Writing Across the Curriculum committee announces writing contest winners

By Grace Manthey

The Quinnipiac University Writing Across the Curriculum committee announced its undergraduate writing contest winners Thursday morning. The winners of the contest are Danielle Radeke, Maily Tran and Jordan Wasylak.

The contest’s theme this year, “Compassion,” is a common thread throughout the university. Research and Writing Institute director, Paul Pasquaretta, who carefully combed through every submission, said the value has been a focus since 2016.

“I think it has something to do with the fact that life is stressful and difficult. One way to help each other is the ability to respond compassionately to each other and have the capacity for that feeling,” Pasquaretta said.


Contest winner and QU senior Danielle Radeke

Contest winner and QU senior Danielle Radeke

WAC is a common program among universities, according to psychology Professor Christopher Hakala, the executive director for the Center for Teaching and Learning. It’s goal is to help faculty and students use their experiences in different classes to make their writing stronger.

Hakala says Quinnipiac does it better than many other schools.

“Instead of making it extra work we make it more of a process. We encourage students to use writing as a tool to think about things differently,” he said.

Hakala admitted that many students don’t necessarily always enjoy the program, but senior Danielle Radeke said her experiences as a nursing major has made a big difference on the way she thinks about writing.

“My patient experiences have opened my eyes to the reality that everyone has a story,” Radeke said. “I have also witnessed how one person bearing the burden with the person grieving really lightens the load. So nursing has made me who I am as a person and a writer.”

Radeke has been doing theater since she was six, and plans to continue after college in addition to her nursing career. She submitted a play she wrote for one of her theater classes to the WAC contest, called “Colby’s Trucks.”

Pasquaretta said Radeke’s play stood out because she was able bring together lots of different parts of her education.


Contest winner and QU freshman Maily Tran

Contest winner and QU freshman Maily Tran

As a senior, Radeke has been able to refine her interdisciplinary techniques. Another winner, physical therapy major Maily Tran said because she is a freshman she hasn’t taken many classes related to her major yet. But her other classes have opened her eyes to recognizing and understanding different experiences.

Tran submitted a poem titled, “Capable of Compassion.”

“No matter who we are, different ages, from different backgrounds, we can experience suffering in various forms. But, as humans, compassion can always to be there to help ease that suffering,” Tran said about the main theme of her work.

She said much of her inspiration came from her Introduction to Honors course, a zero credit class taken by all freshman honors students in to supplement their First Year Seminar. For class they were required to attend a presentation led by Scarlett Lewis, the mother of Sandy Hook victim Jesse Lewis.

“She emphasized the importance of compassion, among other factors such as social emotional learning to the development of a happier, healthier population in our world,” Tran said.


Contest winner and QU freshman Jordan Wasylak

Contest winner and QU freshman Jordan Wasylak

The contest’s third winner, Jordan Wasylak, is also a freshman, but a film major. She saw the contest as motivation to do some creative writing.

Wasylak’s piece, “Blue” is a story about the relationship between a young girl and an older homeless man.

“I wanted to emphasize the innocence of children and how, for the most part, they are born with kindness until people tell them to treat certain people differently,” she said.   

Wasylak said an English class she took last semester helped her learn to write without fear of messing up. She is now thinking about minoring in English.

The three winners received $150, a gift card to the Quinnipiac Bookstore, and a book related to their winning piece of writing. The QUWAC will schedule a ceremony for the winners later in the spring semester. Pasquaretta said he hopes to have a date early next week.   

Major sporting goods stores wade into gun debates


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By Andrew Weiss

Several major sporting goods stores, headlined by Dick’s Sporting Goods and Walmart, announced plans to limit gun sales at their locations. Dick’s announced its plans via social media on Wednesday morning, hitting Twitter and Facebook feeds with their new prerogative revolving around firearms.  

Walmart followed suit that night, adding onto its previous decisions regarding firearm sales.

The announcements come just weeks after the shooting in Parkland, Flordia left 17 dead. The shooter, Nikolas Cruz, used an AR-15 assault-style firearm, also known as a semi-automatic sporting rifle.

