The Quinnipiac Chronicle Issue 5, Volume 84

Page 1

QUChronicle.com September 24, 2014 Volume 84 Issue 5

SPORTS OPINION ARTS & LIFE Pecknold: ‘Defense going to be strength’, page 12 Mental disabilities are not adjectives, page 6 More than just a Saturday night, page 8

Fall Fest returns for second year By AMANDA HOSKINS News Editor

At 1:30 p.m. Saturday the gates will open by the Commons Bridge and students will flood South Lot for the second Student Programming Board’s Fall Fest concert. After last year’s concert, SPB decided they wanted to do it all again. The date for this year’s concert was picked at this time last year, according to SPB President and SGA Vice President for Programing Danielle Imbriano. “This is one of our largest scale concerts, so it takes a lot of work a lot of months ahead,” Imbriano said. The idea of originally having the concert right on the Quad was shut down because of issues with the power requirements, but Imbriano said South Lot was the next best option. The stage and sound system comes from an outside vendor, Atomic. The stage will arrive Friday Imbriano said, and with the help of about 10 staging people from the company, and a number of student volunteers, the stage setup will begin. Around 6 a.m. Saturday morning, student volunteers will start preparing South Lot for the day’s event. Imbriano says the morning set up is a lot of technical work and making sure all of the outside vendors arrive okay. The bands will arrive early in the morning. A group of students are responsible for decorating rooms for the performers with food and snacks as well as decorations of their favorite things. “We like to create like a little atmosphere for them so they are not feeling like they are stranded in a classroom,” Imbriano said. The food trucks will begin to arrive around 9 a.m.. This year’s food trucks differ from last year’s. There will be a wrap truck, grilled cheese truck, ice cream truck and potato truck for students to choose from. Students will be able to use Q-cash or regular cash to purchase tickets for the food trucks. Tables will be designated for that purpose and students will simply bring the tickets to the trucks they want. Prices will vary from $1 to $5. Imbriano says the food trucks are an impor-

tant aspect to the all-day festival experience. “It just adds to the novelty aspect of going to an all-day type of festival,” she said. Junior Michelle Gallagher said she really liked the event last year. “My favorite part of [Fall Fest] last year was the food trucks, and I am excited to hear the music and spend time with my friends.” As far as safety is concerned, SPB is hoping the concert goes as smoothly as last year, Imbriano said. A group of outside concert security will be at the event as well as Public Safety officers, EMT’s, nurses and the pro staff for Campus Life and Student Affairs. All students will be checked before entering the concert and will not be allowed to bring drinks. “It’s kind of all hands on deck with that type of thing,” Imbriano said. “Surprisingly everything went very smoothly as far as safety for the students last year.” Students can enter the concert near the shuttle stop and the Commons bridge. Last year, Imbriano said students tried to enter through New Road. Students coming from New Road must go around the cafeteria to enter. “It is just for the artists because that is where their hospitality rooms are so we just don’t want anyone accessing them to disturb them as they are getting ready for the show or relaxing after the show,” Imbriano said. Imbriano is looking forward to seeing how the students like Fall Fest this year. “Since people already know what Fall Fest is, we are not just selling them the idea of this outdoor festival for the first time,” she said. “It already does have a build up and we had such a great time last year.” She says she knows students enjoyed the concert last year, and there is a lot to live up to for this year to keep students coming back. “The pressure is on but I have a feeling this is going to be a good one,” Imbriano said. “And a lot of work has been put into it and I know that at the end of the day no matter what, students are going to enjoy their time.”

Transfer talent

Full story: page 12

AMANDA HOSKINS/CHRONICLE

Since his Bobcat debut, midfielder James Greco has started in all seven games of season play.

BobcatNet revamped By PAUL BROSNAN Contributing Writer

The university worked over the past 10 months to revamp BobcatNet, thanks to a Student Government Association initiative. Sophomore class president Chris Desilets and Class of 2017 representative Anisha Manglani worked with administration last academic year to make improvements to BobcatNet a priority. “There wasn’t enough space or speed in the network to allow 6,000 students to live here on that network,” Desilets said. “It all shows up when you have buffering, whether you’re watching Youtube, Netflix, trying to download a file from Blackboard, it’s going to be slow, because it affects everyone the same way.”

Some internet access points had been as old as 2006, so Chief Information Security Officer Brian Kelly saw the need for an upgrade. Information Technology increased the number of access points in residence halls and mounted them on the ceiling not the walls. Kelly said this creates a bubble so that students are always in range of an internet access point. The number of access points jumped from 846 to 1085. The network can now support two gigabytes of space, whereas the old access points could only hold one gigabyte. This means there should be less buffering when students use the internet, Kelly said. “Now we can see that there is extra space See BOBCATNET Page 3

Community comes together to pray for Middle East By SARAH DOIRON Associate News Editor

award-winning website since 2009

POLL

see what’s happening on

Do you think BobcatNet is faster this year?

CONNECT

ERIN KANE/CHRONICLE

Students gathered on the Quad to pray for the persecuted churches of the Middle East.

The faint glow of candles could be seen from across the Quad on the night of Sept. 17 as the Quinnipiac community gathered for a candlelight prayer vigil in support of the persecuted churches in the Middle East. More than 100 members from the university and Hamden community attended the event and participated in the outdoor vigil, which featured readings of the Gospel in English, Coptic, Arabic, Greek and Aramaic. The event was sponsored by the Department of Cultural and Global Engagement’s Office of Religious Diversity and the Catholic and Protestant Chaplancies.

Quinnipiac’s Catholic Chaplain Father Jordan Lenaghan said it is important for all faiths to pray together for the people in the Middle East who are suppressed religiously. “Change throughout the world begins always within a single heart,” Father Lenaghan said. “If one heart is changed and one mind opened and educated because of what we do here, then change is possible. Let us be the change we hope for in the world.” Father Lenaghan said the reason this event was organized was because no one was speaking out about the conflicts in the Middle East on campus.

The Quinnipiac Chronicle

See VIGIL Page 3

@quchronicle


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.