the idea that he owns and operates his own business. Last spring, as a freshman, Tyler entered the Syr-acuse University Chevrolet Sonic Road War-riors competition. He created a design for a Chevy vehicle, competing against junior and senior communication design students.

Tyler was victorious. He won $2,500 and his design, which featured different buildings on SU’s campus, was put on the car. It was unveiled at the March 3 men’s basketball game against the University of Louisville.

“That was huge,” he said. “It’s a real cool feeling just walking across campus and there goes the car.”

Clawges was on hand to celebrate Tyler’s accomplishment when he won the car contest, but she had the privilege of watching the design grow from its early stages.

“When we knew that he won, it was awe-some because his design was by far the best one,” Clawges said. “It was really cool to see his car driving around campus because we

really saw it come from design to full-swing actuality.”

When Tyler walked through malls wear-ing his custom T-shirt, people would come up to him, comment and ask where he got it. That was when he knew people were interested in the design and that it had real potential. He considers this his biggest suc-cess story.

“It’s such a rewarding feeling that other people are interested in one, what you designed and two, the company that you are trying to pursue,” Tyler said.

Clawges was fascinated by how talented Tyler was when she first met him, and was even more eager to know more about it.

“I was surprised but when I saw his website, I was really impressed with what he has turned

his company into,” Clawges said.Although he is only a sophomore in college,

Tyler is looking ahead to his future.He says his future goals change everyday,

but he started with hopes of working for Pixar or DreamWorks. He also enjoys design-ing clothing.

Rene would like to see him continue what he started at such a young age. He wants to see the T-shirt company continue to grow, but he also wants Tyler to be able to provide for his family.

“I would love to see him working for a com-pany doing illustration,” Rene said. “I think it has so much potential. He’s so creative. I’d love to see him have his own business some day and to be able to love what he does.”

[email protected]

have embraced this practice, and found a way to make it very much their own.

One of my professors told me when she was a young woman, she saw much less veil-ing in Jordan. Her generation had turned away from the tradition, and only a small minority still felt headscarves were neces-

sary. Now it’s the opposite, at least here in Irbid. The vast majority of women on cam-pus wear headscarves on a daily basis.

When I asked my professor why she thought this resurgence occurred, she told me she thought it was a kind of rebellion. But it wasn’t against the religion, society or parents, as we might expect. She believes young people are embracing their Arab and Islamic traditions as a form of rebellion against misconceptions coming out of the

West.To be honest, I can’t blame young women

if this is their reason for veiling. They have proven to me that veiling is not a form of oppression, or even necessarily an entirely religiously motivated trend. It is a personal and familial choice based on religious and cultural factors. These women still manage to be beautifully stylish while at the same time staying within the frameworks of their personal beliefs.

And the women like me, who don’t veil? We’re perfectly fine, too. It’s not a cultural barrier, it’s just a part of individual style. In day-to-day life, it affects friendships no more than choosing to wear Ugg boots in the United States.

I can only hope that someday the hijab will be accepted just as easily.

Lara Sorokanich is a junior Middle Eastern studies and magazine journalism major. Her column

appears every week in Pulp. For more informa-tion, she can be reached at [email protected].

10 f e brua r y 1 9 , 2 0 13

ABROADF R O M P A G E 9

graphic illustration by beth fritzinger | design editor

CAPE CODF R O M P A G E 9

National Engineers Week kicks off at Link Hall

sam maller | asst. photo editorTYLER POYANT sits and works at his studio in the Shaffer Art Building. Poyant created the design for his line of shirts based on the shape of the Cape Cod peninsula.

“It’s such a rewarding feeling that other people are interested in one, what you designed, and two, the company that you are trying to pursue.”

