Syracuse students have been besieged by racist attacks, and more than a dozen told us they're scared and angry with the school's tepid response

Get the Full StoryMaranie Staab Reuters

Protests erupted at Syracuse University earlier this month after a rash of racist incidents at the upstate New York campus.

Insider spoke to more than 15 students about the issue, and while most said they were indeed scared, their main issue was how the administration was addressing their concerns.

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SYRACUSE, New York A virus has been spreading across the Syracuse University campus.

It started on November 8, when students living on the sixth floor of Day Hall woke up to see the N-word scrawled on the mirror of their bathroom. A few days later, a student looked out the window of their off-campus apartment building and saw a swastika drawn in the fresh snow. That same day, someone wrote "glory hole fer Asians" next to a small divot in the wall of the physics building.See the rest of the story at Business InsiderNOW WATCH: Most maps of Louisiana aren't entirely right. Here's what the state really looks like.See Also:Anti-racist protesters at Syracuse University brought the chancellor to his knees, but now they want his head'Sexual racism' is a major problem on queer dating apps like Grindr, and it may be causing depression in black menA white supremacist manifesto was AirDropped to students' phones during late night studying at Syracuse University, according to campus security

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