Week one of online classes: students’ initial thoughts

By Alexis Rossi

Quinnipiac University students have taken their classes online for one week so far using the Zoom meeting software. Reactions have been mixed.


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 Nicole Gibson, Junior, Journalism and Theatre major

“I’m actually getting really used to the online learning style this semester. It provides more flexibility in my schedule, which I haven’t had for a while, with still being able to complete my school work. I feel like so far the classes are running well; one of them is dance-based where the class is constantly moving but my teacher has come up with ways to still fulfill that objective. The professors I admit are still getting used to it, as am I, but I feel confident that they’ll be more comfortable with it over time. I just had a minor internet connectivity issue during one of my advising meetings today, but we were able to continue what we both had to do.”

Raeanne Bryceland, Junior, Nursing major

“We are now doing lab simulations online. It’s been okay, but we are learning in the virtual lab about things that require hands on experience. It is difficult to feel prepared after watching only videos and listening to lectures. The class is a little different than most to put online since it’s supposed to be done in person. It’s been frustrating because I’m not getting the experience that I thought I would have from this.”

Samantha Simon, Sophomore, Journalism major

“Generally, I’m feeling really overwhelmed with classes being online. I didn’t realize how much I took for granted attending class in a regular classroom setting and overall just living on campus. I’m also finding it really hard to focus and get work done while home. I definitely miss the structure/routine I had at school because I was definitely more productive there. There just seems to be a big disconnect with understanding information through online work rather than an in person class for me. I’m definitely scared my GPA is going to suffer because of this adjustment, but I know professors are being as accommodating as they can because this is a weird time for all of us.”

Ryan Bowens, Sophomore, Film, Television, and Media Arts major

“I understand because of how serious the virus is but I don’t work well in online classes. A lot of my classes need one-on-one help. It’s not the same when it’s virtual. Especially my film classes. I still have to film just without any of the equipment which is pretty hard considering. I just feel like because it was such a sudden switch that no one expected it’s already going pretty bad. The classes I’m taking now are mostly for my major and this is all experience that I really needed to get on campus.”

Spencer Brown, Freshman, Accounting major 

“When it comes to online courses, there are many external factors that come into play. It requires more independence, and doesn’t take into account the student’s life outside of classes. I feel that for everyone it is really stressful having these classes online and that it’s going to lead to lower grades. There’s not a lot of structure, and I feel like that’s something I really valued having on campus, especially with it being my second semester. My classes have been okay online, but I’m definitely not getting the experience that I was getting on campus. I’m losing a part of my first year on campus which is annoying too.” 

Quinnipiac Students move out early

By Kailee Heffler

Moving out of their dorms came a few months early this year for Quinnipiac students.

Due to the spread of COVID-19, more commonly known as Coronavirus, Quinnipiac has decided students are not allowed to return to campus for the remainder of the semester.

This means all QU housing is now closed. 


The now-empty dorms of Quinnipiac University

The now-empty dorms of Quinnipiac University

In an email sent to the Quinnipiac student body by President Olian she stated, “students will not return to campus after the extended spring break, and the remainder of the spring semester will be delivered online. University housing will be closed for the remainder of the spring semester with the exception of special cases that need accommodation.”

With many students only leaving a few days earlier for only spring break, they did not bring home the necessary materials and things they would need to spend the rest of the semester at home.

“I didn’t bring enough supplies home for spring break because I wasn’t expecting to stay away for so long,” said second-year student Katt Gould. 

Many students are frustrated over the lack of communication from QU concerning a plan for students to retrieve their items. 

“I understand that this is new for everyone, but for the students all of our belongings are on campus and I personally get anxious when everything is up in the air. I think it is not fair to families to not give a plan,” said second-year student Zoe Swantak. 

Though Quinnipiac has not released an official move out date for students, students have been returning to campus to grab their belongings. 

“I called Res Life on Monday and asked if we could move out and I was told that we could get things that were necessary. I guess a lot of people didn’t really understand this since they did not communicate it well. I just went and grabbed my clothes and other daily things I use,” said second-year student Caley Nigro. 

Some students said it was challenging to move out so suddenly if they wanted their belongings.  

“I live 4 hours away so it was difficult because my parents had to take off work so I could use two cars,” said Swantek.

The lack of communication from the University has also caused panic among the student body when it comes to retrieving their items. 

