The Quinnipiac Chronicle Issue 24, Volume 83

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QUChronicle.com April 2, 2014 Volume 83 Issue 24 Proud recipient of the New England Society of Newspaper Editors' award for 2012 & 2013 College Newspaper of the Year

SPORTS From ice to turf, page 13

OPINION Missing out on Easter, page 8

ARTS & LIFE Wrap up or check up, page 12

ONE AND DONE

Master’s in sports journalism set to launch By ADAM CAZAZ Staff Writer

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BRYAN LIPINER/CHRONICLE

Senior defenseman Zach Tolkinen skates off the ice as Providence celebrates after the Quinnipiac men’s ice hockey team was eliminated from the NCAA tournament in Friday’s 4-0 loss.

SGA candidates square off By SARAH DOIRON Staff Writer

MATT EISENBERG/CHRONICLE

After weeks of campaigning, elections for the 2014-2015 Student Government Association executive board are taking place today, allowing students to vote online at qu.collegiatelink.net. More than 100 students attended the SGA debates on Monday night in the piazza. Each candidate was given the opportunity to give a two minute speech, answer questions from the current student body president and vice president and end with a 90 second closing statement. Junior Mostafa Elhaggar is running unopposed for student body president. Elhaggar said he wants to act as the voice of the student body. “I want to empower every student to leave a mark in any way, shape or form before their day of graduation,” Elhaggar said. Elhaggar said one of his main goals is to give the student body a better sense of community and to strengthen the relationship between the administration and the student body. “I think that by having a strong sense of community on campus will allow for anything to be possible and for anything to be improved on campus,” Elhaggar said. Sophomores Bianca Solano and Jonathan Atkin are both running for student body vice president.

Sophomores Bianca Solano (left) and Jonathan Atkin (right) compete for the student body vice president position.

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Quinnipiac will be the first university in the Northeast to offer a master’s program in sports journalism starting this fall. Quinnipiac will join Indiana University as the only two universities with this program. The decision to offer a graduate degree specifically in sports journalism was based on Quinnipiac’s close proximity to ESPN in Bristol and NBC Sports in Stamford and the expansion of media in sports, said Lee Kamlet, dean of the School of Communications. “Given the huge interest among students in sports journalism, and the fact that some of the best journalism today is being done in the sports world,” Kamlet said. “It made perfect sense for us to launch a master’s degree program specifically in sports journalism.” Richard Hanley, associate professor of journalism and director of the graduate program, developed the curriculum for the master’s program in sports journalism. “It is really connected intimately to professional practices as they are today and in the future,” Hanley said. “We expect this to separate Quinnipiac from the pack of schools in this area.” Associate Professor of Journalism Molly Yanity will be the director of the new program, Kamlet said. “It’s going to take her a bit of time to figure out all the mechanisms of it.” Kamlet said. “This will be a real good program for the school.” The sports journalism master program is expected to last two semesters. “We’re going to have a four-plus-one program in it, which means that a student could get a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree in five years,” Kamlet said. In addition to current enrollees, Quinnipiac will accept students who have received their undergraduate degrees from other universities. Hanley said the master’s program will prepare students for sports journalism. “All the courses are based on a paradigm that is ruthlessly professional,” Hanley said. “Most of the courses are based on professional training for entry-level positions in the sports journalism field, which is everything from ESPN, to local television news, to The Postgame, Grantland, or any of the other notable sites that produce original works of journalism about sports.” Hanley said the graduate journalism program had previously offered a sports concentration and that the new graduate program makes sports journalism its own field of study. “It is designed to facilitate careers for students who are interested in specifically

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