Tyler PoyantSOPHOMORE ILLUSTRATION MAJOR

DAILYORANGE.COM

By Ruth LiSTAFF WRITER

Poker chips lay in lines like dominos on a big brown wooden table. Michael Fulk sat by the table and tried to build a tower with the cards. For Fulk, it was harder than it looked. The card tower collapsed again and again – it couldn’t even stay stable on its first level. Fulk shook his head and put a poker package on the cards. “It is cheating,” shouted Tomas Kovalcik, sophomore civil engineering major and presi-dent of the Syracuse University chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Kovalcik attended the Monday evening event, titled “Playing Card Towers,” at Link

Hall. As a part of National Engineers Week, the SU chapter of ASCE hosted a series of social events, such as a construction site tour and a steel bridge competition.

The week’s events aim at letting students get involved with the organization and practice engineering knowledge in daily life.

Participants used 20 cards to try and make the tallest card tower possible. The event let students think about what it takes to build a stable tower in the real world, including ele-ments of engineering strategy such as force, angle and material. Students figured out the final solution to build stable card towers through trial and error.

The event promoted engineering as a part

of the annual event, E-week, said Bill Finch, vice president of ASCE and junior civil engi-neering major.

The event lasted close to an hour. Several attendees gave up the smooth table surface and moved to work on the carpet. Most people who participated built card towers for the first time.

Fulk, a senior civil engineering major, said he previously tried to build a tower with coast-ers at restaurants, but using cards was harder than he expected.

He said he thinks it’s hard to build a stable tower because the cards are brand new and smooth. He wasn’t the only one who had prob-lems with the cards.

“It is really difficult to build a tower out of cards. I thought it would be easier,” said Wensi Wu, a sophomore civil engineering major who attended the event, “because all I need to do is to make some perfect triangles.”

By showing up at the event, she wanted to encourage other engineers to get involved into the community and establish social networks.

As a member of ASCE, she thinks it’s a professional organization and opens doors to engineering activities.

Said ASCE President Tomas Kovalcik: “We hope people have fun and can apply their knowl-edge to actually building something, as opposed to what we learn in class.”

[email protected]

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every tuesday in pulpdecibel

MY CHEMICAL ROMANCEConventional Weapons

Reprise Records

Release Date:Feb. 15

Sounds like: Hot Topic trying to become The Gap

Genre: Pop

Top track: “The World is Ugly”

Rating:

1.5/5 soundwaves

graphic illustration by beth fritzinger | design editor

By Erik van RheenenSTAFF WRITER

E mo died in 2006, and “The Black Parade” was the

album that killed it.My Chemical Romance

apparently thought generous applications of “guy-liner” and

swooping haircuts weren’t embar-rassing enough, so the band recorded

its infamous full-blown emo rock opera.Shortly after “The Black Parade” went

platinum, “emo” became a punch line, and My Chemical Romance faced an ultimatum: change or

fade. It changed — polishing a stadium rock sound on 2010’s “Danger Days: The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys” — but its most recent album, “Conventional Weapons,” is the album that could have been.

Released as a compilation, the album is a collection of tracks written, recorded and scrapped for a “Black Parade” follow-up. It makes for a highly entertaining listen to a band in flux, with one foot resolutely planted in brooding emo and the other stepping full-force into arena anthems.

When My Chemical Romance sticks to its punkier, emo guns, the result is ear-bleedingly awful. Singer Gerard Way shrieks his way through opener “Boy Division,” and what could’ve been a cool guitar solo from Ray Toro gets lost in painful squeals of feedback. Way worsens on “Tomorrow’s Money,” slurring through incoherent verses and rushing to a chorus that flatlines with cringe-worthy lyrics like, “fell in love with a vampire.”

Most fans’ knee-jerk reaction would be to jump ship after the first three songs — “Ambulance” is a real snoozer — and it’s hard to blame them.

But from the opening snare drum kick of “Gun.,” it’s pretty clear exactly when My Chemical Romance switched gears and dropped the emo shtick. Way finally sounds like he’s having

fun, and “Gun.” is a fist-pumper of an anthem. Using “Con-ventional Weapons” as an album title was perfect: the album sounds like the band is armed to the teeth with hooks.

Even tracks that resemble rewritten, sad ballads get injected with pomp. “The World Is Ugly” is a lush, sweeping slow dance song, clocking in at just less than five minutes. As lovelorn as its lyrics are, it stays uplifting and vibrant. The album’s second whopper of a ballad, “The Light Behind Your Eyes,” starts with Way crooning over an acoustic guitar before building its bombast for a rousing finale.

