“Women Empowered” and “Naturally Me” host the first annual Curl Con

By Beverly Wakiaga

Wavy, curly, kinky, coily, straight, short and long.

There was plenty of hair at Quinnipiac’s first annual Curl Con. Women Empowered and Naturally Me clubs held the event on Bobcat Lawn. The purpose was to give women a space to appreciate and embrace their natural hair. Students were treated to games, food, art, fashion and skin-care vendors and various raffle prizes for hair care products.

50 pairs of shoes scattered across the quad: Students Honoring Other’s Everyday Struggles

By Shauna Golden

Walking along the paths that criss cross over Quinnipiac University’s lush green quad, a pair of navy and tan plaid Sperrys sat unoccupied. Attached to the shoes was a laminated card with text on it. The card told a story about an anonymous individual. This specific story was about Amber, who works at an institution and teaches students self-love through events that engage students in the positive side of mental health.

Further down the stone paths, there was another pair of blue and white striped shoes with another story. And another. And another.

In total, there were 50 pairs of shoes with 50 personal stories scattered across the quad.

The shoes and the stories attached to them were part of a project put together by Quinnipiac’s Residence Hall Council, otherwise known as RHC. The project was called S.H.O.E.S., which stands for Students Honoring Other’s Everyday Struggles. S.H.O.E.S. was organized by sophomore Morgan Mattil and graduate student Liz Monroe.

The girls were first introduced to the idea for this project when they attended a national residence hall conference at Purdue University in May. They went to the program of the year, which was S.H.O.E.S.

 “So basically, there’s shoes that have a card attached to them that explains stories about people struggling with issues. It could be mentally, it could be physically, it could really be anything, just any type of struggle. And then it is tied off with what kind of shoe you would, like, say the person would wear,” Mattil explained.

Mattil and Monroe took this idea and implemented it onto Quinnipiac University’s Mount Carmel Campus. RHC, which usually puts on more fun and less serious events, decided that it wanted to put together something with a deeper, more serious tone.

“We mostly just have fun events where we have a budget and we buy the students food and we give them them prizes, we have some sort of entertainment…but we wanted to bring something meaningful back to QU, something that would be deeper. There’s more to it now,” Monroe said.

The event itself didn’t take that long to plan, as they already had the idea from the conference they attended. The longest and hardest part, however, was gathering stories that they could share.

Mattil and Monroe ultimately made the decision to collect stories for S.H.O.E.S. during RHC’s first event of the year, Hall Brawl. Participants of the event, if willing, were asked to fill out a sheet of paper.

“There was a sheet of paper that said S.H.O.E.S. and had the acronym about what it was and it said ‘I would like to honor this person’ and then it said you could make up a name if you felt more comfortable and then it said ‘their story is’ or something and you wrote their story and what shoes would best represent them,” Monroe said, “So that was the hardest part and the longest part.”

Mattil added that she believed students were more likely to share their stories with the anonymity factor. She shared that the names were not the meaningful part of the project, but rather, the stories that were being told were the most important part.

“It’s not about who it is, it’s more about the idea that you’re not the only one out there struggling with certain issues,” Mattil said.

Once they had collected stories, 50 of them to be exact, RHC’s PR chair went to Goodwill to gather shoes that could be spread out along the quad. She purchased 50 pairs of shoes for 50 cents each, each pair matching the style of the individual that had been written down on the sheets of paper.

Though some responses to the project varied, the event was successful overall. Several immature comments were made, though most individuals appreciated the project and understood the deeper meaning toward mental health awareness and recognizing you are not alone in your struggles.

“For all of our events we talk about how it’s quality over quantity, so those few people who really did get the message and saw these shoes and appreciated the message, that’s what we wanted. We wanted a true connection to reach out to those people who felt alone and felt like they needed support,” Monroe Said.

