January 18, 2011

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january 18, 2011

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INSIDE

Looking sharp Check out our pullout spread commemorating the Syracuse football team’s Dec. 30 win over Kansas State in the inaugural

New Era Pinstripe Bowl. The victory at Yankee Stadium marks the first bowl win for Syracuse since 2001, a homecoming for Bronx-born head coach Doug Marrone and the end of the Delone Carter era for the Orange. Pages 14-17

su at hletics

SU football nets profit of $3.9 million By Jon Harris Asst. News Editor

What a difference a year can make. For the Syracuse University football program, it was a difference of nearly $4.7 million. A year after losing $834,377, the football program made a profit of about $3.9 million in 2009, according to the most recent report by the U.S. Department of Education’s Equity in Athletics. In its first year under head coach Doug Marrone, the program reported $19,152,691 in revenue and $15,300,740 in expenses. There were two primary reasons that caused the shift in profit from 2008 to 2009, said Rob Edson, SU’s chief financial officer for athletics and senior associate athletic director. The main reason for the increased revenue was a decrease in staff expenses, he said. In 2008, SU paid

andrew renneisen | staff photographer mike sowan , day manager and bartender at DJ’s on the Hill, makes a drink at the newly opened bar. More than 200 patrons filled the bar to maximum capacity on Saturday. The bar opened in the former spot of Maggies Restaurant and Sports Bar, which closed in April 2009.

Sports bar opens in former Maggies location By Kathleen Ronayne Managing Editor

Marshall Street’s newest sports bar, DJ’s on the Hill, saw a successful opening weekend, reaching its capacity of 219 patrons on Saturday night. “It was fantastic, it was more than we even anticipated, especially

with kids gone,” said owner Dean Whittles. DJ’s opened Thursday night in the former location of Maggies Restaurant and Sports Bar. Regular hours are noon to 2 a.m., but the restaurant will open earlier on game days. Whittles and his staff said the restaurant

stands out on Marshall because of its unique, fresh menu items and a strict policy on IDing customers. Whittles has no connection to Maggies or its former owner. The bar is decorated with circular tables printed with basketballs and footballs and a long high table in

the center. Flat-screen televisions behind the bar and on the walls play sports all day, mainly college basketball in the winter season. A pool table and other game machines decorate the room, and there is a VIP lounge in the front corner with

Contributing Writer

Students at Syracuse University and other institutions of higher education in New York state could benefit from the changes to the state government in Albany. “Higher education will be the key

economic driver,” said New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo in his first State of the State address earlier this month. Cuomo, a Democrat, was inaugurated on Jan. 1, replacing former Gov. David Paterson. Cuomo was previously New York’s attorney general and is the son of former New

York Gov. Mario Cuomo. Another change in Albany is the legislature’s new composition since Republicans now control the Senate. An important question is how well Cuomo will be able to work with the GOP and what direction their cooperation will go in.

Day care to expand with alumnus gift By Laurence Leveille Asst. Copy Editor

In Cuomo’s first address to the state, he announced that Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy would organize regional councils across the state that would be responsible for forging partnerships between universities and private businesses. Cuomo specifically

Syracuse University alumnus John Reilly III and his wife, Patty, have pledged $3.5 million toward the construction of a new day care and educational center on South Campus. The Jack Reilly Learning Campus for Child Care Excellence, named after the Reillys’ 13-month-old son who died in a California day care fire, will physically and programmatically connect the two day care centers on South Campus. “This has always been an idea in the making,” said Patty Reilly.

see state politics page 9

see day care page 7

see sports bar page 8

Cuomo seeks to use higher education to create jobs, boost economy By Rebecca Shabad

see Football revenue page 11


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