Blog Archives
The Most Fun Way to Say #1
“quinn-uh-PEA-AKK”
“quinn-uh-PEA-akk”
These are two of the more popular attempts of pronouncing the name of my collegiate alma mater: Quinnipiac University (FYI-“QUINN-uh-pea-ack” in one smooth breath). My first visit to the university was in the middle of winter and it was so frigidly cold the temperature had to have frozen somewhere in the single digits. There was snow, but not the 40” avalanche that recently descended on the Hamden area. I loved it then and continue to love it today with nostalgia.
Speaking of which, I was a broadcast journalism major, focused in sports, and covered numerous sports teams during my four year residence, one of which was men’s ice hockey. This team was particularly exciting because it was the most popular sports team on campus and therefore created an incredibly electric atmosphere for each of their icy battles against the best of the Ivy League and others in the ECAC.
Memories are coming back of midweek player and coach interviews, game day dinners in the arena with my fellow press corps, recording the game for highlights, post-game interviews and the hours spent in the editing room in the School of Communications. These reports were not only for school projects and school television shows, but also for The Palestra online, for which I was a paid reporter/One Man Band. Good times indeed! If only I could be covering the team this season…
While there were some thrilling moments from my time as a student, those teams may have been more responsible for building the foundation for what is transpiring during the 2012/2013 season thus far with the same head coach at the helm, Rand Pecknold.
As declared today, February 11, 2013, the Quinnipiac University Men’s Hockey team has, for the first time in school history been ranked…
Quinnipiac is currently the #1 college hockey team in the country! For all of us alums, this is not only amazing, but also quite a bit surreal. To see them listed in the top spot atop the giants of college hockey from around the United States is truly a sight to witness.
Here is a quick statistical rundown:
–The longest unbeaten streak in America (21)
–Undefeated in their ECAC league play (14-0-2)
–Four of their last six regular season games are at home
To quote from a local Ohio favorite of mine, “With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good®“. To my fellow Bobcats past and present, we all could substitute our beloved college into that phrase and it too would be a perfect fit.
For those who are studying and have graduated from this university, the word “Quinnipiac” signifies many things: Relaxing on the quad on a Saturday or Tuesday afternoon, studying in groups at the iconic Arnold Bernhard Library, ordering a mouthwatering bacon, egg and cheese sandwich from the cafeteria after an 8:00 a.m. science class, adventures in New Haven on Friday & Saturday nights (Toads!), socializing in the many dorms, dressing up in a pink skirt and a tight pink tank top and singing “Man, I Feel Like a Woman” in front of all the fraternities and sororities with two happy backup dancers (my picture made the yearbook!) and so on.
Now, Quinnipiac also means the best men’s college ice hockey team in the country.
Go Bobcats!
Maybe All I Need is a Tuxedo
Yesterday I wore a black wool sweater with a gray penguin stitched on. It should be noted it was not a mystery as to why because it was made by Penguin Clothing. Anyways, at a little more than half an inch tall, I was oddly mesmerized by it. Part of my admiration is because of a project I did about penguins in elementary school. But I was fixated on it… and for several minutes. After getting back to work, I was looking right back at, ‘the emperor.’ Weird.
While this was all occurring, I was constantly leaning back and forth in a reclining chair, pondering my next writing topic. Per daydreaming, I thought of a writing class I took in college with Ms. Diaz when I did the same thing. Sitting in the back row, of course, there was only one other person who was equally as ‘cool’ as me in the room and she was to my left. A beautiful brunette with a smile so incredible that it absolutely validated my choice to take this class. Memories flashed to the front of my mind of how many nice mini-conversations we had (they could have been longer, but the professor kept talking).
She was sweet, funny and smart. I knew she worked at the tech repair room in the university’s main hall. One day, I took in my fully functioning laptop with the power cord and was prepared to ask her about a mysterious ‘power shortage.’ Turns out, my class let out five minutes too late and she was already down the hallway when I was arriving. I didn’t even try to make anything up to the computer guy. I just looked at him and left.
Besides seeing her a few times around campus the following semester, that class was the last time I was within a comfortable/normal speaking distance. However, I was a fit individual and a run across the quad would not have killed me (Note: Being a guy entitles me to being an idiot on more than one occasion).
Did I have ‘a shot’ with her? Don’t know, but I really wish I had let her reject me in person instead of me constantly imagining/fearing it.
She was so close and yet so far. It may be a cliche, but it’s a good one.
Snapping back, I gazed back down at the penguin. Did you know emperor penguins travel an average of 50 miles between a breeding colony and the sea for food? According to “Emperor Penguin” on National Geographic online, the female penguin makes this journey for herself and the baby. After she returns and feeds her young, the male penguin then does the same for himself to prevent starvation after fulfilling his two-month babysitting responsibilities. This is a partnership between a male and female penguin while caring for their young (Some of us complain about going to the grocery store a couple of miles away).
Regardless of the fact they have a baby together, these penguins exhibit extraordinary dedication and courage. It comes natural to them. These acts exemplify the mentality of, ‘putting your head down and getting to work.’ I am constantly amazed and reminded of why they are such admirable birds, though flightless.
Maybe the reason I kept looking at the penguin on my sweater was the hope of seeing it sport a time traveling helmet. If two slacker-rocker-dimwits from the ’80s used a phone booth…
“All you need in this life is ignorance and confidence, and then success is sure.”
Mark Twain
