April 21, 2014

Page 1

free

monday

april 21, 2014 high 75°, low 53°

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 • Signed and delivered

S • Looking forward

Divest SU and ESF plans to hold a rally Monday morning against fossil fuel investment and will then march to the chancellor’s office. Page 3

dailyorange.com

who is Syracuse?

The Syracuse Spring Game on Saturday showed fans in attendance that the football program is moving in a positive direction. Page 20

The Daily Orange asked readers to nominate people for its “Who is Syracuse?” series, running April 21-24. Alicia Verdile and Megan Marshall are featured today. Page 9-10

city

District sets plan for Fowler Career academies to replace Fowler High School’s original model By Annie Palmer news editor

illustration by natalie riess art director

Running strong One year later, SU community reflects on tragedy for inspiration in 2014 Boston Marathon By Jocelyn Delaney staff writer

C

olleen Keilty has mapped out parts of the Boston Marathon course more than a dozen times to help her train for this year’s marathon. But no matter how many times she runs it, she breaks down in tears when she approaches the Boylston Street area. “I don’t even know necessarily what I’m feeling, kind of like I still

can’t believe that happened and I know I’m super lucky that I can be running,” said Keilty, who graduated from Syracuse University in 2009. April 15, 2014 marked the oneyear anniversary of the Boston Marathon bombings, which killed three people and left more than 260 others injured. On Monday, Keilty will be one of many members of the SU community running in this year’s marathon to support runners and the city of Boston.

Colleen Terry ’87, Jessica Boardman ’09 and Bridget Hughes, a case manager at the SU Abroad office, will also experience the emotional run. Although last year’s attack affected each of them differently, they all know their memories from last year and the desire to support the Boston community will push them across the finish line. ••• Keilty and her parents had just stepped into the Mandarin Oriental Hotel on Boylston Street to meet up with her older brother so they could watch his girlfriend, Steph, finish the race. Just when they found Keilty’s brother, they heard a loud explosion from outside. Everyone began yelling and her

brother grabbed Keilty and her parents. They headed out a back entrance, she said. Steph was stopped on the course with other runners about a mile away from the finish line uninjured. They spent the day “sheltered in place” at the Prudential Center to stay safe because police thought that more bombs might go off. “Literally one minute later or earlier and it could have been completely different,” Keilty said. “Someone was looking out for us that day.” Before last year, Keilty had never run a marathon, but it was always on her list of things to accomplish. When she saw that the Boston Athletic Association was having a contest for invitations to race this year, see boston

marathon page 8

Fowler High School, one of three Syracuse City schools deemed priority schools by New York state, is set to become a Public Service Leadership Academy by the next school year. Officials presented their plans to phase out Fowler from its current state at a board meeting on Wednesday. The newly renovated building will now house career academies with different focuses, including: police, fire department, a junior ROTC Navy program, emergency medical technician classes, cosmetology and several other areas, said David Cecile, a commissioner on the Syracuse City School District Board of Education. The new academy will begin with incoming ninth graders, grouped into a separate school from next year’s 10th, 11th and 12th grade classes. The inaugural class will also have its own principal and support staff, which will expand as the traditional school is phased out, Cecile said.

still the same Fowler High School’s graduation rates have stayed at 29 percent for the last four to five years. Some of the programs will also have specialists from Onondaga Community College, the State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry and other organizations, Cecile said. District officials hope that including elements of higher education in the school will bridge the gap between high school and college, he said. “What it is, is they’re trying to draw kids’ interests into the school,

see fowler page 6


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April 21, 2014 by The Daily Orange - Issuu