However, while the end of assault-style rifles occurs in Dick’s Sporting Goods and Walmart stores across the country, in Connecticut it is the age restriction that hits hardest. The sale of assault-style weapons has been banned in Connecticut since the Sandy Hook shooting in 2012. The incident, when 20 children and 26 total people were killed, sparked cries for gun reform that were met with changes to magazine size sales, registration of certain firearms, and background checks for potential buyers.

The increase of age as a restriction is another step in the way for potential Connecticut gun owners. Emilio Zullo, a junior at Quinnipiac, works in the lodge section of Dick’s Sporting Goods. He sells anything from hunting and fishing goods to hiking and camping materials to, yes, firearms. As a gun owner himself, Zullo acknowledged the increase in steps it takes for a gun owner in Connecticut to purchase or own a firearm.

“In Connecticut specifically, there’s an ammo certificate, there’s a pistol and revolver license, and there’s a long gun license,” Zullo said. “You have to apply for different (types of registration) and they’re expensive. You have to take classes.”

According to Zullo, the hurdles associated with obtaining a gun in Connecticut are different in bordering states.

“When you have to pay over $100 just to get a license, it’s a bit ridiculous,” Zullo said. “In New York, I don’t have to pay to get a license, only a pistol permit. If I want to buy a rifle, I have to pay $150 to be certified (after classes) to buy a rifle.”

Zullo could not comment on the Dick’s ruling, stating only that employees were instructed not to speak on the issue.

Some Quinnipiac students were happy to see the change.

“I think it is a good step in the right direction. I am glad that private companies have decided to do what the federal government won’t,” Marc-Yves Regis, a Quinnipiac junior, said.

Owen Kingsley, a senior at Quinnipiac, agreed.

“I love the decision from Dick’s regarding assault rifles,” Kingsley said. “It’s not a huge factor by itself when it comes to the accessibility of assault rifles, but (it is) a possible decision that could trigger larger legislation in that area. I’m hoping it creates pressure on others to act.”

Dick’s stock has dropped since the Parkland shooting on Feb. 14, dropping 1.85 points to a total of 31.80 on Feb. 27 before the announcement. The stock has been growing since then, climbing more than .6 points back up.

Gun owners in Connecticut have been vocal on the decision. For more, Bill Ruocco delved into how gun enthusiasts are responding to these rulings.

We preview the ECAC men’s hockey tournament series vs. Yale


Quinnipiac vs. Yale on Feb. 9 in New Haven, (Photo by Steve Musco/Yale Athletics)

Quinnipiac vs. Yale on Feb. 9 in New Haven, (Photo by Steve Musco/Yale Athletics)

By Cliff Nadel

The ninth-seeded Quinnipiac University men’s hockey team will make the short trip down Whitney Avenue to New Haven to face its rival, No. 8 seed Yale, at 7 p.m., Friday night at Ingalls Rink.

It is the first game of a best-of-three series in the first round of the East Coast Athletic Conference men’s hockey championship tournament. 

Quinnipiac (14-16-4) faces the Bulldogs (15-13-1) for the third time this season. The Bobcats defeated the Bulldogs, 3-0, in their first meeting this season in November. Yale earned a 3-2 victory over the Bobcats in the second contest between the two on Feb. 9.

The last time Quinnipiac and Yale faced off in the postseason was in the 2013 NCAA national championship game in Pittsburgh, where the Bulldogs won, 4-0. 

The Bobcats hold a 17-7-5 advantage all-time over Yale, and are 16-2 in ECAC first-round games having never lost an opening series.

You can watch game one here, or listen to the game here.

 

Hamden Democrats face changes as winds of change blow


State Representative Michael D'Agostino addresses the committee

State Representative Michael D’Agostino addresses the committee

By Rob McGreevy

The Hamden Democratic Town Committee met on Tuesday night in Hamden Public Library’s senior center to begin its spring session and to welcome newly elected committee members.

