Nov. 3, 2014

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free

monday

nov. 3, 2014 high 62°, low 49°

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 |

N • Pass it on

Starting Monday, Syracuse University students, faculty and staff will be required to change their SU ID logins once a year to strengthen cybersecurity. Page 3

dailyorange.com

P • King of Harts

Kevin Hart performed a standup comedy show at Goldstein Auditorium Monday as part of his nationwide college tour. Page 11

S • Late Christmas

SU struggled in the first half of its scrimmage against Carleton Saturday afternoon. Then Rakeem Christmas re-entered the game. Page 20

Rally to promote diversity By Anna Merod asst. news editor

More than 50 student organizations will join together on Monday to protest issues of diversity and transparency at Syracuse University. The Diversity and Transparency Rally will take place on the steps of Hendricks Chapel from 2 to 4:30 p.m. on Monday. The rally is being organized by THE General Body, which was formed in October by leaders of organizations such as the Campaign for an Advocacy Center, SU’s chapter of NAACP, Divest SU, Students of Sustainability and Pride Union. The purpose of the THE General

Courtney O’Dell, a doctoral student in the religion department, watches her son play. O’Dell and other SU graduate students have struggled to find places for child care and to pay for it. A new grant for child care won’t cover the entire cost. margaret lin photo editor

BALANCING ACT SU graduate students struggle to pay for, find places for child care By Annie Palmer staff writer

F

or Courtney O’Dell, affording child care can sometimes be a guessing game. As a doctoral student in the religion department with two young sons, the costs of child care, food and other living expenses can add up. In October, Syracuse University announced that it would offer child care grants to graduate students. Full-time graduate students can apply to receive $375 for each child under 6 years old, with a limit of two children per applicant. The deadline to apply for the grant is Nov. 3. Graduate Student Organization President Patrick Neary said he estimates there are 140 graduate students with children. So far, the GSO has received 48 applications for the grant. But while the grant is helpful, it doesn’t solve the larger problem of providing adequate

support for those with children. Several university committees and offices are working on long-term solutions to providing child care, but students and faculty say the SU community needs to change the way it views work-life balance concerns. The grant doesn’t cover the full cost of child care—it would only cover one week of child care at SU’s Early Education and Child Care Center, which would cost $400 per week for her two sons to attend, O’Dell said. On top of that, O’Dell said the center only enrolls 60 children each year among its constituency of students, faculty and staff. Parents are also encouraged to apply to be on the waiting list at least two years in advance, she added. The center’s biggest weaknesses are availability and cost, O’Dell said. The center operates on a sliding scale, where the less a person see child

care page 4

by the numbers 150 140 120 90 60 60 48

30 0 Number of Estimated children number of enrolled at SU graduate students with SU child care center each children year

Number of grant applications received by GSO so far

This is not the way responsible people run a university. Ben Kuebrich graduate student in the composition and cultural rhetoric program

Body and the DAT Rally is to inform the community about the issues different groups on campus face and also to understand how some of these varying issues are similar in certain ways, said Danielle Reed, one of the organizers for the Diversity and Transparency Rally. Many groups involved in the DAT Rally held protests earlier in the semester about campus issues such as the closing of the Advocacy Center, cuts to the Posse scholarship program and the university’s decision to not divest from fossil fuels. Among all the rallies and protests, about six or seven different lists of demands were given to the administration, Reed said. “We could kind of understand why the administration wasn’t really paying our demands any mind, when they’re getting a list of

see rally page 10


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