“Everyone I talked to was so anxious and nervous about not being able to get their things so everyone rushed to get their stuff,” said Nigro. “There was definitely a sense of anxiety in the air especially with the concerns of the virus and how we are told to social distance but at the same time we had to get our things as I only packed enough to last me spring break.”

For students who have moved out, it was difficult to retrieve their items due to so many students returning at once. 

“I got there around 12 p.m. on Tuesday and it was a madhouse. There were people parked everywhere, even double parked in Hill Circle and there was no public safety around directing traffic and helping to control the area.” said Nigro. 

Some students believe QU took the steps needed in order to ensure the safety of the Quinnipiac community. 

“I think it’s unfortunate but a necessary step to take, we’ve seen plenty of examples around the world of countries that didn’t take precautions in time and now they are suffering the consequences,” said third-year student Will Fowler. 

As of today, the University has not announced any further decisions about when students will retrieve their items. 

QU Dining workers forced to collect unemployment amid coronavirus

With the majority of students returning home, Quinnipiac University has laid off workers in areas like dining and custodial services.

Shaquita Alston has been an employee of Quinnipiac Dining for the past eleven months. She describes the current situation as overwhelming, as it is something nobody has ever experienced before.

“Now that the school is closed, we have to collect unemployment,” Alston said. “I haven’t heard anything yet as far as financial support. All they did was give us a pink slip to collect unemployment.”

Antoinette Orr, a seven-year Quinnipiac Dining employee, described that the months of lost work are going to take a toll. 

“Even though we were going to be going out of work in May, we make use of working full time to save up so we won’t struggle during the break period,” Orr said. 

Many Americans find themselves in the same boat. According to Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, the United States could see unemployment rates rise to 20%, which is double the rate documented during the Great Recession. He warned Congress of this potentially disastrous outlook in a closed-door meeting on Tuesday night.

The sweeping coronavirus pandemic has shut down schools nationwide, cancelled countless concerts and events, and halted travel almost entirely. With the closing of so many businesses and institutions, many Americans now find themselves without a job. 

President Judy Olian announced on Sunday that the remainder of the semester will be delivered online due to the pandemic. The university urged students living on campus to move essential belongings out of their dorms by Wednesday night. With students no longer allowed on campus, dining services are suspended.

“Students are not permitted to return to any of the campuses,” Olian said. “We will provide information at a later date on when and how students can retrieve their belongings from residence halls and other buildings.”

In an email sent to faculty Friday morning, Quinnipiac Dining outlined how it’s going to perform services going forward for the few students remaining on campus.


The empty York Hill dining hall. With no students, employees have been laid off.

The empty York Hill dining hall. With no students, employees have been laid off.

“As you are aware, we have significantly reduced our on-campus services and facilities now that students are remaining home for the rest of the spring semester,” Quinnipiac Dining said. “Quinnipiac and Chartwells have made special arrangements for the small number of students who received permission to remain in university housing to ensure they have access to daily meals.”

Newly unemployed Americans are facing yet another frustration. State unemployment websites are crashing due to the volume of traffic. In order to avoid this, some states including New York and New Jersey have decided to stagger applicants based on their last names.

“I believe a lot of the workers here would say it was unexpected, to say the least,” Orr said.

Quinnipiac shuts down campus amid coronavirus fears


Photo by Wasim Ahmad

Photo by Wasim Ahmad

Following several universities and colleges across the nation, Quinnipiac University will not allow students to return to campus after spring break in an attempt to slow the spread of the coronavirus. The university canceled all classes for Monday, March 16 and Tuesday, March 17, and will move the rest of the semester’s classes online.

“The choices we are making place protecting the health of the entire Quinnipiac community, and supporting the continued academic work of our students, above all else,” Quinnipiac President Judy Olian wrote in an email to students sent Sunday evening. “The majority of faculty and staff will be working remotely and will continue to perform their job functions from home.”

The decision to move classes to an online format was made on March 10, with the university adding two extra days to spring break to ease the transition. Initially students were told they could return to campus housing on March 22. Officials reversed that decision Sunday, announcing that all university housing will close March 18, requiring all students to leave by then. This includes the York Hill campus, as well as all QU-owned houses.

“We will provide information at a later date on when and how student belongings can be retrieved,” Olian wrote.

