November 8, 2011

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SALVATION hi

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TUESDAY

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november 8, 2011

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

INSIDE NEWS

Part 1 of 3

Close to heart

Spreading wealth SA doles out funding to some student organizations during the budget meeting. Page 3

INSIDE OPINION

Election bey Student PAC endorses Khalid Bey for District 4 of the Common Council. Page 5

INSIDE PULP

Up close and personal SA candidates share personal insights through quirky survey answers. Page 11

Syracuse community recalls feelings of dread unraveled by Pan Am Flight 103 Editor’s note: This week marks SU’s annual Remembrance Week, during which the campus comes together to remember the victims of the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing.

By Debbie Truong

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ASST. NEWS EDITOR

hen Pan Am Flight 103 was reduced to wreckage and rubble on Dec. 21, 1988, a pall was cast on members of the Syracuse University community, near and far. A bomb went off aboard the plane and killed 16 crew members and all 243 passengers, including 35 students returning from semesters in London and Florence, Italy, through SU’s study abroad program. Falling debris also claimed 11 lives in

Soccer start-up The Syracuse Silver Knights, a new professional indoor soccer team, has the community excited for its inaugural season. Page 20

courtesy of su archives MARIO CUOMO, former New York governor, speaks at the Jan. 18, 1989, memorial service held at the Carrier Dome in honor of those who died in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. Thirty-five students were on board. Feelings of dread began to creep up as Marino thought of his friends who spent the semester studying abroad in regions across Europe and likely booked flights home for the holidays around that time. “I was getting very, very tense,” he said. On edge, Marino rode the Express Bus to meet his awaiting fiancee, a then-SU undergraduate who already left campus for Winter Break, at his parents’ home for dinner. The door burst open just as Marino neared the doorway; his mother and

fiancee stared back at him. Marino’s fiancee delivered the word — Rick Monetti, a close friend and a fraternity brother Marino helped initiate the year before, died in the bombing. Marino buckled, nearly fainting at the news, as his fiancee and mother braced him. He spent the night consuming media coverage and waiting by the phone, Valium and a bottle of scotch by his side. As Marino grieved in the comfort of family, some of those left on SU’s campus gathered at a service in Hendricks Chapel.

SEE REMEMBRANCE PAGE 9

Juggling act

Lone SA comptroller candidate hopes to bring financial responsibility to forefront By Liz Sawyer

INSIDE SPORTS

Lockerbie, Scotland, when large sections of the plane fell crashing to the ground. The workday was wrapping up at Cas Marino’s advertising agency in Manhattan. He stepped into the lobby and glanced at the television airing news reports of a plane crash. Coverage of the disaster was too premature for Marino, who graduated from SU the semester before, to realize how close to home the tragedy hit. He left for drinks with a coworker that evening, just as information surrounding the crash began to surface. As Marino sat in the bar, TV screens flashed with new details and the situation grew direr. Everybody on board perished, news reports confirmed. Authorities suspected a terrorist plot.

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ASST. NEWS EDITOR

tephen DeSalvo enjoys politics. The Student Association comptroller candidate spends a great deal of time watching CNN and always has news websites open on his laptop. But what DeSalvo enjoys most about being politically active is the ability to give students a voice. “Any time I join something or any time I take an action, it’s always with other people in mind,” said DeSalvo, a sophomore chemical engineering and math major. “And as comptroller that wouldn’t change. I’m not doing this for me. It’s more to help fill a void on campus by taking on a position — which is quite tough and quite time-consuming — to help students receive what they need to receive.” DeSalvo said it was this mentality that led him to join SA and the Finance Board, and run for comptroller. DeSalvo is the only declared candidate. He was a part of student government activities in high school at the local, state and national levels.

SEE DESALVO PAGE 6

STUDENT ASSOCIATION

ELECTIONS

2011

GET YOUR VOTES IN Student Association is the student governing body of Syracuse University and State University of New York College of Environmental Science and Forestry undergraduate students. Voting for Student Association for the 56th session begins Monday, Nov. 14, and runs until Thursday, Nov. 17. There are two candidates for SA president — Dylan Lustig and Taylor Carr — and there is one candidate for SA comptroller, Stephen DeSalvo. Voting is available online through each student’s MySlice page. If less than 10 percent of the student body casts their ballots by the end of Nov. 17, voting will extend until Nov. 18.

kristen parker | asst. photo editor STEPHEN DESALVO, a member of the Finance Board, plans to mandate that all SA members take some form of fiscal training to better serve students.


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