The band also puts together some in-your-face choruses. “Surrender the Night” brushes through sleepy verses for one of the group’s best choruses to date, and drummer Jarrod Alexander puts on a clinic on “Burn Bright,” a feel-good tune that lyrically tackles the thoroughly anti-emo idea of “like who you are.”

But the band follows up its two ballads, both aching with emotion and understated instrumentation, with two slapdash garage-rock yawners. “Kiss the Ring” is a ho-hum White Stripes wannabe, and “Make Room!!!!” changes tempo at random, jostling the listener’s eardrums around at whiplash speeds.

Fans should be thankful this wasn’t the album we got after “The Black Parade.” For all its standouts, “Conventional Weapons” is kind of a mess. It’s the product of a band that didn’t know whether to go for the gusto or give fans another “Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge.”

In all its Hot Topic glory, “The Black Parade” was an album written by a band that wanted to raise the bar for emo. And for its overblown, space-age nonsense, “Danger Days” was penned by a band confident enough with its fan base to go out on a limb and take a 180-degree turn away from emo.

“Conventional Weapons” tries having it both ways but ends up with neither. My Chemical Romance should’ve kept push-ing forward on its next LP and left these scraps on the cutting room floor.

[email protected]

@TheRealVandyMan

MisfireConfusing compilation of emo, stadium rock makes ‘Conventional Weapons’ worst My Chemical Romance album to date

Page 12: Feb. 19, 2013

s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m1 2 f e brua r y 1 9 , 2 0 13

receiver” moniker. Coming out of high school, Lemon ran just

a 4.62 40-yard dash at a Scout.com Combine in Baltimore. To surge up draft boards, that has to improve. That’s what he’s been working on at Fischer Sports in Phoenix, where he said he’s run one of the three fast-est 40-yard dash times among the prospects training there.

“I feel like I’m capable of doing it with the great training I have,” Lemon said. “I see myself as I’m not a blazing fast guy, but I do have some speed, so I just try to go out there and prove it to everyone how fast I am.”

Thomas called his invite to the combine “a dream come true.” For as long as he can remember, he fantasized about participating in the NFL Combine before getting drafted. For a player surrounded with question marks, whether it is about injuries, size or coverage ability, the combine is even more important.

It’s somewhere he can watch his stock skyrocket. At Syracuse’s Pro Day last year, Thomas clocked 4.26 on the 40-yard dash. A potential workout warrior, Thomas said he’s been running times in the 4.4s and 4.5s during his training, but is ready to surprise people.

“We’re going to show in the combine,” Thomas said. “ … It’s just great to have the opportunity to be at the combine, so if I show out, I hope I go up somebody’s radar.”

Thomas wakes up at 5 a.m. every day, try-ing to make that happen. Mayock is higher on Thomas than most, projecting the safety as a third- or fourth-round pick.

“Shamarko Thomas is one of the better safeties I’ve seen on tape,” Mayock said. “ … He’s short, but he’s tough as nails. I’d like to see him run well.”

Thomas is working with some of the nation’s top athletes with Pete Bommarito in South Florida, including former South Florida quarterback B.J. Daniels and Michi-gan wide receiver Devin Street. Even with the stiff competition, Thomas consistently performs at the top of the heap in drills.

The combine is his chance to rise in the draft.“I work too hard not to be at the top,”

Thomas said, “so I stack up at the top of athleti-cism, everything, in every competition.”

[email protected]

By Phil D’AbbraccioASST. COPY EDITOR

Five weeks ago, Miami was unranked. Now, the Hurricanes are on top of the Atlantic Coast Conference, and not far from the top of the col-lege basketball world.

“We want to enjoy the journey, but we also want to stay focused on our next opponent,” head coach Jim Larranaga said in the ACC coaches’ teleconference on Feb. 4. “And that’s what the guys have been able to do. If you win a game, enjoy that, celebrate that for a short while, but the very next day, you’re back to the office doing your job.”

