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September 5, 2024

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thursday, sept. 5, 2024

celebrating 120 years

free

N • Ostrom update

C • Syracuse return

S • ‘Beast mode’

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SU adjusted its plans for its proposed dorm on the 700 block of Ostrom. The new proposal will not use the 727 Comstock Ave. site.

Cali M. Banks returned to Syracuse for a position at Light Works. She also has a documentary exhibit at the Everson Museum of Art.

LeQuint Allen Jr. has become the heartbeat of Syracuse’s offense with his tough running style.

GANNON’S HAS THE SCOOP John Gannon was inspired to open Gannon’s Ice Cream following his father’s n 1982, John Gannon was a student at Onondaga Community College with no idea what career he advice. Now, the shop wanted to pursue. Growing up, he worked at his father’s full-service grocery store, Gannon’s Silver Star, but he felt a sense of inertia about his future. It wasn’t a matter of laziness, but of aimlessness. is a beloved part of the “I had no idea what I wanted to do,” John said. “I think it was driving my parents crazy.” So John’s father convinced him and his sister, Eileen, to start Gannon’s Ice Cream shop at the Syracuse community. small ice cream stand on the lot of Gannon’s Silver Star. The stand went through several managers, and Story by Ben Butler asst. copy editor

Photos by Solange Jain asst. photo editor

Design by Lucía Santoro-Vélez presentation director

I

it wasn’t until John was stuck and the grocery store had gone out of business that the now 42-year-old ice cream store served up its first scoop. see gannon’s page 4-5

suny esf

ESF students voice frustration over SU elective course fee By Kate Jackson asst. news editor

When SUNY ESF students registered for classes last spring, they did not yet know that the university would introduce an Accessory Instruction Fee. The $355-per-credit fee for elective courses taken at Syracuse

University went into effect for the fall 2024 semester. The announcement first came in a July 15 campus-wide email from ESF President Joanie Mahoney that stated ESF students taking an SU course outside their major requirements would need to pay the fee. Some ESF students said the decision made

them feel pressured to adjust their schedules accordingly. “I was panicked and upset,” Jason Eaton, a senior environmental education major, said. “We had been told and advertised that we could take 16 credits for free at SU… just for a lot of people to then be denied those credits.”

Previously, ESF students could take courses at SU at no additional cost. SU students may also register for classes at SUNY ESF for no extra cost, according to SU’s Office of the Registrar. The decision to introduce a fee was made as part of a “five-year accessory instruction” contractual agreement between the two universities, according

to Mahoney’s July email. The charge will not apply to SU courses that are required to complete an ESF major, such as general physics courses. Mahoney also said the cost of offering SU courses became “prohibitive” under the new agreement, which required ESF to introduce the new fee. see esf page 6


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September 5, 2024 by The Daily Orange - Issuu