Classes will be held online using the Zoom software. All events on campus are cancelled, including sporting events. The university promised some amount of refunds to students, but didn’t elaborate.

“We expect to be able to provide some level of refund for housing and meal plans for those graduating,” Olian wrote. “For students not yet graduating, the credit would be applied against next year’s costs.”

At least one student was distraught by the closure.

“I feel like I’m being robbed of the final defining moments of my college life,” Edward Maher, a senior at Quinnipiac, said. “Not by the school, but just by life. And frankly, I feel like that’s more upsetting”

Read the full message from Olian below, and for more information check out the university’s COVID-19 site:


Dear Quinnipiac Family,

We’re all living through an unprecedented time that continues to change on a daily – often hourly – basis. There’s no doubt that our lives have been upended for a while. That’s been very hard for many, including our students who come to Quinnipiac not just to learn, but to connect, compete, grow and lead. Through this time, the choices we are making place protecting the health of the entire Quinnipiac community, and supporting the continued academic work of our students, above all else.

That is why today we have come to this very difficult decision: Students will not return to campus after the extended spring break, and the remainder of the spring semester will be delivered online. University housing will be closed for the remainder of the spring semester with the exception of special cases that need accommodation. Taking this action now is – without a doubt – in the best interest of our students’ health, the health of our faculty and staff, and of our local communities. It is also consistent with the recommendations and urging of government officials all around us to safeguard communities and to try and slow the continued spread of this virus.
 
Here is some additional information on what this decision means for our university community:

  1. All university housing is closed.

    • Students are not permitted to return to any of the campuses at this time. We will provide information at a later date on when and how student belongings can be retrieved from the residence halls and other buildings.

    • Students currently living in university housing must leave by 9 p.m. on Wednesday, March 18.

    • Students with extraordinary circumstances who need access to, or to remain in, university housing must submit a special housing request for consideration. All requests must be submitted by noon on Monday, March 16, to conditionalrequests@qu.edu.

    • All university housing will remain locked to safeguard students’ belongings.

  2. We are transitioning to online delivery of all classes for the remainder of the semester.

    • Online classes begin Wednesday, March 18.

    • Faculty members responsible for each course are providing further details and instructions to students via Blackboard and university email.

    • The university’s libraries will be closed, but the libraries are accessible online for students’ remote use of their resources. Content can be accessed via MyQ at: go.qu.edu/libraryresources

    • Health Sciences and nursing students can continue with their clinicals and fieldwork as long as the clinical agencies/hospitals/sites will continue to support them. The university will evaluate this on a daily basis. In the event that students are not able to continue with clinical practical experiences, their program leaders will work with them to personalize a plan and to ensure that students’ clinical experiences meet requisite criteria.

  3. The university remains open; however, most services will be provided virtually as we ensure the continuity of academics and university operations.

    • The majority of faculty and staff will be working remotely and will continue to perform their job functions from home.

    • Some student employment, including work study and graduate assistantships, may continue if the job can be performed remotely. Students should contact their supervisors for more details. There may be additional student employment opportunities that can be completed remotely; contact nathan.petropoulos@qu.edu in Student Employment for details.

    • The university’s fitness centers are closed for the remainder of the semester.

  4. University Events

    • All university events, including admissions tours and info sessions, have been cancelled until further notice.

    • All spring collegiate and club athletic programs have been cancelled.

    • It is too early to make any decisions about our commencement ceremonies in May.

  5. Credits/Refunds

    • We expect to be able to provide some level of refund for housing and meal plans for those graduating; for students not yet graduating, the credit would be applied against next year’s costs.

    • We have been focused on the health and education of our students and have not yet resolved the financial impact of this crisis. We will provide further details in the coming weeks.

  6. Information and Resources

    • Website – regular updates are being posted online at www.qu.edu/COVID19

    • Frequently Asked Questions – we have addressed many common questions in an FAQ we have published online

    • Online Support Center – if you have any urgent questions remaining, please send an email to COVID19SupportCenter@qu.edu and a representative of our university will personally respond (please include a phone number in case we need to call you).

As our national leaders and health experts have all indicated, we need to ‘flatten the curve.’ While the virus cannot be stopped as of yet, we each can do our part to slow its spread so that our health care systems can catch up and cope with the scale of the outbreak. So for now, this is what we must do.