According to the chairman of the Hamden Democratic Town Committee, Lew Panzo, the committee welcomed 23 newly elected members. Some incumbent members said that number was even higher.

Whether it was 23 or more than half of the 63 members as some suggested, this is an unusually high turnover for the committee.

“Our body here was an older body of people who served here for 25-30 years and it was time for a change for some of them,” Panzo said.

The meeting was full of young people, and the loudest and most active voices in the crowd all belonged to newly elected members.

The committee didn’t reach a quorum and therefore was unable to conduct official business, but there were still plenty of opportunities for members to ask questions and voice opinions.

Connecticut state senator Martin Looney attended and briefed the room on the party’s status in the town, as well as the state.

He spoke about the senate’s general agenda and how it was going to act on certain matters, as well as what the Hamden Democratic Town Committee could do to help.

After Looney spoke, Panzo allowed a number of speakers who were either running for elected office, or had opened an exploratory committee to do so, to speak to the room. The group included Connecticut state representative Michael D’Agostino, who is running for attorney general.

The group also included two prominent Connecticut democrats — both vying for the same elected office.

Susan Bysiewicz announced she had opened an exploratory committee to run for governor. Her political resume includes 12 years as secretary of state. She spoke at length on major Connecticut issues, including establishing a pay equity law, infrastructure and especially tolls.

The other candidate for Governor was young Hartford mayor Luke Bronin.

Bronin is a former aide to maligned Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy. He lasered in on fixing Connecticut’s budget issues, while also brushing upon the base Connecticut Democratic issues that his opponent did – taxes, tolls, infrastructure, etc.

The HDTC gives these candidates a platform to reach Democrats in places they may not have been able to otherwise.

“Especially in an election year we have so many candidates running they will generally invite candidates to attend town committee meetings so they can present their case,” Looney said.

The HDTC did not have enough members to conduct its affairs, but going forward the newly elected members will be officially members at the committees next meeting on March 12.

Panzo seemed hopeful toward the new and exciting future of the Hamden Democratic Town Committee.

“It’s good to see this new influx of young people,” said Panzo, “that’s what this party needs, it needs to be revitalized.”

Looking ahead Panzo says that Hamden has always followed along with the state’s Democratic platform, “but there’s talk about us writing our own platform” — something that Panzo said will probably take place this year.

What will that platform look like?

“God only knows,” Panzo said.

QTHON exceeds goal, raises more than $265k


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By Mary Rose Bevins

About 1,500 Quinnipiac University students waited Saturday night for 21 cards to be flipped over to reveal how much money they had raised for the Connecticut Children’s Medical Center.

A “Let’s go, QTHON!” chant starts as organizers turned over each card.

When the cards had been flipped, the numbers revealed $265,431.79.

The crowd erupted into cheers, chants and tears as QTHON surpassed its fundraising goal by more than $15,000, establishing a new high in the eighth year of the event at Quinnipiac.

“There’s something so special about holding one of those cards. It was a rush of emotions,” QTHON recruitment director Alex Ford said.

The QTHON management committee and student organization committees worked through the school year to put on the 10-hour dance event that took place in the Quinnipiac University Recreation Center Saturday.

Athletics teams, greek organizations and clubs like Alpha Delta Pi, Quinnipiac Student Nurses and IceCats created teams to dance for the entirety of the event and also hosted a “miracle child,” or, a specific child who benefited from the money raised.

“I do (this) for my future patients and to make sure another kid doesn’t see the inside of a hospital room,” Ford said.

Alex Clarke, a senior public relations major, said, “This is a way to give kids a voice and raise money for a good cause.”


Miracle child Emma singing Taylor Swift's: "Look What You Made Me Do"

Miracle child Emma singing Taylor Swift’s: “Look What You Made Me Do”

Each participant was responsible for achieving a personal fundraising goal.

Some got creative with ways of receiving donations, like fundraising committee member Megan McCarthy, who took her personal fundraising to another level by using Venmo.

“I Venmo-requested friends, family and my ex to donate to QTHON throughout the week and night,” McCarthy said.