Projected to barely finish fourth in the con-ference, No. 2 Miami (21-3, 12-0 ACC) has taken the nation by storm, shooting up through the Associated Press Top 25 Poll. Now with a three-game lead over Duke in the conference stand-ings, Larranaga’s well-balanced and experi-enced squad is riding a 13-game winning streak, on pace to earn one of the most improbable No. 1 seeds in recent NCAA Tournament memory.

The Hurricanes were given one of the coun-try’s toughest nonconference schedules and an overall slate currently ranked the third strongest nationally. Still, Miami has knocked off three ranked teams this year, starting with then-No. 13 Michigan State in late November – a team that’s now worked its way into the top five.

But a trip to Hawaii for the Diamond Head Classic at the end of December proved costly. The Hurricanes dropped a 19-point decision to then-No. 4 Arizona, their second game of the day, then lost two days later to Indiana State in overtime.

On top of that, Miami lost starting center Reggie Johnson, a 6-foot-10, 292-pound senior who broke his left thumb in practice and was expected to miss the next six to eight weeks.

“I told Reggie he has until February to get in the best shape of his life so he can help us during the most crucial part of the schedule,” Larrana-ga said in a Dec. 31 article by The Miami Herald.

But Johnson returned ahead of schedule, just in time for the Hurricanes’ home matchup with then-No. 1 Duke on Jan. 23. Miami fans started lining up outside of the arena for seats about 24 hours before tipoff, and some even camped out to get as close as they could to the action.

“I don’t know how you can sit outside for a basketball game for that long,” Miami guard

and leading scorer Durand Scott said after the game. “That made me want to win for them even more.”

Scott delivered a season-high 25 points as the then-No. 25 Hurricanes thrashed the Blue Devils by 27 points, the third worst margin of defeat for a No. 1 team ever. Miami fans stormed the court in celebration of a victory that was essentially decided by Miami’s 23-point lead at halftime.

Three games later, Miami, which moved up to No. 14, kept its momentum going with a one-point win at then-No. 19 North Carolina State – the preseason ACC favorite – courtesy of a tip-in by Johnson with less than a second left in the game. Since returning from his injury, Johnson hasn’t been a major factor offensively, but his presence is felt on the boards, as he’s averaging 8.3 rebounds per game for the year.

Guard Shane Larkin has been just as instrumental to the Hurricanes’ success. The sophomore and only underclassman in the starting lineup, Larkin is the team’s second-leading scorer at 13.2 points per game while dishing out 4.3 assists per contest, tied for third in the ACC.

But Larkin’s conference-leading 2.1 steals per game are just as crucial to Miami’s scoring defense, which ranks third in the conference.

“He’s terrific at everything,” Larranaga said in the Jan. 28 ACC coaches’ teleconference. “He’s a heck of a defender, he works so hard defensively, comes up with steals ... He runs the team, he shoots the 3, he handles the press, just having an all-conference caliber year.”

Miami still has six regular season games left on its schedule. With wins over the ACC’s presumed top teams, Miami’s resume now is arguably impressive enough for a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

But the Hurricanes expect to inflict even more damage in the postseason.

“Beating Duke, Carolina, N.C. State, these are schools that passed up on guys playing at Miami right now, so beating these teams is very special,” Johnson said after the win over N.C. State. “I’m not sure what people think of us now, but they should respect us. People think we’re good, but I think we’ve got a great team. We can make noise come March.”

[email protected]

@PhilDAbb

“Coaches are really going to like Ryan Nassib. He’s got good physical attributes, not great, but good physical attributes, plus he’s got all the intangibles: toughness, intelligence and work ethic. He’s going to start to quietly climb boards between the combine and the draft.”

“He’s got that

possession-receiver moniker

on him, so he has to

run well.”

“He came in with shorter arms at the Senior Bowl and everybody immediately wanted to move him to guard and I thought, ‘No way.’ I give him the benefit of the doubt. He looked like a late first-round tackle to me, and I’m not going to move off that until he proves to me he can’t play. And at the Senior Bowl I thought he played pretty well.”