For all our current Bobcats, I share your sense of loss as we go through this experience – loss of time with friends, faculty and staff mentors, academic and athletic competitions, team activities, and social gatherings – that were abruptly taken from your lives. Your QU family will be examining whether, and how, we can offer any parts of those experiences later, even in the summer, especially for seniors. But right now, our focus is on everyone’s health.

Be well, take care of yourselves, and take care of each other.

Quinnipiac graduate running for office in North Carolina


Buddy Bengel, a Quinnipiac graduate, is running for Lt. Gov. in North Carolina. Photo Courtesy: https://buddyfornc.com/

Buddy Bengel, a Quinnipiac graduate, is running for Lt. Gov. in North Carolina. Photo Courtesy: https://buddyfornc.com/

A Quinnipiac University graduate is making a name for himself in North Carolina. 

Buddy Bengel, a graduate of the class of 2004, recently ran for Lt. Gov of North Carolina. The election, which took place on Tuesday, March 3rd, had Bengel come up short as a republican primary candidate. However, despite receiving less than 10 percent of total votes, Bengel isn’t discouraged about his future in politics.

“We’ll see what tomorrow brings,” Bengel said. “For the immediate future, I’ll be focusing on my companies and making sure they are running smoothly.”

Bengel, who attended Quinnipiac on a scholarship to play Division I baseball, now owns a restaurant called Baker’s Kitchen in New Bern, North Carolina.

He can also be found on the baseball field mentoring players of the Morehead City Marlins, a collegiate summer baseball team Bengel founded in 2010. The Marlins are a dream that became a reality after his college business plan came to life. 

“I actually wrote the business plan for the Marlins in a class at Quinnipiac,” Bengel said. “It was really where I made a blueprint for everything during my senior year.”

Bengel acknowledges that he wouldn’t have this professional success without his experiences at Quinnipiac.

“Overall, it was a wonderful experience. From the classroom to the baseball field, it taught me a whole lot of things and I wouldn’t be here today if it weren’t for Quinnipiac.”

John Arcangelo, a 2002 Quinnipiac graduate, serves as the Senior Director of Alumni & Parent Relations and Annual Giving at the university. He shared his thoughts on what it means for Quinnipiac to have such influential alumni.

“We’re very proud of our alumni who demonstrate their commitment to uplifting their communities by running for elected office,” Arcangelo said. “Working to improve our local and global communities is one of the four pillars of our strategic plan.”

Arcangelo also says that Bengel’s success can have a positive impact on alumni-related goals.

“Fostering lifelong connections and success with our alumni is at the heart of everything we do in alumni affairs,” Arcangelo said. “Celebrating and connecting with alumni such as Buddy will inspire other members of our Bobcat family to get involved with not only the QU community, but in their local communities as well.”

Bengel says he has been in touch with Quinnipiac about helping to build new baseball and softball stadiums. 

“We’ve formed a booster club, where we have been raising money to help the baseball and softball programs,” Bengel said. “We’ve been raising money every year to support those programs. It’s important to us and we want to see baseball and softball get a new playing facility on campus there.”

‘On The Rocks’ plans for more events after successful first week

On the Rocks opened its doors to the Quinnipiac community this past weekend with two events, followed up by a third one this past Wednesday night. 

The weekend kicked off with a ribbon cutting ceremony on Friday, Feb. 28, followed by an event on Saturday evening for students 21 and older to watch the Quinnipiac vs. Yale men’s ice hockey game.


A look inside ‘On The Rocks’ as comedian Shane Smith performs. Photo credit: Sean Raggio

A look inside ‘On The Rocks’ as comedian Shane Smith performs. Photo credit: Sean Raggio

“I thought it went really well,” third-year management major Glenn Adams said. “I thought it was very well managed, and it was really easy for people to get in and out, and for people to get drinks. It was a great opening night experience. I think it is really important because it’s not just opening a pub, it’s opening a programming space that is at times open to the whole student body.” 

With the pub being a brand new addition to the campus, it’s safe to say that there was a lot of excitement built up. 


Sliders, nachos, quesadillas, and more are available at On The Rocks. Alcohol is served at particular events. Photo credit: Kailee Heffler

Sliders, nachos, quesadillas, and more are available at On The Rocks. Alcohol is served at particular events. Photo credit: Kailee Heffler

“The reason I think there’s a lot of buzz around it, I want to believe, it’s because students were involved in the process,” Director of Campus Life for Student Centers and Student Involvement Erin Provistalis said. “This was something that they really were vocal about, and they believed in, and they pushed for and found ways to show that there was a need for.”