“I am so proud of all of the people who worked so hard to make this goal achievable. It makes me so incredibly happy that we were raise that much for the kids,” she added.

Various activities took place through the 10 hours to keep the energy up.

Decked out from head to toe and wearing neon pink shirts were members of the morale committee.

Every hour on the hour they performed a 10-minute routine — rehearsed months prior.

“I knew I wanted to be a role model and have more of an impact on this event, so I applied for (the morale committee) and never looked back,” Melissa Podias said.

Throughout the day, organizers went on stage and asked participants to take out their phones and ask family and friends to donate through apps. That effort raised about $7,000 in one hour.

Fundraising co-chair Katie Stokarski said, “I was very nervous about us reaching our goal. A quarter of million dollars is a huge goal for a school our size, but the push we had at night of made us reach our goal.”

Other activities during the long day included a game of knockout and a game of HQ Trivia QTHON version. There were also different theme hours that included Disney, holiday and throwback Thursday themes in which participants dressed up.


Morale dancer Erin Schirra dressed as Moana for Disney Hour

Morale dancer Erin Schirra dressed as Moana for Disney Hour

“Throwback hour was definitely my favorite because it reminded me of my childhood,” QTHON participant Jess Ciccarella said.

 

Hamden resident trains at Quinnipiac to climb Mount Kilimanjaro

By Nicole Kessler

Scaling up Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania is no easy feat. 

It’s an extreme altitude mountain trek. It takes hikers through five different ecological zones, from farmland to alpine desert to snow capped arctic peaks. Temperatures can reach an upwards of 104 degrees and at night drastically drop between 20 to -20 degrees Fahrenheit, not including windchill. People can start experiencing acute mountain sickness symptoms as low as 8,000 feet and, as one enters the higher altitude zones, limited oxygen begins to impact one’s physiology, officially making the experience empowering yet treacherous. 

Now, imagine ascending to the top at 64 years old. 

Hamden resident Lew Nescott is taking on this challenge wholeheartedly. He flew out on Feb. 18. 

In order to reach the top of the 19,341-foot summit, the body has to train itself, physically and mentally, to adapt to change. He felt the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University would be the perfect place to help him get back into tip top shape. 

Nescott reached out to Bruce Koeppen, the dean of the school of medicine, about wanting to team up for this project. Koeppen then reached out to the biomedical sciences professor Tom Martin. 

Martin said, “yeah, let’s give this a try,” and then blasted a call out to the first-year medical students to see who was interested in taking on such a project— perhaps as the student’s required capstone project. 

Katherine Woolley was the first to jump on the offer. 

“Oh, I hopped on it,” she said. 

You can say it was fate. 

 “I was really excited about it,” Woolley said. “Honestly it seemed too good to be true.” 


Katherine Woolley

Katherine Woolley

Woolley is a bright-eyed 23 year old from Denver, Colo. She is an avid rock climber, hiker and snowboarder who loves the outdoors and nature. Having done undergrad at the University of Colorado Boulder, studying Integrative Physiology with an emphasis in exercise science, she knew that Quinnipiac University, nestled in between Sleeping Giant State Park, was the perfect choice for med school. 

“The facilities are beautiful and the professors are amazing,” she said. 

The year before she moved out to the East Coast, Woolley took a gap year, hiking all over Southeast Asia for three months, developing an appreciation for what the human body is capable of. She explored Thailand, Laos, Malaysia, Nepal and India. 


Woolley and Professor Martin

Woolley and Professor Martin

“I did some high altitude trekking in Nepal, which is where I kind of had my first idea of making my capstone project involving high altitude and mountaineering,” she said. “It’s such an interesting culture there.”  

The entire infrastructure of Nepal is based on Nepali Sherpas taking tourists up different mountains that normally one couldn’t do on their own. 

“I thought it was so interesting that this 5-foot-2 tiny man can carry like 200 pounds on his back and run up the mountain and all these big buff tourists are struggling to catch their breath,” she said. 

Nescott’s request couldn’t have aligned better with Woolley’s curiosity and career aspirations.  