COMBINEF R O M P A G E 1 6

BREAKING DOWN THE FILMFour former Orange players are heading to the NFL Combine to impress scouts. Here’s what NFL Draft analyst Mike Mayock said about each:

n a t i o n a l

Miami shocking country with climb up ACC, AP Top 25 poll

“Shamarko Thomas is one of the better safeties I’ve seen on tape

and I would give him a third- or fourth-round grade at the worst. …

He’s short, but he’s tough as nails and I’d like to see him run well.”

Page 13: Feb. 19, 2013

s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m

By Kevin PriseSTAFF WRITER

Breaking out of the locker room for Saturday afternoon’s matchup with Pittsburgh, Syra-cuse donned a new look. In SU’s annual “Play 4Kay” game in support of breast cancer aware-ness, all of the Syracuse players sported pink jerseys for the cause.

The color change from the traditional orange didn’t appear to affect SU’s play in the slightest in an 80-39 rout of the Panthers. Not much

has affected the team’s play at home this sea-son. The Orange (21-3, 9-2 Big East) carries an unblemished 11-0 home mark into its final regu-lar season conference matchup with Rutgers (14-10, 5-6) at 7 p.m. at the Carrier Dome.

“We love playing at home in front of our home crowd,” senior center Kayla Alexander said. “They give us energy, and it’s also impor-tant to protect the home court as well, especially during conference play.”

Syracuse has already completed one home-and-home series this season against rival Georgetown, with the home-court advantage apparent. At Georgetown on Feb. 12, Syracuse needed to battle back from an eight-point, sec-ond-half deficit to escape with a 69-60 victory. At

home on Jan. 12, SU led at the half and notched a 52-point second half in a comfortable 86-56 win.

After completing an undefeated two-game road swing against Cincinnati and Georgetown, in front of crowds of 535 and 609 respectively, the Orange returned home to play Pitt in front of 1,355, SU’s largest home crowd of the season to date. Tipoff approached and the crowd started to clap, as it does at the beginning of every men’s game.

The fans continued their rhythmic clap until the 18:02 mark, when freshman guard Brianna Butler drained a 3-point shot to break the score-less tie. SU jumped out to a 7-0 advantage, and the game was never really close.

“It’s good to be home,” seventh-year head coach Quentin Hillsman said. “Obviously the crowds are good, and even when the crowds aren’t really large, they’re always into it. I think that helps us a lot.”

Syracuse has proved effective at home, even when the crowds are sparse, as Hillsman allud-ed. Against Seton Hall on Jan. 30, the Orange cruised to a 65-34 win with a crowd of just 490. Facing DePaul on Jan. 15, Syracuse made big plays down the stretch to earn an important 84-80 win against the dangerous Blue Demons in front of a crowd of 450.

Five of the six largest crowds SU has seen this year have occurred on the road with the Orange going 3-2, losing to Connecticut in front of 14,786 and Villanova in front of 1,519.

But with the Orange enjoying a prosperous 21-3 start and positioning itself well for its first NCAA Tournament bid in five years, the fans are starting to come out. Syracuse’s last two home games have brought its two largest crowds of the year, looking strong in comparison to the weak road turnouts at Cincinnati and Georgetown.

“We have been to some gyms and there’s nobody there,” Hillsman said. “We’re in an arena, and people are there, and you can hear them. So for us, it’s important, and it says a lot about our fan base and our team.”

The Dome’s unique basketball arrangement, without completely enclosed seating around the court, differs from the traditional gym environ-ment for most Big East teams.

But with 11 games down on the Dome court, SU is comfortable with the setup and

embraces it, Hillsman said.“For us, we’re good, so we just come out and

play,” Hillsman said. “This is our home court. We love it here, we shoot well here and we score the ball here at a good rate. So I’m really happy with playing here.”

At the conclusion of Saturday’s rout of Pittsburgh, junior guard Phylesha Bullard took the microphone and thanked the fans for coming out to support the team, saying she hoped to see them again. The crowd gave one last cheer before filing out.

