April 5, 2016

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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 |

NÏeÏIt’s on us

PĂŹeĂŹInnovation nation

Carrie Bettinger-LĂłpez, the White House adviser on violence against women, spoke at Syracuse University on Monday about sexual assault. Page 3

dailyorange.com

The South Side Innovation Center is celebrating its 10th year of helping startup companies get their footing in Syracuse and expand beyond the city. Page 9

SĂŹeĂŹ 9-0(-2+ĂŹ&03'/7

Briana Day, Syracuse’s best shot blocker, has stopped blocking shots to prevent herself from getting into foul trouble. Instead, Day has started taking charges. Page 16

A SOBERING REALITY

FROM PRAY TO PARTY How SU became one of the nation’s top party schools

Officials reflect on donation JPMorgan Chase sustains 5 years of investment in SU’s IVMF By Justin Mattingly managing editor

illustration by devyn passaretti head illustrator

By Jacob Gedetsis social media director

Editor’s Note: Over the past month, The Daily Orange has collaborated with the Department of Newspaper and Online Journalism at Syracuse University on a series of stories relating to alcohol culture on the SU campus. Multiple stories will appear in The D.O. in the coming days.

A

tall blond girl stumbles toward the Carrier Dome. Her arms wrapped around two of her friends, she cocks her head back and screams, “We are the No. 1 party school!� No one blinks an eye. This wasn’t always a common sight. In the 1870s, consuming alcohol off campus could get you expelled. Over its 146-year history, Syracuse University has transi-

tioned from a strictly dry campus to one of the nation’s top party schools. Michael Hevel, a professor at the University of Arkansas who is currently working on a book about the history of alcohol on college campuses, said he suspects less has changed than people may think. He said he has found that despite campus rules, drinking has always been part of see alcohol page 6

IN HISTORY 1914 SU banned drinking in campus student housing and on school property.

%6',ĂŹ AĂŹ ĂŹ SU was officially founded.

New York raised drinking age from 18 to 19.

)&@ĂŹ AĂŹ A committee of students, faculty and staff approved a policy to allow drinking at college events.

1999 Riots broke out on Livingston Avenue after police tried to shut down a block party.

)'@ĂŹ AĂŹ New York raised the drinking age to 21 to comply with the federal National Minimum Drinking Age Act.

9+978ĂŹ The Princeton Review ranked SU the No. 1 party school in the U.S.

When you walk into the offices of the Institute for Veterans and Military Families, there’s a collage of photos on the right-hand side. Around the center text announcing where you are, there are scenes of Syracuse University serving veterans over multiple decades. World War I. World War II. Now there are images of the university serving post-9/11 veterans. It’s that history — that commitment — that the IVMF uses to attract partners. That’s the pitch. “I think that as folks are thinking about whether or not to partner with the IVMF, you’re always looking for signs of long-term sustainability and certainly this kind of commitment speaks to that,� said IVMF Chief Operating Officer Maureen Casey. Five years ago, the IVMF got off the ground with a large investment from JPMorgan Chase & Co. Now, five years later, the largest financial institution in the world has invested another $13.8 million into the institute, which aims to help SU continue its long history of transforming the services and resources relating to veterans and their families. The IVMF is a soft money institution, which means it doesn’t receive money from SU. So partnerships like the JPMorgan Chase one allow the IVMF to survive. The process for creating the IVMF began with the expansion of Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans with Disabilities (EBV), one of the entrepreneurship and small business programs offered by the institute. As EBV endured more success, there was an “opportunity recognition� moment for the university, said Mike Haynie, the founder of the IVMF and the vice chancellor for veteran and military affairs at SU. There wasn’t an interdisciplinary academic institute focused on veterans and their families anywhere in the United States. “To me that didn’t make a whole lot of sense,� Haynie said. Haynie ended up in a meeting

see ivmf page 8


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