Wednesday, March 4 was the first opportunity since its opening that all students could experience an event at On the Rocks. Comedian Shayne Smith performed with Katie Boyle as an opening act. 

The event had food such as quesadillas, pretzels, loaded tater tots and chicken wings. No alcohol was served at the event. Students were able to play billiards and shuffleboard while the comedians were performing. 

“It was a great turnout, more than we were expecting,” On The Rocks manager Danielle Herman said. “I know people really wanted the food, and a lot of people ended up staying. We counted around 80 people. I like how it was an event to incorporate people who are under 21.”


On The Rocks was filled during its grand opening. Photo credits: Kailee Heffler

On The Rocks was filled during its grand opening. Photo credits: Kailee Heffler

Several of the remaining events in March will be centered around March Madness, according to Provistalis. In addition, On the Rocks will be open for both the men’s and women’s Final Four. 

With all of the hype around On the Rocks prior to its opening, students had expectations going into its opening. 

“I think also the layout … they put a lot more into it than we thought they were going to, the TVs were very nice,” Adams said. “The pool table, shuffleboard area…it just screamed school spirit. I think in the realm of spirit and tradition, it definitely exceeded my expectations.”

Having a pub on campus can also improve the safety of students when they decide to go out on weekends, which is an important factor for some when considering plans for a night out. 

“I think that the biggest thing is the fact that people are now able to go somewhere and socially drink on campus,” senior Steven McAvoy said. “It isn’t like going to New Haven and forcing yourself to get an Uber and other things like that.”

While On the Rocks is located on the York Hill campus, it isn’t exclusively for Quinnipiac students. 

“It’s a space where the community can come together,” Provistalis said. “Whether that’s students or faculty, staff, alumni, families…it’s a gathering place and it feels like that.”

On the Rocks will have five more events throughout March, and will have an April event schedule being released following spring break. 

While On the Rocks is currently only open during specific events, the long-term goal is for standard business hours to come into effect in the fall. 

The pub can be found on Instagram @ontherocksqu .

QU monitoring coronavirus for future study abroad programs


The current statistics of coronavirus in the United States. Courtesy: Pat Hickey

The current statistics of coronavirus in the United States. Courtesy: Pat Hickey

Quinnipiac students received an email late Monday on how the university is handling the coronavirus outbreak. 

Students studying in Italy were forced to return home, as the partner institutions have suspended the programs. They’re required to stay in their home for a minimum of 14 days to prevent spreading the virus. 

“Our partner institutions in Italy have suspended their programs and/or are offering the remainder of their coursework online,” Interim Provost and Executive Vice President Jennifer Brown said. “As a result, students studying in Italy are returning to the United States and are required to return home, not to campus, and remain at home for a minimum of 14 days as a self-quarantine.”

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) issued a  “Level 3” advisory recommending that people avoid all nonessential travel.

Other universities including Fairfield University, Sacred Heart University and the University of New Haven have pulled their students out of study abroad programs. 

Quinnipiac, however, is not making any changes to other study abroad programs scheduled for later this year. Quinnipiac junior Ryan Breitzka has already made plans to study abroad this summer. 

“I’m going abroad to the Czech Republic over the summer in Prague for now, unless told otherwise by the program people,” Breitzka said. “I am concerned if the surrounding areas are contaminated by the time I get to Prague, and I’m talking with my advisor to go over a plan B because this is nearly the last time for me to go abroad. As of right now to travel, I feel relatively safe.”

Students traveling within the United States are also concerned about the risks. 

“I have an internship set up for this summer in Los Angeles, and it’s something that I have been looking forward to since my first semester,” junior Julianna Coscia said. “The program in Los Angeles was one of the reasons why I chose to come to Quinnipiac.” 


Junior Juliana Coscia, set to study abroad in Los Angeles this summer, hopes the coronavirus won’t change her plans. Credit: Alexis Rossi

Junior Juliana Coscia, set to study abroad in Los Angeles this summer, hopes the coronavirus won’t change her plans. Credit: Alexis Rossi

The university has established a coronavirus task force with various members of the university and medical professionals. 

A new web page was created including regular updates from the members of the task force. It was also announced that the group will be meeting with state and federal health officials over spring break. 

