thursday, sept. 12, 2024
celebrating 120 years
free
N • ‘CUSE Cash
C • Shirt showcase
S • Uplifting journey
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Several off-campus eateries began accepting ‘CUSE Cash, SU’s cash account program, this fall semester.
Around campus, students sport graphic tees that represent them in some way, from an affinity for thrifting to favorite teams.
After growing up in Ghana, Ernest Bawa has spent the last decade playing soccer in the United States.
Planned Parenthood Generation Action established its Syracuse University chapter last fall, making it one of over 350 across the country. This year, PPGen will focus on advocating for abortion rights and affordable healthcare. collin snyder contributing photographer
Action Planned Parenthood Generation Action to increase outreach ahead of 2024 general election
for access By Kate Jackson asst. news editor
W
h e n Emma Burke and a handful of her friends discovered that there was a local Planned Parenthood chapter only a few blocks from campus, they wondered why more Syracuse University students weren’t aware of its presence. This shared thought eventually grew into the establishment of an SU chapter of Planned Parenthood Generation Action last fall. Despite starting with under ten members in the club’s first semester,
PPGen at SU is now approaching one year on campus. “There wasn’t an official organization on campus that was working alongside (Planned Parenthood) at the time,” Burke said. “Especially with the political climate, it was vital that this organization have a voice and student leaders on campus.” Burke was one of the founding members of PPGen, a gender-inclusive club advocating for increased access and awareness of reproductive healthcare across campus and in the broader Syracuse community. Ahead of the impending 2024 United States general elections, several PPGen see ppgen page 6
on campus
Joint Falk, Newhouse Esports program kicks off first semester By Madeline Goodheart asst. digital editor
Syracuse University’s first group of students pursuing the new bachelor of science in Esports Communications and Management began their first semester of study this fall. The degree program, a collaboration between SU’s David B. Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics and S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, is the first of its kind at a Research-1 institution. While the major only has four students enrolled in its inaugural
semester and six prospective spring transfers, Esports Executive Director Joey Gawrysiak there are big plans for the program’s future. “(The major) brings something that students are passionate about and can relate to and probably are already researching … and puts it through that new lens that they care about,” Gawrysiak said. The new major was first announced by Chancellor Kent Syverud in a Jan. 18, 2023, message to the SU community. In February of that year, administrators told The Daily Orange they may admit
students to the program as early as the fall 2023 semester but would have a guaranteed incoming class by fall 2024. The program won the 2024 Emerging Program of the Year award at the National Association of Collegiate Esports National Convention this summer. The 2023-24 academic year served as “year zero” for the Esports major, as the university prepared and tested ideas for the unprecedented program, Gawrysiak said in a June SU News podcast. The program currently requires students to complete a 36-credit
Esports Core consisting of introductory communications, sports management and Esports-specific courses — including SMC 330: Topics in Esports and Media and SPM 342: The Business of Esports. Majors also are required to take SPM 415: Sport Law or an equivalent Communications Law course, according to SU’s course catalog. In 2018, Newhouse collaborated with social video service Twitch to launch the first Esports and Media course at SU. The course became available via the Newhouse Sports Media Center, inviting industry
partners to serve as case studies for students. Partners of this course in recent years include ESL, Microsoft and Super League. Only one Esports-specific course, SPM 300: Introduction to Esports, accepted students this fall semester. Students then select one of the three following tracks: Esports Business and Management, focusing on sports promotion, sport venue management and financing for emerging enterprises; Esports Communications, which studies public relations and social media tactics that exist in the esports world
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