How Caitlin Sanders carved out time as Otto the Orange, CuseHacks founder
Corey Henry | Senior Staff Photographer
Caitlin Sanders, a Syracuse University senior, spent her past four years at SU running CuseHacks events and cheering as Otto the Orange.
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Who Is Syracuse is an annual series by The Daily Orange that highlights those who have made notable contributions to the community.
Caitlin Sanders knew her time was up. It was Feb. 28, and the Syracuse University senior was almost finished running her last CuseHacks event, an annual “hackathon” where participants compete to create technology projects for 24 hours.
After an impromptu speech over Zoom thanking the people that helped her, a sense of uncertainty fell over her. All those late hours planning and organizing were now in the past.
Joseph C. Wilson Magnet High School - No. 980-1,218
Leadership Academy for Men - No. 980-1,218
Lyons - No. 980-1,218
Northeast College Preparatory - No. 980-1,218
Rochester Early College International High School - No. 980-1,218
True North Rochester Preparatory - No. 980-1,218
University Preparatory Charter School for Young Men - No. 980-1,218
Vertus Charter School - No. 980-1,218
What is the methodology?
U.S. News & World Report considers six factors including math and reading proficiency, graduation rates and college readiness weights them, and produces an overall score for each school between zero and 100.
The score correlates to a schools’ percentile for example, a school with a score of 70 is in the 70th percentile and ranks higher than 70% of schools.
Created: February 17, 2021 06:59 PM
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WHEC) While high-risk high school sports have been underway for almost three weeks, other extracurricular activities like choirs, bands, orchestras and drama clubs are still waiting for new guidance from New York State on when they can perform again.
At Eastridge High School in Irondequoit, vocal students and teachers are still taking a virtual approach to performing. I keep trying to give kids opportunities because they need little glimmers of hope, said Eastridge Vocal Director Ellice McQuay. I just thought I don t want to make any promises this year that I can t keep, so I know that I could keep a promise of recording them, giving them solos, like that s a thing that I can assure will happen.