Men’s basketball catches fire, p. 16
QUChronicle.com
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What’s Inside: Grading Obama, page 4 Wrecking Ke$ha, page 7
News ................................2 Opinion ............................4 Arts&Entertainment ...........6 Scene ..............................8 Sports..............................10
The QUINNIPIAC Volume 79 Issue 13
January 27, 2010
Obama’s Cocaine, marijuana bust leaves freshmen in handcuffs Nation
Two arrested on drug charges By Andrew Vazzano General Manager Two Quinnipiac University students were arrested early Saturday morning after marijuana and cocaine were found in their rooms. Mathew Scherl from Bayside Hills, N.Y., and Bradley Burkhard from Andover, Mass., were arrested after police responded to a call at 3 a.m. on Saturday. Police found 52 grams of marijuana, 0.7 grams of cocaine, drug paraphernalia and $680 in their room, according to Hamden Police. Scherl, 18, was charged with sale of a controlled substance, possession of marijuana, possession of narcotics and possession of drug paraphernalia. Scherl was being held on $25,000 bond. Scherl posted bail and attended class on Monday.
Who: Bradley Burkhard, 20 Mathew Scherl, 18
What: 52 grams of marijuana, 0.7 grams of cocaine, $680, drug paraphernalia Where: Perlroth Hall When: Saturday, 3 a.m.
A year in review Burkhard: Charged
with possession of drug paraphernalia
Quinnipiac’s campus is continuing to move in a more ecofriendly direction, and the latest example is the creation of a new electronically-based package-tracking system that will be implemented next week. The Quinnipiac community was notified of the new system on Jan. 12. It was originally supposed to be in place by the time the semester began. “Certain circumstances did not allow us to be up and running at the beginning of the semester, obviously we don’t want to unveil this if it’s not working,” said Peter DiDomenico, manager of printed POST OFFICE, continued on page 3
controlled substance, possession of marijuana; narcotics; and drug paraphernalia --photo from Facebook
Burkhard, 20, was charged with possession of drug paraphernalia and was released. Campus security originally went to the suite in the Perlroth
dormitory in response to a noise complaint, according to the police report. Both are scheduled to appear in court on Feb. 12 in Meriden.
Post office to Barger handed activate digital package alert Asst. Chief appointed to step in for injured Twining system By Meghan Parmentier Co-News Editor
Scherl: Charged with sale of a
In the wake of a recent injury to Chief of Security and Safety John Twining, Assistant Chief David Barger has assumed TwinBy Joe Pelletier ing’s position for an unSenior Managing Editor specified amount of time, according to Richard Ferguson, senior vice president for administration. Ferguson released a MyQ announcement on Jan. 20 which identified an accident that will leave Twining out of office for an “indeterminate amount of time.” Despite his absence, Twining has remained a part of day-to-day operations, and according to Barger, no changes will be enacted without Twining’s consent. Barger, a night supervisor on campus for more than 10 years, will play the role of “boots on the ground.” “When we need the physical presence of a chief, whether it is dealing with law enforcement or admissions or anything on campus – when they want to see a face, I’ll be there,” Barger said. In his Irmagarde Tator office on Friday afternoon, Barger appeared to have settled into the role, calming down a questioning parent on the phone and keeping
The University had no comment on the fate of either student, according to John Morgan, associate vice president for purblic relations.
security reins
Amanda Shulman / Chronicle
tabs with Residential Life during a Chronicle interview. “It’s really no different than what I have done before,” Barger said. “A few extra meetings, and some more responsibility. I am only too happy to fill in for the chief at this time, to make sure everything runs smoothly.” Prior to his time at Quinnipiac, Barger worked for 24 years in the Connecticut State Police, working his way to a master sergeant position. “He’s not the kind of guy to sit behind a desk,” SGA liaison for security and transportation Ben Wald said. “He is fair and understanding, and has always been there for me as a student.” And in what Wald called “really unique timing,” he SECURITY, continued on page 3
By Joe Pelletier Senior Managing Editor
Barack Obama rode a veritable tsunami of support to the presidency in 2009. But one year later, the waves have died down considerably, leaving Obama’s influence, as Professor of Political Science Scott McLean put it, “dead in the water.” “Never has so little been done with so much political capital,” McLean said. “The Obama movement has just evaporated.” Exactly one year after Obama’s inauguration, Republican Scott Brown was elected to a Senate seat in Massachusetts, a Democratic stronghold since 1979. With Brown’s election, the filibuster-proof majority of the Democratic Party disappeared, and what has risen in its place is a staunch dissatisfaction with Obama’s lack of change. “The irony to me is that Obama gets elected with the help of a social movement demanding change, and is fueled by the Internet and cell phones and the youth OBAMA, continued on page 3
ARNOLD
Bernhard Library will play host to several classes this semester. Story on page 2.
IDOL TIME
It’s that time of year again...and time to look back at your favorite American Idols. Story on page 6.