April 28, 2014

Page 1

free

MONDAY

april 28, 2014 high 63°, low 47°

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 • More than a goal

dailyorange.com

P • Moment of ‘Clarity’

A Falk School professor is premiering his in-depth documentary on how sports can change the lives of people with disabilities. Page 3

Rapper 2 Chainz and electronic dance music DJ Zedd electrified the crowd for the annual Block Party concert in the Carrier Dome. Page 11

S • Out of luck

Syracuse fights back and comes up empty in a 15-14 loss to Notre Dame in the ACC tournament final on Sunday. Page 20

‘EVERY DAY SHOULD BE

MAYFEST’

University releases report Outside consulting firm details areas for improvement for SU By Jessica Iannetta and Dylan Segelbaum the daily orange

Students crowd around Castle Court to celebrate the end of the year on Friday as part of MayFest. People spent the day traveling between Castle Court, Walnut Park and Euclid Avenue to socialize, eat free food and enjoy live music. renee zhou staff photographer

WA L N U T PA R K

E U C L I D AV E N U E

Students enjoy warm weather, relax with free food, live music

Party-goers let loose in end-ofthe-year off-campus celebrations

see walnut page 8

see euclid page 8

SU teams struggle with athletic facility limitations By Phil D’Abbraccio asst. copy editor

Last February, Syracuse University Athletics announced plans for a new, state-of-the-art $17 million practice f a c i l ity for the O r a n g e ’s

YEAR IN

sports

football program. The proposed facility, to be built where the Joseph Vielbig Outdoor Track Stadium stands now, is expected to vastly enhance the program’s status and attract better recruits. Along with plans to build a new track facility on South Campus, it will also benefit other teams in the athletic program.

Until these new facilities open, though, some Syracuse programs have had to and will continue to compromise their practices due to the state of SU’s current facilities. Even when the facilities are constructed, some programs will remain unimproved. “Everyone has their own quirky things that maybe they’re working

on,” said Paul Flanagan, the Syracuse women’s ice hockey head coach, “and their own little battles they have to fight.”

Women’s lax faces overcrowding When plans for the new football facility were announced, the SU women’s lacrosse program was fresh see facilities page 18

For Syracuse University to be successful in the next five years, a majority of faculty and staff members believe the school must “significantly change,” according to a sweeping, 38-page report from an outside consulting firm released late Friday afternoon. The report from Bain & Co., a global management consulting firm based in Boston, analyzes ways the school can become more efficient and effective. SU commissioned the report last fall and formed a committee made up of faculty, staff, deans and administrators to help compile the analysis. Bain & Co. is separate from Bain Capital, an investment company founded by former presidential candidate Mitt Romney. But, Romney worked for Bain & Co. from 1977-85, and again for a short time in the early 1990s. The analysis was put together during the course of four months and its findings have been presented to Chancellor Kent Syverud. Bain conducted interviews with more than 110 faculty, students and administrators. The company also surveyed 1,221 employees and drew on existing university data as well as information from peer institutions for the report. The report examines 16 different areas of the university and looks at financial trends; compares SU to peer institutions; and identifies places of “concern, inefficiency and ineffectiveness” in the way the school works. Here’s some of the report’s findings:

Strategic Plan First, the company found SU lacks an “overarching strategic plan” — a clear vision and objective for the school. This plan would help with decision-making in areas such as enrollment, hiring and spending. Because there is no strategic plan,

see bain page 10


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