February 17, 2011

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february 17, 2011

t h e i n de pe n de n t s t u de n t n e w spa pe r of s y r acuse , n e w yor k lacrosse

preview

2011

2 0 11 l a c r o s s e s e a s o n p r e v i e w

40th a nni v ersa ry

Upper class The Syracuse men’s lacrosse team opens its season Sunday against Denver at 1 p.m. The Orange is

Independence days This weekend, The Daily Orange celebrates

headed by a senior class looking for its third national championship in four seasons. The Daily Orange breaks down everything you need to know about the upcoming season, including predictions for Syracuse’s finish in the Big East and the NCAA tournament. SEE INSERT

its 40th anniversary of independence from SU. Read more about how the break happened and why it matters. Pages 19-22

Smoke-free forum draws little interest

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Calling out

By Sean Cotter Staff Writer

Six students attended Student Association’s town hall meeting about the smoke-free campus initiative Wednesday. Five were SA members. SA Vice President Jessica Cunnington and the rest of the committee in charge of drafting the smoke-free initiative proposal wanted more student opinion before presenting a concrete list of goals to the assembly and university officials. They were specifically looking to get input from smokers around campus at the meeting, Cunnington said. None of the six people at the meeting were smokers. SA may have another town hall meeting in the future for the smoke-free campus initiative, Cunnington said, but the association will announce it further ahead of time in an effort to gain a higher turnout. Wednesday’s town hall meeting was announced at the end of Tuesday’s regular SA meeting. Because of the low turnout, committee members may walk around campus this weekend and speak with people who are smoking to discover their opinion on this topic, Cunnington said. Amy Snider, SA President Neal Casey’s chief of staff, said SA will focus on the L.C. Smith College of Engineering and Computer Science and the School of Architecture because they tend to have the most smokers. Both schools, as well as the Martin J. Whitman School of Management, have the highest percentage of international students on campus, Snider said. International students tend to smoke more than domestic students, she said. A representative from the School of Architecture last semester said this initiative would be difficult to implement based on the high number of smokers in his school, Cunnington said. One idea discussed at the meeting was a possible plan to move smoking receptacles 10 to 15 feet away from see smoking page 6

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Students, administration continue discussion on medical amnesty policy

want to be held responsible for anything

By Laurence Leveille

A

that was wrong with him,� said Pech-

Asst. Copy Editor

fter a night of drinking, Iris Pechenik’s friend walked away and didn’t come back.

When Pechenik and others searched

for him, they found him on the floor of his dorm room, vomiting what looked like blood.

enik, a sophomore music major. A year later, Pechenik now knows her friend hit his head on his bed frame and split his lip when he blacked out. The blood was from the cut lip, not because he was sick, she said. Many students, like Pechenik and her friends, avoid calling for help. And those

No one called for help. “We didn’t want to get in trouble for

who do call sometimes find the focus is

drinking in the dorms, and we also didn’t

see amnesty page 7

photo illustration by kirsten celo | photo editor

Financial aid for 2011-12 to increase By Jon Harris Asst. News Editor

Until Steve Caruso receives his financial aid award from Syracuse University in late March, he doesn’t know what to expect. He’s always wanted to get into the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, but he has already been accepted to the University of Connecticut, where the public university tuition is reasonable. “I really wanted to get into Newhouse, but I’m not sure if that’s going to happen,� said Caruso, a senior at Lewis S. Mills High School in Burlington, Conn. “I think that if there’s a lot of money for financial aid at SU, it would probably help my decision.� Caruso is new to the financial aid process and is unsure how much aid the university will give him based off his family’s upper-middle-class standing. Caruso filed the Free Application for Federal Student Aid forms and the College Scholarship Service Profile required at SU to apply for financial aid by Feb. 1, the deadline for first-year and transfer students to file the forms. More than 10,000 prospective students will play the waiting game until the end of March, when they will be notified of their financial aid awards. But it could be worth the wait — the university will provide more undergraduate financial aid for the 2011-12 school year than it did for the current school year, said Gwenn Judge, director of the Office of Budget and Planning, in an e-mail. The increase in financial aid is mainly because more students will be entering in fall 2011 than leaving this spring, Judge said. The university will have more revenue from undergraduate tuition with this increase in students, she said. Judge said there is no estimate of the amount of 2011-12 undergraduate financial aid available yet. SU reported $172.9 million in undergraduate financial aid for the 2010-11 school year, according to the Fiscal Year see financial aid page 8


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February 17, 2011 by The Daily Orange - Issuu