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oct. 4, 2018 high 73°, low 39°
t h e i n de p e n de n t s t u de n t n e w s pa p e r of s y r a c u s e , n e w yor k |
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Fall is upon us and with that comes a trend of on-theme spices. Here’s how you can make fresh pumpkin spice and how to incorporate it into your daily routine. Page 9
Syracuse University’s Student Association approved funding for six student organizations in what one member called the “shortest SA meeting ever.” Page 3
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Syracuse has improved its Carrier Dome revenue by creating a steady profit through its beer sales. The arena is one of the only college venues to sell alcohol. Page 12
gso
GSO adds genderneutral pronouns By Casey Darnell asst. news editor
The Graduate Student Organization amended its constitution to use gender-neutral terms at a meeting on Wednesday night. Nick Mason, GSO vice president of internal affairs, switched all uses of “he” and “she” with gender-neutral phrases in the constitution. Senators voted to approve the amendment, and passed an additional resolution requiring future resolutions to “use language that is inclusive and free of discrimination.” Obi Afriyie, a university senator and graduate student in the School of Education, proposed the second part of the resolution, which won’t be binding. The resolution acts as a recommendation rather than a new rule despite the usage of the word “required” because the GSO Senate can break its own resolutions. “I think this is awesome, and thank you for taking the time to go through this beast and figure it out,” see gso page 4
on campus
Students organize Kavanaugh walkout By Casey Darnell asst. news editor
Syracuse University students are planning to walk out of classes and rally on the Quad Thursday in protest of Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination. Organizers of the SU walkout said they want to bring awareness to sexual assault and rape culture on campus and show solidarity with Christine Blasey Ford, the first of three women to accuse Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct. The Senate is expected to vote on Kavanaugh’s nomination this week as the FBI investigates the allegations against him. “This is not only something that’s happening nationally, but happening within our university, so what this walk out really is for us is to demand (university) administration to hear us and to end rape culture see walkout page 4
Candles to remember NATALIE KOLOSOVA holds a candle on the steps of Hendricks Chapel on Wednesday night at an event in remembrance of Holodomor. Holodomor was a famine in Soviet Ukraine in the 1930s. About 7 million to 10 million people died during the famine, according to the United Nations. corey henry staff photographer
city
Common Council to vote on police tech renewal By Dakota Palmer staff writer
Syracuse’s Common Council plans to vote next week on a proposal to renew technology services the city’s police department uses to investigate shootings. Along with the Syracuse Police Department technology, the council will vote on the possible addition of school resource officers to city schools and a potential bus contract for transportation to schools. At the Wednesday meeting, SPD First Deputy Chief Joe Cecile requested to renew a one-year subscription to Shotspotter, a gunfire tracking system. Cecile said the software has helped the police
department investigate shootings in the city. Cecile said neighbors sometimes do not call in incidents of shots fired and police sometimes will not investigate shootings until the next day. When gunshot-like sounds are made, a signal gets sent to a database in California that can detect whether the shots are fireworks or actual gunshots, within three to five seconds. The signal is then triangulated to 911 with a location, and dispatchers can send officers to the location of the shots. Cecile also said many of the officers also have an application on their computers and phones that will send them the triangulated sig-
nal, which can lead to faster shooting response times. “In most cases, we are arriving on scene and finding the shell casings exactly where Shotspotter is telling us they are,” Cecile said. Currently, the software only covers about 1.2 square miles in the city, including parts of the South Side. Eventually, the police department would like to expand the software to cover the majority of the city, Cecile said. The current software costs $227,500, and Cecile said he would provide the council with a city-wide cost analysis. The police department is also asking the council to authorize a
memorandum of understanding between the department and the Syracuse City School District to have police officers serve as school resource officers for three years, beginning in June 2018 and ending in June 2021. Currently, there are officers at Syracuse high schools and the Institute of Technology at Syracuse Central. Common Council President Helen Hudson said that numbers are down in the police department, and asked where the officers would come from. Cecile said the school officers will be officers that are currently employed by the department. dapalmer@syr.edu