S.H.O.E.S. was used as an advertisement for Quinnipiac’s Fresh Check Day that will happen tomorrow, Oct. 5, on the Bobcat Way lawn from 12-3 p.m. The event is meant to raise awareness surrounding mental health and suicide prevention.

“Fresh Check Day is mental health awareness day and suicide prevention and they have free activities, free food…but it’s to promote mental health awareness,” Monroe said.

RHC will put on their next ‘bigger meaning event’, Fall in the Halls, during Parents’ Weekend. The meaningful event that will promote a generational discussion will take place in Complex Courtyard on the Mount Carmel Campus.

Both Mattil and Monroe expressed they, as well as all members of RHC, hope that these bigger picture events will start a movement on campus.

“Hopefully these small changes Quinnipiac will be receptive to, these big meaning events, because there’s a lot going on and we should be aware and support,” Monroe said.

Public Safety’s efforts to prepare for active shooters


                                                                                                                                                                                                                Timeline by Dorah Labatte

                                                                                                                                                                                                                Timeline by Dorah Labatte

By Dorah Labatte and Shauna Golden

Following the mass shooting in Las Vegas that happened on Sunday night, people nationwide are looking toward safety precautions that can be made to prepare for such events in the future. Quinnipiac University is doing just that.

Quinnipiac University will require the incoming freshmen class, the Class of 2021, to participate in a mandatory active shooter training before coming to school. According to Executive Vice President and Provost Mark Thompson, the training will be online.

“Basically, it’s a training video that, I can’t remember which police department it was….I think it was one in Dallas or Houston, I don’t remember exactly, but it’s a training video that’s used nationwide […] It gives specific examples of, you know, situations and when each of those three would be appropriate and how to do that effectively,” Thompson said.

In September 2014, the Public Safety department armed their retired sworn officers. The first active shooting training happened soon after when about 20 public safety officers were armed. The department is working to release the program “Alert Us.” The technology will allow public safety officers access to all screens on campus to warn students of any immediate danger that is on campus or in Hamden.

“It’s sad that we even have to teach classes like this,” training officer, Bradley Bopp said.


Officer Bradley Bopp in the Public Saftey Office.                                                                                                             Photo by Dorah Labatte                                                                 

Officer Bradley Bopp in the Public Saftey Office.                                                                                                             Photo by Dorah Labatte                                                                 

Officer Bopp has worked for years as a Connecticut State Police Trooper, and is one of the armed officers on campus. He hosted open active shooter training for faculty, staff members and students throughout the school year.

“I teach run, hide and fight,” Bopp said.


Information cards with the plan implemented by Public Safety.                                                                                         Photo by Dorah Labatte

Information cards with the plan implemented by Public Safety.                                                                                         Photo by Dorah Labatte

The retired trooper said situational awareness is very important in active shooter situations.

“Run…where does that stairwell take me out to? You need to be cognizant of your surroundings.”

Thompson further explained the Run, Hide, Fight training, saying, ” If something happens where you become aware of an active shooter, your choices are first, if you can safely, run. If not, attempt to hide somewhere. The third option, which is the least you know…where you confront someone physically and engage with them.”

Bopp urges everyone to be familiar with all areas on campus. It is easier to run when you know exactly where every door leads you to.

Quinnipiac University’s campus is easily accessible, a feature that must be addressed in these types of situations.

“I think we just have to be aware that [these] things do happen and be as best prepared as possible. We have a very easily accessible campus, it’s not like we’ve got huge walls that people have to climb over or anything like that,” Thompson said.

According to Officer Bop, because of this, “you need to think outside the box.”

If you find yourself close to the shooter and don’t have much time to run, hide. If you are in a room, lock the door, turn the lights off and hide behind/under an object.

“I’d like to think the last thing to think is give up. I’d hope nobody gives up,” Bopp said.

Bopp suggested fighting is the last resort. If there are many people in a room, the shooter will not be able to take out every single person if everyone attacks at once.