Although the pink jerseys provided some-thing different, Saturday brought more of the same for the Orange at home, an enthusiastic crowd and a winning effort on the court.

Junior guard La’Shay Taft, who posted a season-high 11 points against the Panthers, said she wouldn’t mind seeing the pink again soon.

“I think it’s amazing,” Taft said. “I think pink is pretty also, so I think it was good; it felt good wearing pink. I wish I could wear it more.”

“She loves pink,” Alexander [email protected]

f e brua r y 1 9 , 2 0 13 1 3

spencer bodian | staff photographerLA’SHAY TAFT and the Orange, winners of five in a row, will look to feed off another enthusiastic home crowd Tuesday night at the Carrier Dome against Rutgers at 7 p.m.

Harlem shaking sudoku

9 8 41 7 3

7 86 8 2 4

1 3 6 93 4 9 6

2 52 5 9

6 9 3

w o m e n ’s b a s k e t b a l l

SU continues to thrive with home dominance

UP NEX TWho: RutgersWhere: Carrier DomeWhen: Today, 7 p.m.Channel: CBS Sports Network

Page 14: Feb. 19, 2013

s p o r t s @ d a i l y o r a n g e . c o m

By Jacob KlingerASST. SPORTS EDITOR

The lessons of Syracuse’s 2012-13 season crystal-lized in a pair of home losses to league-leader Mercyhurst at the weekend.

The Orange grinded its way to a 3-2 lead over the No. 9 team in the country with 10:30 remain-ing in Friday’s game, but three Mercyhurst goals in the closing nine minutes undid SU’s upset bid that threatened to knock the Lakers off of the College Hockey America summit.

“It’s like Groundhog Day,” head coach Paul Flanagan said, “Every time I turn around we’re losing to Mercyhurst.”

Syracuse (18-13-1, 12-5-1 CHA) skates into its regular season-ending home set with Linden-wood (6-23-3, 6-9-3) needing no result – Syracuse is locked in as the No. 2 seed in the CHA tourna-ment. Instead, the Orange must iron out the fatal kinks that have undone some of its greatest efforts this season.

Mercyhurst’s Friday fight back and three early goals Saturday actually serve as a model for SU, looking to extend its season to a rematch with the Lakers in the CHA finals, and poten-tially an NCAA Tournament bid. The Lakers crashed rebounds constantly, working their way to rugged goals.

Syracuse knows it must do the same. The Orange knows it’s pulled about even with the perennial conference power. But to beat them, SU has to match the Lakers and teams of similar cali-ber for net-crashing effort, channeling the defen-sive energy that’s carried SU for so much of the season into the offensive zone – and for 60 minutes.

“We’re not the type of team that scores those really pretty goals anyway, so we have to have that crash-the-net mentality,” junior forward Margot Scharfe said.

Increased power-play output would save the Orange, too.

On its own end, Syracuse is among the best in the country. Kallie Billadeau is tied for seventh in Division I in save percentage at .939. She’s also tied for second in shutouts, despite having played six less games than Noora Raty, the net-minder for undefeated No. 1 Minnesota.

Down 3-2 with eight minutes to go against Mercyhurst on Saturday, SU took a five-on-four man advantage after Jenna Hendrikx checked Holly Carrie-Mattimoe in the head for a five-minute major. SU got off just one shot and came away with nothing, all but permanently surren-

dering momentum to the Lakers.“I don’t know if we were just looking to pass

first instead of look to shoot. That’s what it seems to me,” Flanagan said. “The onus is on us as a coaching staff to have our power plays bet-ter prepared, we’ve got to do a better job. And we have to instill confidence in our kids that they know what they’re going to do.”

SU has no problem holding, scrapping and staying with potent offenses. In fact, only seven teams have surrendered fewer goals per game. The true challenge, though, is injecting that dogged mentality into the offense.

Lacking the skill of some of the nation’s elite, SU must scrape by on raw effort on both ends of the ice to unsettle the best in the country.