“This project is so multifaceted,” she said. “Not only are we helping a master’s athlete who came out of a retirement for a climb to do something amazing, but he’s doing it all for charity.” 

Woolley said that working with Nescott has been inspirational and that he is motivated, hard working and doing this from the bottom of his heart. Nescott is funding his trip all out of pocket. All the money raised will go directly to the Sarah Foundation, which provides programs and services for people with intellectual and other disabilities who live in Connecticut. 


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According to the foundation’s website, Nescott said this climb is personal. He is climbing for Sarah, as well as his cousin, George or “Geo.” 

“I think this goes to show you that if Lew can come out of retirement, hike to the top of Mount Kilimanjaro, then anyone in the Sarah Foundation, anyone anywhere, if you are down on your luck, if you are turning over a new leaf, you can do anything you set your mind to,” Woolley said. 

“It’s been a real honor to work with him and everything that this climb stands for.”

Nescott started to ascend to the top of the mountain on Feb. 20 or Feb. 21, but in order to prepare, Woolley and Martin devised a strategic plan for Nescott to help him through the harsh conditions. 


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Even though Nescott is an experienced climber having previously scaled three of the seven highest mountains in the world, he still needs to train and prepare for that high hypoxic environment. 

“We came up with high intensity interval training, which has been shown to improve your cardiovascular fitness very efficiently,” Woolley said. “You can go for like an hour jog or you can do a 30 minute HIIT routine and you’d be sucking in a lot more air after the HIIT routine.”

The program also has different measures of heart rates that they want Nescott to hit. He has his own monitor with a watch he wears so he knows what beat per minute he needs to be at and for how long. These exercises can be done on his own, which is something Woolley thought was important. 

“It’s a pretty strict exercise regiment,” she said. “Now he has the equipment to really workout properly.” 

Testing began eight weeks ago before training started in the Motion Analysis Laboratory. 

The work doesn’t end when Nescott returns from Africa on March 1. 

From the plane, he will head to Quinnipiac and, on March 2, the rest of the data will be collected and they will begin to see how the operative outcome affected a bunch of the different variables.

“And on top of that, we have data we are collecting while he is climbing,” she said. “So he is wearing a bio strap. It’s going to be collecting heart rate, heart rate variability, temperature, activity level and GPS, all that kind of stuff. He is going to be wearing a pulse oximeter, O2 saturation…”

Woolley though is most excited about the video interviews Nescott will record, answering questions like: How nauseous are you? How are you sleeping? How are you eating? This is all to see if Nescott is getting altitude sickness. 

Woolley will be able to see his cognitive abilities, how he is talking and how he looks. She also has him doing ataxia exams, heel to toe walking and a stroope test for air detection. 


Nescott during one of the tests ( Source )

Nescott during one of the tests (Source)

“The whole idea of all the senses is so we can recreate this climb from a data standpoint,” Martin said. “This is how he went from this elevation, how the heart rate and body temperature changed …that kind of stuff.”  

Whooley said it may seem like a niche study, but there really isn’t any other data on anyone like Nescott out there.  

“It’s a great opportunity for Katherine and the learning for the school of medicine students,” Martin said. “It’s also a way to help advance science potentially. To kind of get an idea of how athletes can respond to the altitude, it benefits the community, it benefits Lew, it benefits the foundation, it benefits the students and it also has the ability to potentially help the sciences. It hits all those landmarks.”  

The research isn’t even close to being done yet, but Woolley is thankful for the opportunity. 

“I am really grateful for Lew, the foundation is awesome, the school has been very supportive and Dr.  Martin has been the best mentor ever,” she said. “He’s even teaching me an independent study, which is something he is doing out of his own free time.”

Quinnipiac hosts eighth annual QTHON


Last year's QTHON charity event, courtesy of the  QTHON Facebook page  .

Last year’s QTHON charity event, courtesy of the QTHON Facebook page .

By Nicholas Williams

Quinnipiac University will host its eighth annual QTHON charity event Saturday from 2 p.m. to midnight. The 10-hour dance marathon will take place in Quinnipiac’s recreation center at Quinnipiac University’s Mount Carmel campus.

