The Marquette Tribune | April 24, 2014

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EDITORIAL: After loss of partnership, MU needs to get social innovation back on track

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2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper

Volume 98, Number 55

www.marquettewire.org/tribune

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Times ends affiliation with MU

DPS unclear on if it will take police powers By Matt Kulling

matthew.kulling@marquette.edu

conducted on 336 Marquette undergraduate students in 2006. 70 percent of respondents told one or more persons about their suicidal thoughts, while 30 percent told no one. In addition, 15 respondents considered suicide but changed their minds after attempting it. Training centered on the Question, Persuade, Refer model, a gatekeeper program that teaches how to effectively talk about suicide while controlling normal anxieties. “It’s not our job to completely fix the problem, just to give the person a little sense of hope,” Jenkins said. “Most people that have suicidal thoughts don’t want those thoughts but

think suicide is their only option. That’s where we come in to help.” There is a wide range of suicide symptoms, including hopelessness, impulsivity, burdensomeness and substance or alcohol abuse. If a suicidal person is intoxicated, he or she is in greater danger of acting on their symptoms. When asking if someone is considering suicide, Jenkins stressed that individuals should not skirt around the question, even if someone is seeking attention, which is a warning sign. “A lot of times it’s OK to,

The Department of Public Safety could not give any specifics on when it may decide to use the police powers it was granted by law earlier this month. At the bill signing in the Alumni Memorial Union April 14, Gov. Scott Walker said the law will help add value to the contributions of DPS. “This legislation, once it becomes law, will open the door for Marquette University to have the ability that private colleges and universities have in 21 other states and the District of Columbia,” Walker said at the bill signing. “In the end, I believe that it will provide tremendous value to students and the faculty and the staff, but also the community.” Interim University President the Rev. Robert A. Wild stressed at the bill signing that the law only gives the university the option of establishing a police force, and no official decision to actually implement one is reached. If the university decides to take the option of establishing a police force, it will add roughly 50 commissioned police officers to the Avenues West area. The law, which passed through the Wisconsin State Legislature in April, allows the university to enter into an agreement with the state and the city of Milwaukee to establish a police force run by the university with the same powers of city police officers. Twenty-one other states allow private universities to operate a police department. This includes schools such as the University of Notre Dame, Georgetown University, Boston College, Loyola University Chicago and Yale University. Following a governor’s task force that suggested the university would benefit from a police force, a Marquette internal task force met in the summer of 2013 to review the idea of an internal police department. The task force was co-chaired by L. Christopher Miller, vice president of student affairs,

See Suicide, Page 4

See DPS, Page 3

NEWS

VIEWPOINTS

SPORTS

Walker

Biggi

Killian

Photo courtesy of Elise Chapman

Jeff Snell, the primary architect of Marquette’s Social Innovation Initiative, speaks at ManPower Group headquarters in June. Snell was responsible for developing a social innovation partnership with The New York Times called FixesU, which the Times ended as a result of Snell’s layoff two months ago.

Layoff of Jeff Snell stunts campus social innovation programs By Joe Kvartunas

joseph.kvartunas@marquette.edu

FixesU, a social innovation partnership between Marquette and The New York Times, end-

ed in the wake of the layoff Jeff Snell, who was the primary architect of the university’s Social Innovation Initiative. SII hosted a faculty forum Wednesday to discuss the future of social innovation at Marquette. The event was led by the initiative’s new leader Jeanne Hossenlopp, vice president for research and dean of the graduate school, and the Rev. Nicholas Santos, an assistant profes-

sor of marketing. The purpose of the event was to decide how to advance the initiative at Marquette in the wake of the layoff of Snell, whose severance reverberated throughout social innovation projects at Marquette. “It’s really sad that Jeff Snell was let go, and it’s important that we figure out how to move forward,” Santos said at the event. FixesU is a project working to build a wiki-style platform to

bring case studies of social innovation projects around the world to classrooms across the country. It is based on the “Fixes” column published in The New York Times by David Bornstein and Tina Rosenberg. Bornstein, however, said the project grew out of the work of Snell. Bornstein said it was Snell’s idea to create the platform usSee Social, Page 4

Counselors take on suicide prevention Program focuses on Question, Persuade, Refer model of help By Natalie Wickman

natalie.wickman@marquette.edu

The Counseling Center continues to focus on providing suicide prevention resources nearly five years after a student committed suicide in 2009. The Counseling Center offered its suicide prevention training to the general public Wednesday to dispel myths and teach effective responses to suicide symptoms on campus.

The training, also presented at resident assistant training and in classrooms by professor request, was led by Nick Jenkins, counselor and coordinator of mental health advocacy. It was the fourth training session held this school year. Linda Davis, administrative chemistry assistant, was the only attendee for this training. She said it’s common for faculty to be approached by students showing suicidal symptoms. “I think faculty and staff should be more in-tune to (suicidal symptoms),” Davis said, noting that she will apply the training skills to work. Jenkins referenced a University of Texas–Austin study

INDEX

CALENDAR...........................2 DPS REPORTS......................2 CLASSIFIEDS........................5

MARQUEE...................6 VIEWPOINTS..............8 SPORTS.......................10

Scott Walker may finish his degree with UW system. PAGE 3

MU should consider co-ed floors beyond Dorothy Day. PAGE 8

Miwaukee Brewers have rewarded fans with a fast start. PAGE 11


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