“Even if you chip it by the defender you’re going against, you still have to crash hard to the net, you got to crash,” senior captain Jacquie Greco said. “Even if you don’t have the puck you got to always crash, to the net, crash, crash. It

kind of becomes tedious and tiring but we have to do that for a full 60 minutes.”

Lindenwood is far from the best in country, but the Lions represent the Orange’s last chance to fine-tune its approach before the Mercyhurst-hosted CHA semis in Erie, Pa. Success there will mean a likely rematch with the rival and model SU is so nearly caught up to – and a shot at extend-ing one of the Orange’s best-ever seasons.

“We want to see them again, we want to – we know we owe it to them and we really got to bring it,” Greco said. “We know we’ll get them in the championship game so we just got to be there for that game.”

[email protected]

@MrJacobK

1 4 f e brua r y 1 9 , 2 0 13

ziniu chen | staff photographer

MARGOT SCHARFE and the Orange will close out the regular season against Lindenwood during the weekend. They’ll look to transi-tion into scoring chances and punish Lindenwood on the power play as they prepare for the semifinal round of the CHA tournament.

By Bryan RubinSTAFF WRITER

Last week, Chris Fox said Syracuse’s Laruen Penney may be the best distance runner in the country right now.

After her two most recent performances at the Husky Classic in Seattle and the Big East Indoor Championships in Geneva, Ohio, Penney has a legitimate case to prove her coach right.

In Seattle, the post-graduate runner com-peted in the 3,000-meter race. After building her base in the fall, Penney’s training and determi-nation came together in the race. She ended up placing fifth with a time of 9:06.

Her time, however, was good enough to con-quer the school record of 9:12, which she set in 2012.

“Going into the race, I was really excited,” Penney said. “I think I had a chance to get my best time, but I didn’t know I’d drop it by six seconds. I was just hoping for under 9:10.”

While Penney is hoping her personal record holds up and gets her to Nationals, she had to quickly put the race behind her with the Big East Indoor Championships coming up the fol-lowing weekend.

In her final time competing in the event, Penney carried her momentum from the week before and finished third in the 3,000-meter run. While her time of 9:24.46 was much slower than at the Husky Classic, she was still able to earn SU six points – one-fifth of the 30 points they would earn total as a team on the weekend.

“This meet is not about getting individual fast times,” Penney said. “It’s more about going

out there for the team and making Syracuse look good.”

The women’s team finished ninth for the second straight year at the meet, and scored six fewer points than a year ago.

Even though Syracuse focuses more on the outdoor season, many of the runners feel vet-eran athletes like Penney are always successful indoors because they have learned to progress as athletes and become more professional.

When Penney was a freshman, she suffered a quad strain and didn’t really know what the injury was at the time. All she knew was that something was not right.

“At this time freshman year, I wasn’t even running because of the injury,” Penney said. “I would say, ‘I hope I run again at some point.’ And now I have come a really long

way since that.”Griff Graves was a teammate who watched

her overcome the injury and ultimately run her way into the Syracuse record books.

Graves has been Penney’s teammate since 2008. While he has embraced a veteran-like role on the team, Graves knows how important other older runners like Penney are to a program try-ing to resurrect its indoor reputation.

And in the past four and a half seasons, he has been a testament to that.

“You look at a girl like Lauren and she is a stud,” Graves said. “She is going to be going to Nationals this year and will tear it up because she’s learned over the years how to take it pro-fessionally, step by step. She is probably the best distance runner Syracuse has ever seen.”

[email protected]

i c e h o c k e y

Hoping for championship rematch, SU learning from Lakers

t r a c k & f i e l d

Off Big East championship success, Penney cementing Syracuse legacy

“Even if you don’t have the puck you got to always crash, to the net, crash, crash.”

Jacquie GrecoSU FORWARD

Page 15: Feb. 19, 2013

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SP ORT S PA G E 16the daily orange

By David WilsonASST. SPORTS EDITOR

J ustin Pugh now wakes up at 7 every morning. He reports to Competitive Edge Sports at

8:30, ready to start his new job.He gets right to work with resistance

training, then lifts for about an hour and a half. After a brief lunch break, he gets back to work with former New Orleans Saints tackle Jon Stinchcomb for his position drills, all with the goal of performing well at the NFL Combine.