QTHON has been an annual event at Quinnipiac University since 2011. QTHON has raised more than $450,000 to date for the Connecticut Children’s Medical Center. Dancers and sponsors raised $218,184.83 for the cause at last years event.

The dance marathon charity event began in 1973 in the HUB Ballroom at Penn State. Penn State’s IFC President Bill Lear put on the inaugural event. His goal was to host a dance marathon for a worthwhile cause. Over $2,000 was raised in its first event. Since then, the event has adopted the name “THON” and has raised well more than $100 million to date at Penn State alone.

Students and community members around Hamden will gather Saturday to attempt to reach the goal of $250,000 raised. Dancers who have raised more than $100 prior to the event will receive a QTHON dancer shirt, as well as food and other amenities.

The entry fee for all other attendees is $10 at the event according to QTHON co-executive director, Steph Rivera.

To donate or start your own fundraising page visit QTHON’s website here.

Four QU students arrested after pot bust in dorm

By HQ Press staff

Hamden police arrested four Quinnipiac University students Sunday, Feb. 18 after an anonymous tip led to the revelation of large quantities of marijuana products in a campus dorm. 

According to a release by the Hamden Police Department, Quinnipiac Public Safety searched the room of Patrick Owenby and found a plastic bag containing 15.5 grams of marijuana, five “Marijuana Fruity Pebbles Squares” weighing 303.3 grams, 87 grams of THC oil and drug paraphernalia, including packaging materials. 

Police charged Owenby, an 18-year old from Cherry Hill, New Jersey, with possession of a controlled substance and sale of a controlled substance. 

Facing the same charges is Shawn Wheeler, 18, of Atkinson, New Hampshire. At the time of the search, Wheeler was in possession of 137.5 grams of marijuana and drug paraphernalia, including a scale. 

Both Owenby and Wheeler paid $1,000 in bond to appear in court in Meriden on March 5. 

Police also issued infractions (possession of less than a half ounce of marijuana) to Samuel Geiss, 19, of Wellesley, Massachusetts, and Wilton’s Matthew Moore, 19.

Black Panther roars out of the box office

By Andrew Weiss

Like any good movie opening up to the public, “Black Panther” found itself in sold-out theater after sold out theater. During opening night on Thursday, it was more likely to find a four-leaf clover that wasn’t frozen solid than a ticket to a North Haven showing of “Black Panther.” Patrons lined the halls of the Cinemark on Universal Drive, a luxurious 14 screen theater, eagerly awaiting the first showings of the newest Marvel masterpiece.

Much like any great movie, however, the lines continued to find their way back. 

On Friday, showings of “Black Panther” sold out quickly throughout the day as reserved seats online and over the phone were snatched up by eager fans. The only way to walk into Cinemark North Haven and watch the new film was with a neck cramp, as the last available seats belonged to the front two rows.

Drive north a few miles to Wallingford, and you’d find the same dilemma at Holiday Stadium Cinemas, where showings sold out hours before the pre-film advertisements flickered on-screen. The sellouts continued all of the way until Sunday, where the 10 screen cinema updated their “Black Panther: sold out times” sheet by the entrance hourly.

“I would encourage everyone to watch it,” Ayanna Simpson said. “It has a beautiful message that doesn’t overpower the film but can be clearly seen, and I think it’s a breath of fresh air from today’s populated climate.”

Simpson serves as the program coordinator for multicultural education at Quinnipiac University. The African and Caribbean Student Union, along with the Student Programming Board and Department of Cultural Global Engagement at Quinnipiac, put together a “Black Panther” viewing event on Friday.

“Overall I thought it was a remarkable film,” Simpson added. “I loved how each character had a complete and complex story.”

Samantha Nardone, a junior public relations major at Quinnipiac, attended the viewing party with fellow Bobcats.

“It’s really important that they kind of defeated (the) stereotype that everyone in Africa is poor, because there are some wealthy countries in Africa and there are poorer areas,” Nardone said. 

