The official student newspaper of Quinnipiac University since 1929. Proud Recipient of the New England Society of Newspaper Editors’ Award for 2015-2016 College Newspaper of the Year
FEBRUARY 1, 2017
VOLUME 87, ISSUE 15
ARTS & LIFE: LOCAL HOT SPOTS P. 12
SPORTS: ZAMBONI DRIVERS P. 14
QUCHRONICLE.COM OPINION: BREAKING THE SILENCE P. 6
Houston, we have a Super Bowl
Students form petition in support of undocumented immigrants By JESSICA RUDERMAN Contibuting Writer
See FALCON Page 5
See IMMIGRANTS Page 3
WHAT TO WATCH FOR IN THE GAME, COMMERCIALS AND HALFTIME SHOW
P. 13
KEITH ALLISON & EDUARDO SCHOEN /FLICKR CREATIVE COMMONS
Patriots quarterback Tom Brady and Falcons quarterback Matt Ryan square off in Super Bowl LI in Houston, Texas on Sunday, Feb. 5.
From Bobcat Pizza to Falcon Pizza
Local pizza shop goes through name change SHANE SULLIVAN Staff Writer
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The newly named Falcon Pizza debuted a new sign on the storefront.
Sahin was unable to discuss the name change. Although, after reaching out to the university, Lynn Bushnell, the vice president for public affairs, did not appear to know of the issue. “We are not aware of any lawsuit at this
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Last semester, students traveling to campus often passed a new restaurant, Bobcat Pizza. After the new year, the restaurant chanaged its name to Falcon Pizza The updated home page of their website currently reads, “Welcome to Falcon Pizza, formerly known as Bobcat Pizza, home of the legendary gourmet pizza.” The names and owners of the restaurant have changed many times in recent history but the building has housed various pizza parlors for some time now. Steve Sahin, owner of the restaurant, hopes to leave a lasting impression on the Hamden community. “Actually, it was Papa John’s, Roma Pizza, Aladdin, they kept changing the name. So hopefully the Falcon will be the last one,” Sahin said. When the restaurant was named Bobcat Pizza, they had a logo that could have been mistaken for the Quinnipiac Athletics logo with a bobcat whose paw was reaching out of the “O” in Bobcat. The eatery also sported the same blue and gold color scheme as the university’s athletics department.
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time and are currently in discussions with Mr. Sahin concerning the use of the name ‘Bobcat Pizza,’” Bushnell said. When changing the name of the
In response to the current political and social state of American society, graduate students at Quinnipiac University have created a petition in support of undocumented faculty, students and their families. The petition currently has six supporters, with an ultimate goal of 100. The statement, issued by Pomona College, has been signed by over 500 university and college presidents around the country, including 16 of Quinnipiac’s “peer institutions,” but is the first of it’s kind developed for and by the Quinnipiac community. Those who are looking to sign and/or join this movement are not required to display their name if they do not wish to do so. Michael Diaz, a first-year social work graduate student and one of the creators of the petition, founded the idea after discussing ways to enact social change in his human behavior class. “My main goal, honestly, throughout this whole process is mainly to start a conversation,” Diaz said. “I really want to start a conversation that roots in respect and roots in empathy and that doesn’t necessarily mean that we can’t have opposing opinions, that doesn’t mean that we can’t have conflicting opinions. I just want us to be able to talk about it in a way that’s productive.” This was a major topic of discussion in 2015 when Maria Praeli, a Quinnipiac undergraduate Political Science major, was one of six undocumented youth immigrant members of the United We Dream foundation to visit the White House. With the intention of speaking to President Obama on the subject of immigrant rights, Praeli and the Dreamers, who are part of the movement, vocalized their personal experiences to show how anti-immigration legislation would prevent millions of young people from realizing their opportunities according to an article written by the Yale Daily News. The concept now arises again in the form of a petition to President John Lahey and Provost/Executive Vice President Mark Thompson. As the petition is still in its early stages, created around November 2016 the document is still making its rounds amongst the staff and students of the school. Diaz said a petition of a similar cause has been in circulation throughout the faculty since December, but this version includes all members of and around the Quinnipiac community. “I have been noticing movements and groups on campus that have supported an assortment of different causes, so you have a group that supports the LGBT community, and you have other groups that have supported and illuminated ideas surrounding the Black Lives Matter movement,” Diaz said. In previous years, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA) has
Opinion: 6 Interactive: 9 Arts & Life: 10 Sports: 14