Looking forward, incoming freshmen will participate in active shooter training presentation and answer questions in addition to the alcohol awareness and Haven program training.

Above all, being prepared is the most important element that Quinnipiac University is trying to convey to students. 

“So, just a preparedness, making sure people understand it could happen. And if it does, this is what you should do,” Thompson said.

***In the situation of an active shooter, please call 9-1-1 right away***

 

Quinnipiac University’s Puerto Rico relief efforts

By Camila Costa and Angela Varney

Embed from Getty Images

It has been nearly two weeks since Hurricane Maria swept across Puerto Rico, destroying nearly everything in her path. However, residents of Puerto Rico are still continuously working to rebuild their community. 

Miles away from Puerto Rico, Quinnipiac University students currently living in Hamden, Connecticut are doing their part to support Puerto Rico’s recovery from the recent devastation.

One student, Kelsey Bombon, reacted quickly. Bombon is a health science studies major and is of Puerto Rican decent. She also happens to be the President of Latino Cultural Society on campus.

After Bombon found out about the damaged caused by Hurricane Maria, she felt it was necessary to discuss it during her club’s general board meeting, especially because all members of the executive board are Puerto Rican.

“Our public relations chair was born and raised there and she came here when she was very little and pretty much said her old elementary school and old house were all completely gone,” Bombon said. “But she’s here where she has the blessing to get food whenever she’s hungry while her grandma has no food and is so hungry, we all had limited contact with our relatives, so we all comforted each other. By the end of the board meeting, we pretty much had a whole fundraiser week planned.”

The last event Bombon and the Latino Cultural Society are planning will happen on Oct. 13 at Buffalo Wild Wings in North Haven, Connecticut.

The participants have to present the flyer for the event and their check will go towards Bombon’s fundraiser. 10 percent of the total proceeds will be donated to their fund.

The Latino Cultural Society tabled on Sept. 26 and collected $300 in one day. Mark Thompson, Executive Vice President and Provost of Quinnipiac University, made an appearance and tried to help their cause by getting the attention of other students and faculty.

Bombon’s club is working on a website where people will be able to donate online without having to participate in events or tables, because she understands a lot of students and faculty might not have the time.

“We have faculty members saying they want to donate but can’t make it to the tabling, so they have been contacting me to give me money directly,” said Bombon.

In the meantime, they are working with organizations such as Unicef and Amizade.

“For specifically Mexico, we are working with Unicef so we trust that the money goes to where it needs to go,” said Bombon. “For Puerto Rico, we had a lot of organization recommendations to work with, but we wanted to know specifically where the money is going so we did research.”

Bombon goes above and beyond to help her community, whether that is at Quinnipiac or in Puerto Rico.

“I even went to Hartford and met with Connecticut legislators and decided to go with the organization Amizade. And, the Chief Diversity Officer here at QU has worked with them in the past– and for one of her classes she plans to bring students with her to Puerto Rico in January to donate the money personally.”

Bombon is counting on other organizations, inside and outside of Quinnipiac, to help with her cause. She has been working with Quinnipiac’s Student Government Association to help promote her club’s events as well as to help expand their ideals across Quinnipiac.

The last fundraiser will be happening next week, but in the meantime, if anyone wants to donate to help the victims in Puerto Rico, Bombon says she is available.

“I am always on main campus, so if anyone is ever interested in donating and needs to find me, I’m always here,” said Bombon.

Irma troubles in the south impact Quinnipiac residents up north

By Shauna Golden and Michael Brennan

There were several days where Roliya Jackson, a senior at Quinnipiac University, didn’t know whether or not her family in Tortola, British Virgin Islands, was alive after Hurricane Irma swept through her home.

Once she was able to successfully contact her mother, nearly three days later, Jackson said that as her mother spoke over the phone, she could “hear the tears in her voice.”

“At first I had hope that the hurricane would change course. Then I was scared, and then I was sad… I religiously checked the news” said Jackson.

