March 5, 2013

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march 5, 2013

t h e i n de pe n de n t s t u de n t n e w spa pe r of s y r acuse , n e w yor k

INSIDENEWS

INSIDEOPINION

INSIDEPULP

INSIDESPORTS

DA I LYOR A NGE .C OM

Fueling the fire

Source of inspiration Nicholas Kristof is a wise choice

Fess up Syracuse Confessions has

All in the family Dylan Donahue is the latest

Who is Syracuse? Go online and fill out a form

Students protest against SU investing in fossil fuels. Page 3

for the 2013 commencement speaker because of his life experiences. Page 5

become a forum for students to anonymously share secrets online. Page 11

member of the Donahue family to suit up for the Syracuse men’s lacrosse team. Page 20

to tell us who you think best exemplifies the Syracuse University community.

common council

Housing decision is postponed By Nicki Gorny ASST. NEWS EDITOR

The resolution to create a “student resident” category in the city zoning code was held at the Syracuse Common Council meeting Monday. Khalid Bey, 4th district Syracuse common councilor, chose to hold the resolution to continue discussion of the legality of creating student-use zones, he said after the meeting. The amendment to the city zoning code is part of legislation proposed by Bey and the Southeast University Neighborhood Association to

SEE COUNCIL PAGE 10

com m encem en t 2 013

Seniors react to selection of speaker By Jessica Iannetta ASST. NEWS EDITOR

Sweta Giri had never heard about Nicholas Kristof, but one bit of information from a friend told her all she needed to know. “He writes about Cambodia,” her friend told her. “You’ll like him.” That was enough for Giri, a senior sociology major with a minor in Southeast Asian studies, to get excited about Syracuse University’s choice for the 2013 commencement speaker. Kristof, a New York Times columnist, will give the 2013 commencement address to SU and State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry students on May 12 in the Carrier Dome.

SEE KRISTOF PAGE 7

illustration by micah benson | art director

LOST IN TRANSLATION Newhouse’s emphasis on English, group work results in challenges for international students

By Nicki Gorny

W

ASST. NEWS EDITOR

hen Kyungseo Han was asked to delete a photo of a girl wearing a spaghettistrap tank top from her camera because officials at a Model United Nations debate in Singapore deemed it inappropriate, she knew she’d have to go abroad to get a degree in communications. Han’s desire to study communications under greater press freedom brought her to the S.I. Newhouse

School of Public Communications at Syracuse University, where she is currently a sophomore television, radio and film major. “I found that the U.S. is more adaptable to studying communications. They’re more open and there’s more freedom,” said Han, who is originally from South Korea. Last year, Han and 39 other students were part of the largest number of international undergraduates at Newhouse in recent years, according to enrollment statistics

from the Slutzker Center for International Services. This number is likely to continue to grow as recruiting efforts increase in Asia, Europe and South America, said Rosanna Grassi, associate dean at Newhouse. But Newhouse, ranked among the top communications schools in the country, poses distinct challenges to international students through particular emphases on language, interactive group work and media awareness. “If I’m a math major, that’s a uni-

versal language. I can solve problems with people across the world using numbers and symbols that we’ll all understand,” Grassi said. “But communications is not that way. It’s language-based.” For this reason, admissions staff members request prospective Newhouse students score a 100 on the Test of English as a Foreign Language, or a 7.5 on the International English Language Testing System. These standards are the highest

SEE INTERNATIONAL PAGE 6


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