“It’s important to show the pride people can have in black culture. So many movies and TV shows don’t show that at all (and) I think this movie helped to reduce that myth and stereotype. It was just awesome to see all the black power and black culture emphasized and the pride in that in this film.”

The nation’s box offices agreed with Nardone. 

Original projections expected “Black Panther” to claw in about $120million over the four-day opening weekend.

As Thursday turned to Friday, and Friday turned to Saturday, moviegoers shattered those projections. 

The three-day opening brought in an estimated $192 million, ranking fifth most all time. Current expectations project $218 million over the four-day holiday weekend in the United States with $361 million worldwide.

The film also broke the record for the largest opening by a movie with an African-American director. Ryan Coogler’s masterpiece destroyed the previous record of $98 million set by F. Gary Gray’s “The Fate of the Furious” back April 2017 of 2017.

Tiana Duggin of West Haven was happy to add to that total.

“This climate right now, because (of how) a lot of people in the world view what African Americans are, this can teach them what we were in the past, and what we can be in the future,” Duggin said.

The film is available for fans of the film, or anyone interested, in North Haven, New Haven and Wallingford.

Quinnipiac will host a roundtable discussion — A Place at the Table —on “Blackness, Heroism and the American Imagination: Can ‘Black Panther’ Expand the Marvel Universe?” The discussion takes place at 6:30 p.m., Tuesday in Buckman Theater. Professors in media studies, English and journalism will moderate. 

Contributions by Thamar Bailey

Quinnipiac women’s basketball team aims for momentum after Fabbri’s 400th win

By Nicholas Williams

**UPDATE: Quinnipiac won Sunday afternoon’s game against Marist, 80-74, in double overtime. The victory clinches the fourth consecutive Mid-Atlantic Athletic Conference regular-season championship for the Bobcats, who move to 22-5 overall and 16-0 in conference play. Aryn McClure led the Bobcats with a season-high 25 points, while Jen Fay added 21.**

Quinnipiac University women’s basketball head coach Tricia Fabbri collected her 400th career win Feb. 11 against Siena College. It is unlikely that this is on her mind now, as her team prepares to face off this afternoon against arch-rival Marist College — the only Mid-Atlantic Athletic Conference team that has challenged the Bobcats. 

As the MAAC tournament approaches on March 1, every game is important as teams jockey for control of the conference — a position the Bobcats (21-5, 15-0 MAAC) are firmly in.  

Fabbri is already a member of the Connecticut Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame as a player for Fairfield and, now with 400 wins, is adding to an impressive 22-year coaching career. Fabbri certainly seemed to enjoy the moment for a few minutes in this video posted on Quinnipiac’s women’s basketball team Twitter page.

In the video, Fabbri spoke about sharing the victory with everyone around her. 

“The team is not I, and it’s shared with everybody. I don’t do this by myself,” she said. 

Carly Fabbri, a senior guard and the coach’s daughter, said staying focused game to game is the key to the team’s success this season. 

“We hate to lose. I think that’s what fuels us,” the young Fabbri, who is averaging 4.3 assists per game, said.

“Once you start focusing too much on the future, that’s when you’re going to get picked off in MAAC play.” 

As her mother collected her 400th win, Fabbri and the team are also on a 16-game win streak. In case that wasn’t good enough, the team is also unbeaten in conference play amassing a perfect 15-0 record.

“I think it’s just that mentality (that) everyone’s going to have their chance if they put in the work and they buy into the system,” Carly Fabbri said. 

Her mother’s system, which includes five-player substitutions known as the “gold rush,” was put on display when Quinnipiac made it to the Sweet 16 in the NCAA Tournament last spring when it upset Marquette and the University of Miami.

Quinnipiac has three games remaining on its schedule before the MAAC Tournament opens in Albany, New York. 

The Bobcats face MAAC opponents Marist, Rider and Monmouth starting today at 2 p.m. in Poughkeepsie, the place that Carly Fabbri called “one of the loudest places to play.” 

Fans can watch the game online at ESPN3