According to Donald G. McNeil, a science and health reporter for the New York Times, making a vaccine will take around a year. 

The CDC is recommending washing your hands often, and to stay away from people who are coughing or sneezing. 

Thirteen states have confirmed cases of the coronavirus with over 90,000 worldwide. 

There are currently no confirmed cases of the coronavirus in Connecticut.

QU and People United Bank’s entrepreneurial relationship, two years in the making


People's United president, Jeff Tengel, spoke in the Lender School of Business. Tengel is one of several speakers in People's United Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Speaker series. Photo credit: Peter O’Neill

People’s United president, Jeff Tengel, spoke in the Lender School of Business. Tengel is one of several speakers in People’s United Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Speaker series. Photo credit: Peter O’Neill

May 18 will be the two year anniversary of the partnership between People’s United Bank and Quinnipiac University, announced back in 2018. Since then, Quinnipiac and People’s have presented a variety of opportunities to connect entrepreneur students with bank executives. 

“It’s been two years almost, and [this relationship] has wildly exceeded our expectations in terms of the collaboration and the partnership,” Jeff Tengel, president of People’s United Bank said. 

On Wednesday afternoon, Tengel spoke in the Lender School of Business to bankers and students alike. He was one of several speakers in the weekly People’s United Center for Innovation & Entrepreneurship Spring Speaker series, running from February to April.

“[The Speaker series] is probably less important than some of the other things we do that are maybe more personal, like the mentor-mentee thing we just did, which is a chance for [students] to talk one on one with a bunch of executives,” Tengel said. 

Students were given the opportunity to have a discussion with professionals working in the field.  


Tengel's audience consisted of Quinnipiac students, investors and bankers. Quinnipiac's Fred McKinney, director of People's United Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, hosted the event in the School of Business. Photo credit: Peter O’Neill

Tengel’s audience consisted of Quinnipiac students, investors and bankers. Quinnipiac’s Fred McKinney, director of People’s United Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship, hosted the event in the School of Business. Photo credit: Peter O’Neill

Last September, People’s United Center invited students to pitch their business ideas for monetary prizes to help get their entrepreneurship ideas off the ground. The center awarded $5,000 in cash prizes to three Quinnipiac students with the best pitches. 

“We had 60 Quinnipiac students participate in that pitch competition…People’s played a very instrumental role in that,” Fred McKinney, director of People’s United Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship said. 

“I think any way that we can get out and interact with the students, it’s gonna be a good thing,” Tengel said. “And so I think as we go forward, it’s going to be more of the same. I don’t see any reason why that would change.”

The next guest speaker for the People’s Speaker series will be Will Ginsberg, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Community Foundation for Greater New Haven, held on March 18.

Forced home: Observations from study abroad students coming back from Italy

Sydney Reynolds. Quinnipiac Junior, FCO → JFK (3/2/2020)


Sydney Reynolds Quinnipiac University, Junior

Sydney Reynolds Quinnipiac University, Junior

“I did not face any screenings or questions when I flew home, or when I landed. Neither airport had any type of temperature check and they didn’t ask what part of Italy I was in or what countries I’ve visited. It’s so weird because multiple Americans told me Trump and Pence were saying that there would be security at the borders. I didn’t face any. Pence then said it would be rolled out within 12 hours. So I texted my friends who flew home later than me… they faced nothing either. …right now, the promises given by our administration to contain the virus are empty.”

“My friend who flew home yesterday had health screening done only in the Roman airports. So there are still no changes, to my knowledge, to precautions in US airports”

Olivia Giusti, Junior at UMass Amherst, FCO → GVA → BOS (3/1/2020)


Olivia Giusti. UMass Amherst, Junior

Olivia Giusti. UMass Amherst, Junior

“I had to be checked for coronavirus before in and out of security in Italy. They check our temperature. This has happened to me every flight in and out of Italy I have taken since I started this experience. In Italy, since the very beginning, they checked my temperature every time I went in and out of the country. You walk up to a thing of a bunch of people sitting in a row, looking at you and you have to stop in front of them. They have a little screen and they look down at it and it has a camera and heat map for your face. So, they shine the camera at you and can tell if you have a temperature that way.

“ …When I got to Switzerland, they only asked me if I had been to China in the last 14 days. I obviously said no. When I landed in Boston though it was nothing. The woman in customs asked where I was coming from I said Rome, and she gave me back my passport and told me to have a nice day. She literally asked me nothing.”


