Issue 12, Volume 82

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QUChronicle.com November 14, 2012 Volume 82 Issue 12 Proud recipient of the New England Society of Newspaper Editors' award for 2012 College Newspaper of the Year

arts & life No-shave November, page 10

opinion Sports Near death by turbine, page 7 Basketball games to watch, page 15

york hill shuttle schedule announced By KATHERINE ROJAS News Editor

A concrete York Hill shuttle schedule will begin on Nov. 26 after the Student Government Association worked with the Department of Public Safety and transportation company DATTCO to make a shuttle system accommodating to students. After a year-long process, York Hill residents will soon no longer have to wait for a shuttle to the Mount Carmel campus. Vice President of Student Concerns Evangelos Milas met with Chief of Public Safety David Barger over the summer and on a weekly basis this semester to come up with a solution. “The shuttles have always been a problem since we started having York Hill shuttles to

campus,” Milas said. “There’s never been a real schedule; they run from a certain time and they have an end time and that schedule has been up, but they’ve never had a systematic stop time to York and Mount Carmel.” With three York Hill shuttles running on a loop, and without a concrete schedule, shuttle drivers were open to take breaks in unofficial times, Barger said. The shuttle drivers would also alternate, resulting in more break times adding to the issue of inconsistent shuttles. There once was a concrete shuttle schedule when York Hill’s residence hall, Crescent, first opened in 2009; however, it wasn’t effective which led to its current continuous loop system, according to Barger. “So what we thought to do now was to just

keep operating the buses on a continuous loop, thinking that you would catch everyone on that continuous loop,” Barger said. “Unfortunately, that did not work as efficiently as we wanted to.” The effort of fixing the sporadic shuttle system began last spring semester, with former Vice President of Student Concerns Vincent Bond. Milas then took on the task and didn’t stop working until it was complete for this semester. “We put together a schedule that would be compatible with class start and end times so students will be able to take the shuttle and not be late to class,” Milas said. “We wanted to make it more accessible.” The biggest issue with the current shuttle See SHUTTLES Page 2

what quinnipiac has in store for whitney avenue, pages 8-9 MOUNT CARMEL CAMPUS

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Staff Writer

Crescent resident Joseph Ugalde walked into his living room early one morning to find that a strange, comfy chair had appeared in his suite overnight. He quickly learned that his suitemates had taken this chair from the lounge area in the building. This is one of various incidents involving missing lounge furniture and wet floor signs in the Crescent and Westview residence halls. However, most of the facilities property was given back after Residence Hall Director Michael Guthrie warned students through email on Nov. 5 that they may be subject to random room checks if the property was not returned. According to Guthrie, Residential Life will no longer need to search students’ rooms since the items have been returned. Ugalde said his suitemates decided to return the chair after learning through the email that they would go through the conduct process and be fined if missing items were found in their room. “It was the fact that they were ST

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By JULIA PERKINS

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Quinnipiac students know all about New Haven’s nightlife, however the university is working to make Hamden more appealing to students. Quinnipiac has purchased numerous plots of land along Whitney Avenue in order to make the town more “college friendly.” “We sort of think of [Whitney Ave.] as our Main Street,” Quinnipiac University President John Lahey said in a September interview. “We’ve been working with private developers and we’ve been acquiring property along that strip in the hopes of really upgrading it.” President Lahey said Whitney Ave. lacks the consistency of most college towns, as not all the businesses are conducive to students. Lahey hopes to see more businesses like bookstores, Starbucks and bistros along Whitney Ave.

Stolen Crescent furniture returned

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Design by michele snow/chronicle

Above is a map of the various properties that Quinnipiac owns on Whitney Avenue. See pages 8-9 for details.

See res life Page 3

Clery Act: Quinnipiac’s don’t walk the jaywalk own crime report

see what’s happening on

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One forcible sex offense, three aggravated assaults and three burglaries. That is the number of times those crimes occurred on Quinnipiac University’s campus in 2011. It is also the kind of information that can be found in the the Quinnipiac University Clery Report. Federal law requires all federally-funded universities and colleges to have a Clery Report. This log documents all crimes that occur on campus over a three-year period. Information in Quinnipiac’s three-year Clery Report may present any continuing problems. Chief of Public Safety David Barger believes that the major problem on Quinnipiac’s campuses has to do with drug and alcohol-related is-

sues. He does not think that it is a problem unique to Quinnipiac, but one that is common at many other universities. Information in the Clery Report shows a steady increase in disciplinary referrals for drug-related violations at Quinnipiac. There were 32 cases in 2009, 66 in 2010 and 147 in 2011. It also shows disciplinary referrals for liquor law violations. In the past three years, Quinnipiac has had 1,802 violations of the liquor law. Quinnipiac’s Department of Public Safety keeps brochures documenting this information, as well as other crimes that have occurred on campus over the past three years. A large binder in the Public Safety office shows what crimes have occurred in the previous 60 days. This

How do you plan to spend your Thanksgiving break?

binder also shows all crimes since the beginning of the fall semester. “You look and say,‘wow this is 75 pages’ but you would go to another campus and it might be double that,” Barger said. The Clery Report is beneficial because it allows for Public Safety officials to see what trends are developing throughout the student body on a yearly basis, Barger said. “It’s only in number so we have to look into that number and try to extrapolate from that number what the problem is or what the trend is,” Barger said. “But at least it gives us something to start out with.” The information also allows Quinnipiac to compare itself to other schools to see what kinds of comSee clery log Page 3

Full story, Page 4

Check out a gallery of some students’ tattoos.

katie o’brien/Chronicle

Hamden Police captain, Ronald Smith, warned students about the dangers of not using crosswalks and sidewalks.

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By ANDY LANDOLFI

The Quinnipiac Chronicle

@quchronicle


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