QUChronicle.com March 27, 2013 Volume 82 Issue 22 Proud recipient of the New England Society of Newspaper Editors' award for 2012 College Newspaper of the Year
Sports opinion Arts & Life Road to the Frozen Four, page 16 Stop blaming victims, page 6 Student gets golden ticket to America Idol auditions
Suite life for sophomores
2013 commencement speakers announced By JULIA PERKINS Associate News Editor
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Mountainview residence halls will only house freshmen beginning in the fall, according to Residential Life. Associate News Editor
Residential Life is making changes to on-campus housing for freshmen and sophomores beginning in the fall. Mountainview will house only freshman residents this fall due to the layout of the buildings and the number of incoming freshman and sophomore residents, according to Residential Life. Meanwhile, sopho-
mores will live in the suites or have Bakke Hall as an option, which is the smallest of the three Complex buildings. Suites include Perlroth and Troup, which can house approximately 150 students each. Associate Director of Residential Life Melissa Karipidis estimates that 20 percent of sophomores will live in the suites. However, Larson will still house freshmen. About 387 students can
live in Mountainview, Karipidis said. Although Karipidis expects that this will be a permanent change, she said Residential Life considers making adjustments to on-campus living each year. “Every year we need to look at how many students we have, make a projection of how many [students] we’re going to retain,” she said. “We See suites Page 2
Small fire started in Buckman
By CAROLINE MOSES Staff Writer
By KATHERINE ROJAS News Editor
A small fire occurred in a chemistry classroom in Buckman Center yesterday morning. All students, faculty and staff in Buckman Center were safely evacuated shortly before 10 a.m. after the small fire broke out in room 119, according to Assistant Vice President of Public Relations John Morgan.
There were no injuries or damages to the classroom, and people were allowed back inside the building at 10:40 a.m. with Hamden Fire Marshal Dennis Harrison leading the investigation. The Hamden Fire Department, Hamden Police and Quinnipiac Public Safety and Facilities responded. Harrison was unavailable to comment.
Check out pages 8-9 for a sneak peek at the new School of Medicine, set to open in July see what’s happening on
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Next year’s formal recruitment is now set to occur in the fall, according to Quinnipiac’s Greek recruitment process’s announcement. “The whole process of moving started in 2011,” said Courtney McKenna, associate director of student center & campus life. “There was a lot of research coming out in the field of fraternity and sorority life in terms of looking at, specifically when students join, and the effects of the membership on their experience in college.” The fall recruitment process received its praises from those with an insight on the Greek community. “It’s the preferred method for the Panhellenic and National Fraternity councils, there’s so much logic behind it, it makes sense and it works for the community, so why aren’t we following it?” said Greg Fink, assistant director of the student center & campus life for Greek life. “By allowing for the opportunity to have younger people, it allows them to get leadership positions earlier and have better leadership experiences by senior year.” Members of the Greek community also voiced their excitement for the change. “It’s really exciting how Greek
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A small fire occured in Buckman Center yesterday morning.
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Greek life recruitment moved to fall
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Life has moved their recruitment process to the fall,” added Rachael Cox, a new member of Pi Beta Phi. “It makes it a lot easier because the spring semester is always so much busier.” This change to the recruitment process for both sororities and fraternities now allow for freshmen to “Go Greek” first semester, and with no first-semester GPA to base their standards by. This requires the chapters to connect with the potential new members on an entirely different level – asking intellectual questions rather than looking solely at the new members’ grades. Allowing freshmen to join in their first semester also boasts more benefits, according to Fink and McKenna. Joining in an organization their first semester helps freshmen transition to the university and encourage them to get involved on campus. “I think it’s an excellent opportunity,” Cox said. “I’ve already met so many people that have touched my life. There are a lot of opportunities that are going to come out of Greek life, and the friendships and bonds that I have already formed definitely confirm my decision.” The move to fall is not the only change that sororities are facing. Along with the addition of a new sorority, recruitment is now being spread out over two weekends, in order to ease the stress on the potential
connect
By JULIA PERKINS
The commencement speakers for the two graduation ceremonies were announced on Tuesday. Jessica Jackley, the co-founder and former chief marketing officer of the microlending website KIVA, will speak at the School of Business and College of Arts and Sciences ceremony. At the School of Communications, School of Health Sciences and School of Nursing ceremony, Good Morning America’s news anchor Josh Elliott will speak. In the spring of 2004, Jackley founded KIVA, a non-profit organization that allows people to loan money to poor entrepreneurs across the globe, according to its website. Jackley created the website to give people a way to help the rural entrepreneurs she had met in East Africa. In 2009, Jackley started ProFounder, a website where small businesses can raise money from their community to kickstart their company. Pro-
Founder shut down in 2012, according to its website. She also teaches Global Entrepreneurship at the University of Southern California Marshall School of Business, the KIVA website said. Besides being the news anchor for Good Morning America, Elliott has been part of ESPN SportsCenter, ESPN First Take and ESPNews, Senior Class President Andrea Rogers said at the announcement on Tuesday. In 2005, Elliott earned a New York Emmy for his writing and reporting contributions for Madison Square Garden’s program Angles: Religion in the NFL, according to ABC News. The process of picking May’s commencement speakers began the day after the May 2012 graduation ceremony, Rogers said. Rogers and Senior Class Vice President Katie Tobin listened to student suggestions and submitted lists of pos-
The Quinnipiac Chronicle
members as well as those encouraging the recruitment process. “The actual process for formal recruitment does not change,” Fink said. “We’re moving to two weekends because having a full day of classes plus a full day of recruitment was starting to cause stress.” “I’m really happy about formal recruitment changing to the fall,” freshman Jessica Hernandez said. “I wasn’t very sure if I wanted to go through recruitment this semester, but now I’m really excited for the fall. Now I can’t wait to find my home on campus.” Yet, freshman Julia Leeds, a new member of Alpha Chi Omega feels that fall recruitment is too stressful for freshmen. “I would prefer it in the spring because as a freshman I wanted to get adjusted to my classes and get to know my roommates before I had to make the decision,” Leeds said. “I feel like having it in the fall is a big slap in the face with stuff to do.” The changes to recruitment and Greek life on campus promise to expand and better our social fraternities and sororities on campus, according to Fink. “These organizations are not social in the sense of a party, but rather because they promote social excellence, better scholars, academic citizens of the world and socially excellent people,” Fink said.
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