“They train you on working on explosion, working on specific drills you’ll be running,” Pugh said, “so I’m training for the combine basically.”

Pugh is one of four former Syra-cuse players headed to Wednesday’s NFL Scouting Combine in India-napolis. Quarterback Ryan Nassib, wide receiver Alec Lemon and strong safety Shamarko Thomas are set to join the tackle at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Both Nassib and Pugh currently project as fringe first-round picks. In a quarterback class with “a whole lot of holes,” NFL Network’s Mike Mayock ranks Nassib No. 4 among

quarterbacks heading into the com-bine. The NFL Draft analyst also placed Pugh as his No. 5 offensive tackle and a likely late first-rounder.

The major knock on Pugh right now is his wingspan. His arms mea-sured shorter than what’s considered ideal at the Senior Bowl, and many now peg him as a guard. Not Mayock, who said Pugh could go as high as No. 24 to the Indianapolis Colts.

Pugh expects to be one of the most athletic offensive linemen at the com-bine – he feels good about the 10-yard split in his 40-yard dash – but where his greatest strength lies is in his interviewing. A general manager came to Duluth, Ga., to help Pugh and the rest of the prospects learn how to interview properly.

“He had already told me basically, ‘Hey look, you’re one of the best. I’m going to use you as the example for next year,’” Pugh said. “He didn’t really have to do much.

“I think once teams meet me, see what kind of kid I am, it’s just going to increase my stock even more.”

The interview expectation is also

what makes Nassib an intriguing pros-pect. Nassib is a player whose stock will rise between the combine and the NFL Draft, Mayock said, because of his personality and intelligence.

“Coaches are really going to like Ryan Nassib,” Mayock said. “He’s got good physical attributes, not great, but good physical attributes, plus he’s all the intangibles: toughness, intel-ligence and work ethic. He’s going to start to quietly climb boards.”

Nassib and Pugh’s invites weren’t a surprise to anyone. But for Lemon and Thomas, self-proclaimed bubble play-ers, the invite is a massive opportunity.

“I was kind of nervous,” Lemon said. “I always wanted to go to the combine, I just wanted to go out and prove myself.”

What Lemon needs to prove is his speed. Right now, he’s tagged with a tough-to-shake “possession

T U E S D AYfebruary 19, 2013

QUOTE OF THE DAY“If I do get traded I’m not going to sit here and pout and cry, but I’ve told them numerous times that I want to be here, so it’s up to them and management what they want to do.”Darrelle Revis

NEW YORK JETS CORNERBACK

TWEET OF THE DAY@WilliamShat-ner: My thoughts go out to the family of Dr. Jerry Buss. A brilliant team owner who will be sorely missed. MBBWilliam Shat-ner

STAT OF THE DAYMost decorated NBA ownersJerry Buss L.A. Lakers 1979-2013 10Walter A. BrownBoston Celtics 1945-1963 -7Jerry Reins-dorfChicago Bulls 1985-6

COMBINED ASPIRATIONS

Former SU standouts head to Indianapolis looking to raise draft stock

RYAN NASSIBNassib ranks first all-time in Syracuse history for completions and passing yards, and second in touchdown passes, completion percentage and total offense.

ALEC LEMONThe All-Big East first-teamer is still dodging questions about his speed regardless of his ownership of SU’s career (201) and single season (72) receptions records.

SHAMARKO THOMASAlso a Big East first-teamer, his speed and torpedo-like hitting ability can make up for his lack of size.

JUSTIN PUGHBlocked for a 1,000-yard rusher in each of his three seasons at Syracuse.

RYAN NASSIB

andrew renneisen staff photographer

JUSTIN PUGH

nate shron staff photographer

ALEC LEMON

sam maller asst. photo editor

SHAMARKO THOMAS

andrew renneisen staff photographer

AT A GLANCE

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Follow the Daily Orange for updates on the performances of Syracuse’s former players at the combine start-ing on Wednesday.

SEE COMBINE PAGE 12