The Quinnipiac Chronicle Issue 8, Volume 83

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QUChronicle.com October 16, 2013 Volume 83 Issue 8 Proud recipient of the New England Society of Newspaper Editors' award for 2012 & 2013 College Newspaper of the Year

DROP THE PUCK

All-hockey sports section, pages 13-16

Parking issues persist

Burglaries in Village

301 violations cited in September

MEGAN MAHER/CHRONICLE

In September, 26 of the 301 parking tickets were issued to violators on Hilltop and Hill Village Circle, according to Public Safety. Students with Hilltop parking have sold their decals to other students. By LOVANDA BROWN Staff Writer

Students assigned to park at Westwoods have been illegally parking on the Hilltop parking lot. Some students purchased Hilltop parking decals from students who have been assigned to the area, according to Public Safety. Public Safety assures that such violations will not go without repercussions. “Students caught committing fraud will have a student conduct

hearing and will either lose their parking privileges completely or be issued another decal and will have limited parking privileges,” Chief of Public Safety David Barger said. A total of 301 parking violations have been issued to students who failed to comply with parking assignments in September, according to Barger. Of that total, 26 of those tickets have been issued to violators on Hilltop and Hill Village Circle. Hilltop has 613 parking spaces

Student injured in assault

available at the beginning of each semester while Westwoods consists of 360 spaces. The Hilltop parking lot is on the Mount Carmel campus and the Westwoods lot is by the polling institute across Whitney Avenue. Sophomore Brooke Artz said it is more convenient to part at Hilltop. “It’s more time consuming waiting for a shuttle to take you to Westwoods [when] Hilltop is right there,” Artz said. Sophomore health science

major Erica Magalhaes received a $40 parking ticket for parking on Hilltop instead of Westwoods after leaving a meeting later than she anticipated. “I was a little scared of going [to Westwoods] and waiting for the shuttle that late at night, alone, so I left my car at Hilltop for the night thinking that there would be no problem,” Magalhaes said. “I just don’t think you should have to pay a ticket for parking in the wrong lot for a night or two.” Yet, parking is a privilege, not a right, Barger said. “Parking has been and will continue to be an issue as long as drivers feel that parking is a right,” Barger said. “Parking is a privilege whether or not parking is limited, abundant or free. The university has ample parking; the unfortunate part is that the numbers of parking spaces that are convenient are much smaller in number.” At the beginning of this semester, Quinnipiac introduced a new barcode system designed to make the process of checking for parking violations more accessible. There is also a system used to assign students to specific lots, Barger said. The student parking lot assignments are determined by the number of years attended, credits and residence location for each student.

Pie, oh my: Alpha Chi Frisbee Fest

By JULIA PERKINS News Editor

Have you received a parking ticket from Public Safety?

The Hamden Police Department are investigating three burglaries and one attempted burglary that occurred early Sunday morning where the residences’ windows were open and their screens were cut or removed, according to Hamden Police. It is not known if the individual committing the burglaries is a student, Chief of Public Safety David Barger said. The first Hamden Police investigation revealed that an individual entered the ground-level residence of two female students while they were sleeping. “It appears that the individual cut a screen and then entered through an open window. Electronic equipment was stolen in the burglary,” Captain Ronald Smith said in a press release. The second reported burglary investigation revealed that early Sunday morning, three female students heard a noise from the downstairs area of their ground-level dorm, Smith said. They then discovered their window was open and the screen was removed. A male was observed fleeing from their residence, Smith said. Sophomore Shelby Hub lives in the residence hall where the attempted robbery occurred. “We were just nervous and scared,” Hub said. “We were not anticipating obviously somebody to be in the room at that time of night. Nor for it to be a complete stranger.” The third reported burglary investigation revealed that an individual had entered the ground-level residence of two male students, Smith said. Once inside, electronic equipment was stolen. The students were in their second-floor bedrooms while the burglary occurred. The attempted burglary occurred when an individual attempted to pry open a ground-level residence. Sophomore Jesse Laico of Village 503 had his Xbox stolen in the third burglary. At around 2:30 a.m. on Sunday morning, Laico heard the rustling of the window blinds from his common room and the slam of the door. When he came downstairs, he saw that his Xbox was gone and called Public Safety. “I’m angry and kind of upset that we pay $50,000 to go here and [people] feel they need to steal stuff,” Laico said. “I don’t feel safe in my own room.” According to Laico’s roommate Patrick McAssey, the students also had an Xbox, a large television and a playstation in their room. See VILLAGE Page 4

Read about the dialogue on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

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MATT EISENBERG/CHRONICLE

Alpha Chi Omega members pied each other in the face during Saturday’s Frisbee Fest.

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A student was injured in an assault at Andale’s Bar on 3307 Whitney Ave. on Oct. 11, according to a press release from the Hamden Police Department. The 19-year-old student got into a verbal fight with a group of people in Andale’s Bar, police said. The group then left the bar, where a physical fight broke out and the student lost part of his ear, according to the police. According to the press release, the students’ friends brought him to Health Services where Hamden police arrived at about 2:30 a.m. The student was then brought to the Yale-New Haven Hospital, police said.

By JULIA PERKINS AND KATHERINE ROJAS

The Quinnipiac Chronicle

@quchronicle


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