Jackson learned from the news that the eye of Hurricane Irma would directly hit her 21-square mile home in Tortola.

Tropical Storm Irma, which finally made its way to Florida last weekend, ravaged many of the Caribbean Islands as a category five hurricane. Jackson’s home of Tortola was one of several Caribbean cities destroyed.

According to the New York Times, nearly the entire island was affected by the hurricane. For example, “buildings are leveled. Roads have been washed away. People have limited food and water.” Jackson’s family, which includes her mother and 14-year-old brother, is now homeless.

Individuals living in Florida also experienced the impact of Irma’s wrath. Though the storm dropped in status to a category one storm by the time it hit Florida,  Fox News reports that it still “[hammered] much of Florida with roof-ripping winds, gushing floodwaters and widespread power outages.”

Now, nearly, a week after Irma hit the Caribbean and several days after it hit Florida, individuals all around the world are still wrapping their heads around the devastation the storm has caused. The ripple effects are still being felt just days after the storm across the country, including for many students at Quinnipiac University.

Quinnipiac University senior Daquan Stuckey found himself in a predicament similar to Jackson’s while trying to contact his grandmother, who is stuck in the US Virgin Islands. While he no knows that his grandmother is safe, having to wait for the first text message from her was stressful.

 “When you get the text messages that ‘I’m okay’… those are always fantastic, but what about the time, the two hour period where you have to wait for that next text… then I really don’t know what happens,” Stuckey said.

Stuckey was not worried, however, because of his strong faith in God.

“Even though I was very worried in that moment, because God knows I wouldn’t be here without my grandma… He wouldn’t let anything happen to her,” Stuckey said.

Irma tore through The Caribbean, including the British Virgin Islands and US Virgin Islands, at a tremendous rate of 185 miles per hour. According to CNN, the deadly storm left at least 36 people dead in the Caribbean, four of whom were in BVI.

Jackson, who is 1,767 miles away from home,  has been relying on photographs and the internet to assess the extent of the damage on the island she calls home. She explained that because of the hurricane’s impact on BVI, the satellite images of her home are now dull brown in color instead of the vibrant emerald that they used to be. According to NASA, there are several possible reasons for which this change occurred. First, “lush green vegetation can be ripped away by a storm’s strong winds, leaving the satellite with a view of more bare ground.” Second, “salt spray whipped up by the hurricane can coat and desiccate leaves while they are still on the trees.”

 

Jackson has had very limited contact with her family because the island does not have electricity at the moment.  She has only been able to talk to her family three short times since last Wednesday when the storm hit BVI.

Hurricane Irma downgraded to a category four hurricane by the time it reached the Florida Keys. Soon after, Irma further downgraded into a tropical storm as it moved out of Florida and into Georgia.

Quinnipiac University senior Nicole Kessler and her family have lived in Boca Raton, Florida for nearly her whole life, and hurricanes are all too familiar territory.

Millions of residents across the state who have just survived one of the worst storms of the year, are without power and have had their homes destroyed.

According to CBS News, “Irma flooded streets, spawned tornadoes, knocked out power to millions of people across the state and snapped massive construction cranes over the Miami skyline.”

Kessler’s family has just faced a terrifying tropical storm that Florida has not seen for quite some time. She recalls the dangers of Hurricane Charley and Hurricane Wilma and how they destroyed Captiva Island, one of her family’s favorite vacation spots.

“There [were] [these] beautiful banyan trees, and the branches grew over each other, so you would drive for miles and you were in like a tree tunnel. And those all got destroyed,” Kessler said.


Photo Courtesy of NASA

Photo Courtesy of NASA

Kessler’s family decided to wait out the storm. While they are safe, this made her remember going through those frightening, if comforting, times all those years ago.

“My favorite part about the hurricanes […] I have, not good memories, but my grandparents would come and stay with us for like two weeks, and that was like a dream come true because I loved when my grandparents got to stay with us,” Kessler said.