Emma Dombrowski University of New Haven, Sophomore

Emma Dombrowski University of New Haven, Sophomore

Emma Dombrowski, University of New Haven, Sophomore, FLR→ JFK (3/3/2020)

“I flew home with some of the other students and nothing was done as far as seeing if we were sick when we landed.”

“There’s less of a focus on people who aren’t coming from China.”

“My temperature was taken at the airport before getting on the plane but nothing was done after that. We were just free to go basically.”

“There weren’t any changes that I saw within the airport…you couldn’t tell that there was a virus spreading or anything…it was very odd to me.”

Key of Airport Codes

BOS = Boston, Massachusetts

FCO = Rome, Italy

FLR = Florence, Italy

GVA = Geneva, Switzerland

JFK = New York City

State archaeologist presents possible Revolutionary War remains at QU


Audience members watch on as archaeologist Nick Bellatoni presents his findings. Courtesy: Garrett Amill

Audience members watch on as archaeologist Nick Bellatoni presents his findings. Courtesy: Garrett Amill

Connecticut state archaeologist Nick Bellantoni believes the human remains found in Ridgefield, Connecticut last fall are likely the remains of Revolutionary War soldiers. At a presentation given in Quinnipiac University’s Center for Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences on Monday, Bellantoni discussed the remains, which were discovered in a cellar. 

“The thing I should preface right off the bat is I don’t have a lot of conclusions to give you,” Bellantoni said. “It’s probably going to take a good year to get a handle on what we have.” 

However, if the remains are from soldiers, this is considered a major find. The remains were found in situ, or in place, meaning they hadn’t been disturbed prior to the archaeological research. According to Bellatoni, this is very rare.

“It will put revolutionary Connecticut on the map,” he said. 

The discovery began as a police case. On Nov. 25, 2019, construction workers were renovating a basement in Ridgefield, Connecticut when they found some bones underground. The workers called the police, who then called the medical examiner’s forensic anthropologist.  Once the anthropologist discovered just how old the bones were, the state archaeologist was brought in.

“The law in the state of Connecticut is that whenever bones are 50 years old or more, the state archaeologist is notified,” Bellantoni said. 

Bellantoni knew there had been a Revolutionary War battle in Ridgefield with some dead from both sides of the conflict buried in the town. He’d looked for remains in the past, but never found anything. 

Bellatoni hoped the finding was Revolutionary War soldiers, but he didn’t have the highest hopes at first. Farming families often buried their dead near their homes, so the bones could be linked back to that.

However, when he got to the site, Bellantoni found soldiers were most likely buried there. He said the remains were from strong men between the ages of 25 and 35. 

Then came the most important piece of evidence.


Nick Bellantoni and Eddy Rosenblatt conversing before the presentation. The two studied the same remains, and came to similar conclusions. Courtesy: Garret Amill

Nick Bellantoni and Eddy Rosenblatt conversing before the presentation. The two studied the same remains, and came to similar conclusions. Courtesy: Garret Amill

“We started to find buttons,” Bellantoni said. “These buttons were a strong indication that the remains weren’t from farmers..In the colonial period, clothing was expensive. You didn’t bury someone with something so valuable that could be passed down to brothers and sisters.” 

However, Bellatoni still had his doubts.

“One of the things we have not found yet in the field is trauma,” he said. “If the remains are from soldiers, they would have been killed by some sort of trauma.” 

Dr. Eddy Rosenblatt, a radiology consultant for Quinnipiac University, validated that nothing found on the bones can be considered trauma. 

“We can come up with all kinds of exciting speculation that this guy took a headshot and that’s why he’s buried,” Rosenblatt said. “However, more likely it has to do with the burial.”

Still, Bellantoni believes the remains are from Revolutionary War soldiers. 

“I’m still calling it a hypothesis, but really I’m struggling to come up with another explanation for three healthy guys together on a battlefield,” he said.

Bellantoni also mentioned Quinnipiac’s effort in this investigation. 

“Quinnipiac has been so helpful with the diagnostic imaging of those remains,” he said. “This is only the latest of a number of collaborations we’ve had. The collaboration has been so marvelous.”

Bellantoni and his team will continue to analyze the remains. The bones were not allowed to be photographed at the presentation.