OCTOBER 19, 2022 • VOLUME 93 • ISSUE 6
The official student newspaper of Quinnipiac University since 1929
JACK SPIEGEL/CHRONICLE
Ribbon cutting, helicopter landing: QU touts campus health care advancements Photos on page 3
ILLUSTRATION BY SARAH HARDIMAN
OPINION P.5: Do not disturb News Editor Katie Langley describes how phone calls add an unnecessary stressor to everyday life
JACK SPIEGEL/CHRONICLE
ARTS & LIFE P.6: Sweet success QU student Merve Sariyildiz launched an online bakery during the pandemic selling chocolate-covered sweets
CAMERON LEVASSEUR/CHRONICLE
SPORTS P.12: More than an athlete
Looking at Quinnipiac Women’s Rugby player Kat Storey, both on and off the pitch
LGBTQIA+ History Month Teach-In highlights intersectionality of identity By KATIE LANGLEY News Editor
As a part of its recognition of the accomplishments, struggles and stories of the LGBTQ community, the Quinnipiac University Office of Cultural & Global Engagement held the second annual LGBTQIA+ History Month Teach-In on Oct. 13. The program hosted in the Carl Hansen Student Center Piazza included a lineup of student and faculty speakers. It opened with a presentation about LGBTQ representation in media by William Jellison, a professor of psychology and women’s and gender studies. Junior political science major Leea Cotter attended Jellison’s portion of the event. “It offered a perspective I have not really considered before regarding LGBTQ+ representation in television and films,” Cotter wrote in a statement to the Chronicle following the event. “The speaker mentioned how Hollywood tends to use stereotypical
characteristics that are harmful to the overall population.” Junior political science major Emily Diaz then led a discussion about the intersections of Latinx and LGBTQ identities. Next, Arnold Bernhard Library Public Services Librarian Robert Young featured his work chronicling the history of gay men. Young discovered photographs of a gay couple from the 1950s on eBay in 2010. Since then, he has been developing collections to track down family and friends, and sometimes, the people featured in the photographs themselves. “I was born in the early sixties, so these men were from my mother and father’s generation, and they were also before the Stonewall Rebellions kind of sparked the modern LGBTQ movement, which I benefited from,” Young told the Chronicle. Young said that LGBTQ people of the
mid-20th century such as those in his photographs grew up in a very different world than he or LGBTQ youth today have. “Whenever I share the photos on Facebook I get such a huge response from the gay men who said, ‘These are wonderful… I feel so moved when I see the photos, these mean so much to me, this is our history,’” Young said. “This is stuff that you don’t think of (being in) this time period of people living happy, fulfilled lives.” Following Young’s presentation, Associate Athletic Director for Academic Support Kristen Casamento and Senior Associate Athletic Director for Business and Administration Alyssa Hyatt highlighted professional and college-level athletes from the LGBTQ community. This included U.S. women’s soccer player Megan Rapinoe and University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas.
“Sports is such a microcosm of society that if we could share the stories of the LGBTQ community and activists within athletics, maybe it helps to spark that conversation outside of athletics, too,” Hyatt told the Chronicle. Part-time political science professor Ellie Beargeon spoke next on the topic of the LGBTQ experience within the armed forces. Her research, “Diverse Warriors: The Changing Experiences of LGBTQ Servicemembers,” includes Beargeon’s own story as a lesbian Iraq War veteran as well as the accounts of other LGBTQ military members. Beargeon told the Chronicle that she decided to participate in the event to show the different layers of being LGBTQ in the military. She said it is both an institution which has historically silenced LGBTQ people with policies, such as Don’t Ask, See TEACH-IN Page 2