                Regardless, Kessler knows that once a hurricane comes through, in the present or the past, the area is never the same.

  “We couldn’t go back to Captiva Island for years. And it’s now, you go back there, and it’s never the same,” Kessler said.

Now that her home has been demolished by Irma, Jackson feels the same way, and is worried that the island will lose the culture she loves so much.

“It’s not the same. It will never be the same,” Jackson said.

Sushi taste test

Video and Photos by Lindsay Pytel

By Julius Saporito

HQ Press held a blind taste test on Sept. 13, where Quinnipiac students tasted the same sushi roll from three different Japanese eateries: Kumo, Sakura and Quinnipiac’s new sushi bar.

Kumo and Sakura are both local restaurants in the Hamden community, and they are well-known among Quinnipiac students as well as Hamden residents. Quinnipiac just opened the new sushi place in the upper cafeteria of the Mount Carmel campus, where HQ Press held the taste test.

Students seemed to share the same opinions when it came to the taste, quality and price of the California roll they tasted, which contains cucumber, avocado and crab meat.

The majority of the students said their favorite roll was from Sakura. At Sakura customers can get one roll, or six pieces of sushi, for $5. Students said it had the highest quality of taste and flavor.

Taking second place on the test was Kumo. A California roll costs $2.75 there and people said it was very similar to Sakura’s roll, however there was a lot of cucumber in it, making it the meat to cucumber ratio a little off. 

Lastly, the Quinnipiac sushi was not mentioned as the favorite at all.

But the main question is, is the Quinnipiac sushi worth it if it costs more than local sushi restaurants – at a high price of $7.99 for a roll – if students say they prefer the taste and quality at other Japanese restaurants?

The positive side to Quinnipiac sushi is its quantity. Sushi rolls from Quinnipiac come with eight pieces, whereas competitors only come with six.

While some may prefer off-campus choices, convenience plays a huge factor. Kumo is 4.5 miles away from campus (13 minutes) and Sakura is 5 miles away (14 minutes), according to Google Maps. Although it came in last place as far as quality goes, the Quinnipiac sushi is located on campus so students have much easier access to this dining option.

“I think (Quinnipiac sushi) is worth it,” one student said. “I mean, I like it. It’s easy (to get to).”  

Here’s a graph showing the results of the taste test.

Relay For Life: Community Event to Find A Cure for Cancer.

Relay For Life - Community Event to Find A Cure for Cancer.

By Erin Reilly

Quinnipiac’s Relay for Life raised more than $33,000 to fight cancer.

“No matter the number of attendants and no matter the amount of money raised, QU has the chance to come together to raise money to fight this horrible disease,” Liz Monroe, co-chair for Relay for Life, said. “Anything we do has the power to make a difference towards a cancer-free world.”

All of the money will go to the American Cancer Society to fund research and patient care programs.

About 600 people registered for Saturday’s Relay for Life, according to Monroe. The 10-hour event on the quad included a walking marathon, a hair-cutting ceremony, movie screenings, lawn games, music and raffles.

“As a cancer survivor myself and as someone who lost a very good friend of mine to cancer, Relay is extremely important to me,” Lynn Aureli, Relay for Life’s survivorship chair, said.

Aureli says the walking marathon symbolizes cancer itself.

20170909_151530.jpg“Participants form teams with their friends and family and one team member should be walking around the track at all times because ‘cancer never sleeps,’” Aureli said.

While the main event is over, fundraising for Relay for Life will continue until December 31, according to Monroe.

Your Hamden-Quinnipiac News Headquarters

Today we are launching a new publication for the Hamden and Quinnipiac communities. Each Monday we’ll help you start your week by presenting some of the most significant stories from across Connecticut and beyond. Return to us throughout the week – here and on social media – for continued coverage of our campus and the surrounding neighborhoods.

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