September 6, 2011

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FINALLY COOLIN’ DOWN? hi

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TUESDAY

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september 6, 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

INSIDENEWS

INSIDEOPINION

INSIDEPULP

INSIDESPORTS

Science of love Women studying math and

The next chapter In light of the new facility, The

Fun at the fair Diverse attractions and good times keep

Forest rangers Syracuse rallies from a 15-point,

science fields struggle to balance romance. Page 7

1 arrest, 15 hospitalized at Dayglow

Daily Orange Editorial Board looks forward to more library improvements. Page 5

the fairgrounds packed with people. Check out The Daily Orange photo gallery from the fair online. Page 9

WHAT A DIFFERENCE A YEAR CAN MAKE In the 2008-09 fiscal year, which is from July 1, 2008, to June 30, 2009, there was a 3 percent pay increase for SU employees. The most recent 990 is based on the 2009 calendar year. Only half of the increase is included, meaning half of the 2008-09 fiscal year is included in the report. Here are the highest paid employees and salaries for the 2008 and 2009 calendar years:

ASST. NEWS EDITOR

HEAD MEN’S BASKETBALL COACH

ATHLETIC DIRECTOR

Head football coach Doug Marrone’s salary is disclosed. Chancellor Nancy Cantor’s salary and compensation is revealed a year after she ranked among the most highly compensated college presidents in the country. All Syracuse University employees received a 3 percent pay increase during the recession, which is the same time when the university’s expenses outweighed its revenues. All are highlights in SU’s most recent Internal Revenue Service Form 990 report. In terms of SU officials’ salaries, the most recent 990 covers calendar year 2009, from Jan. 1, 2009, to Dec. 31, 2009. But the university’s revenues and expenses cover the 2009-10 fiscal year, which runs from July 1, 2009, to June 30, 2010.

2009 salary: $510,644 2008 salary: $490,155

The football coach

2009 salary: $1,186,225 2008 salary: $1,133,428

THE DAILY ORANGE

SEE DAYGLOW PAGE 6

WHAT IS DAYGLOW?

Dayglow began on college campuses in 2006 in Florida. The events infuse high-energy music, art, dance and paint. Attendees are entertained by aerial acts, stilt walkers, contortion acts and fire shows, along with blasts of paint from cannons. Dayglow will travel to many cities this year, including: New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago and Melbourne. Source: dayglowtour.com

2. Doug Marrone HEAD FOOTBALL COACH

2009 salary: $1,017,646 2008 salary: N/A

Marrone was not employed by SU until December 2008.

3. Nancy Cantor CHANCELLOR

2009 salary: $615,882 2008 salary: $598,758

4. Daryl Gross

5. Louis Marcoccia CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER AND EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT

2009 salary: $478,894 2008 salary: $447,281

6. Eric Spina

VICE CHANCELLOR AND PROVOST

graphic by becca mcgovern | presentation director

Fifteen hospitalizations and one arrest occurred Friday night at the Dayglow paint party at the Nicholas J. Pirro Convention Center in downtown Syracuse. Attendees were hospitalized for overdosing on alcohol or drugs, said Capt. Shannon Trice of the Syracuse Police Department. It is unknown whether they were Syracuse University students, but the majority of those hospitalized were underage, Trice said. The arrest was for harassment and resisting arrest. Five thousand people attended the sold-out event, a dance party where attendees are splattered with paint. The event was part of the Dayglow BLU (Beats, Love, Unity) tour, which features electronic artists including Steve Aoki, DJ Diplo and Chuckie. Steve Aoki and DJ Diplo have both played concerts at SU events in the past. The event, targeted at young people in their teens and twenties, attracted a number of SU students. Trice said SPD received warning that there would likely be drinking and drug use, such as Ecstasy and PCP (Phencyclidine) at the event, Trice said. A representative from the Oncenter declined to comment. A Rural/Metro ambulance took

Form reveals officials’ salaries, pay increases By Jon Harris

1. Jim Boeheim

By Meghin Delaney and Dara McBride

4th-quarter deficit to upend Wake Forest in overtime. Page 20

2009 salary: $440,644 2008 salary: $414,946

7. Melvin Stith

DEAN OF THE MARTIN J. WHITMAN SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT

2009 salary: $436,999 2008 salary: $410,293

8. George Langford DEAN OF THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES

2009 salary: $358,773 2008 salary: $179,400*

9. Peter Blanck

UNIVERSIT Y PROFESSOR AND BURTON BL AT T INSTITUTE CHAIRMAN

2009 salary: $356,608 2008 salary: $330,689

SCALE $1,000,000 $800,000 $600,000 $400,000 $200,000

10. Kenneth Shaw CHANCELLOR EMERITUS AND UNIVERSIT Y PROFESSOR

2009 salary: $351,205 2008 salary: $331,250

*Langford began midyear at SU in 2008, only half of his salary was reported on the 990 that covered the 2008 calendar year. The most recent 990 reflects Langford’s full compensation.

$0 2009 Salary 2008 Salary

Source: Syracuse University’s Internal Revenue Service Form 990 reports

In 2009, his first year as head coach of the SU football team, Marrone made a base salary of $1,017,646 en route to leading the Orange to a 4-8 record. Though Marrone led the team to a better record than the 3-9 record his predecessor Greg Robinson put up in 2008, Marrone made about $78,000 less than Robinson in base compensation. Robinson — who coached the Orange from 2005 to 2008 and compiled a 10-37 record — was paid $2,214,505 in 2008, which included a $1,083,309 buyout for not coaching the final season of his five-year contract and $1,095,987 in base salary for coaching his fourth season. “Each coach has a contract they negotiate with the athletics director and the university, and there’s a whole bunch of variables in every contract that can affect salary, incentives, timing and so forth,” said Kevin Quinn, SU’s senior vice president for public affairs. Quinn declined to disclose the terms of Marrone’s contract or whether the head coach received a raise or bonus following the team’s 8-5 record and New Era Pinstripe Bowl victory last season. At SU, all athletic department salaries, including coaches and officials, such as the athletic director, are paid

for out of athletics revenues. Income from athletics includes ticket sales, gifts and sponsorships, among others. But a portion of athletic officials’ salaries are paid through International Sports Properties Inc., a marketing and multimedia company that holds the rights to radio and TV for SU sports, Quinn said. For example, Marrone’s base salary of $1,017,646 includes $305,672 paid by SU, $700,000 from International Sports Properties and a net income of $11,974 realized from conducting a summer football camp.

The chancellor In 2008, SU Chancellor Cantor was among the 30 private college presidents who earned more than $1 million in total compensation. Cantor was listed as the 14th-highest paid president with a total compensation of $1,386,464, which included a onetime bonus of $500,000. But Cantor gave the bonus back to the university as part of a $1 million donation with her husband, Steven Brechin, an SU sociology professor. The gift was announced Oct. 31, 2007, as a donation to SU’s capital campaign, The Campaign for Syracuse University, which has a goal of raising $1 billion. The $500,000 bonus was given to Cantor for the completion of her first contract, which ran from 2004 to June 2008. SU’s Board of Trustees awarded Cantor a new six-year contract through 2014 in June 2008. In 2009, Cantor’s total compensation was down to $895,025, but her base salary was more than $17,000 higher than her base compensation of $598,758 in 2008. In March 2009, Cantor announced she was taking a 10 percent pay cut for the 2009-10 fiscal year in light of the recession and its effect on the university. Cantor’s base salary in 2009 was $615,882, according to the 990 report. “That’s her base salary for the year and that does reflect half the year’s 10 percent voluntary pay reduction,” Quinn said. Only half of the 10 percent pay cut is reflected in the most recent 990 because the report is based on the

SEE SALARIES PAGE 6


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