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Volume 104, Number 05
Meaning to team motto Louis Bennett’s Q3 shapes development of men’s soccer program SPORTS, 14
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
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Students challenge policy, investments Protestors aim to deliver message to Zilber, voice concerns By Jenny Whidden
jennifer.whidden@marquette.edu
At 11 a.m. Monday morning, Marquette students chanted as they walked along Wisconsin Avenue with signs that read “Marquette divest,” “Hear your students” and “Marquette cannot silence dissent.” For the second time in the past week, the group was heading for Zilber Hall. While climate strikes large and small took place across the world Friday, the Marquette students held an initial protest outside Zilber Hall. They advocated for climate change awareness and spoke out against Marquette’s demonstration policy and certain university investments. The students joined the global movement of climate change demonstrations in more than 150 countries, whose messages were in anticipation of a United Nations climate summit that began Monday. The group of students also attended the Milwaukee Climate Strike earlier Friday, congregating at Milwaukee City Hall and marching the three miles to North Point Park before making its way back to campus around 2 p.m. Once the students reached Zilber Hall, the university’s demonstration policy became a point of protest. The administration are currently revising the policy after unclear wording confused members of the university community. The policy provides guidelines for student, staff and faculty demonstrations on campus. One of the policy guidelines
requires organizers to receive university approval for demonstrations in most campus buildings, including Zilber Hall. Neither Friday’s nor Monday’s student protests adhered to the official process. The group, determined to deliver a letter of demands to university leaders, entered Zilber Hall without prior approval Friday. After a desk receptionist told the students no administrators were in the building, the group resolved to return Monday. When the students entered the hall Monday morning, Catie Petralia, one of the protest organizers and a senior in the College of Arts & Sciences, approached the information desk. She asked to speak with University President Michael Lovell or acting provost Kimo Ah Yun. Once again, the receptionist informed the group that both leaders were out of the building. The students waited for 45 minutes in the Zilber Hall lobby before Dean of Students Stephanie Quade came downstairs to meet with them. “We feel like there’s a severe disconnect between the people in this building and the rest of the campus,” Andrew Himmelberg, a senior in the College of Arts & Sciences, said to Quade. Himmelberg spoke on behalf of the group. Quade pointed out that the group was in violation of the university’s demonstration policy, and asked the students to move to a “designated area,” specifically the Alumni Memorial Union or a public space. “We’ve identified spaces on campus for public protest. This space is not one of them,” Quade said to Himmelberg. See POLICY page 2 INDEX CALENDAR......................................................3 MUPD REPORTS.............................................3 A&E..................................................................8 OPINIONS......................................................10 SPORTS..........................................................12
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SEAC speaks up
Dozens participate, express urgency of climate situation By Bridget Fogarty
bridget.fogarty@marquette.edu
While some students attended their final classes of the week Friday afternoon, others were east of
Photo by Zach Bukowski zachary.bukowski@marquette.edu
campus, shouting. “Hey hey, ho ho! Fossil fuels have got to go!” Laura Schmit, co-president of Students for an Environmentally Active Campus and a senior in the College of Arts & Sciences,
joined the chants of dozens of other marchers as she walked with fellow club members in the Milwaukee Climate Strike. See SEAC page 3
College discusses future Friday forum allows conversation about potential merge By Alexa Jurado
alexa.jurado@marquette.edu
Students in the College of Education met Friday to discuss the future of the college and to take things into their own hands. Juniors in the College of Education Brooke McArdle and Jonathan Jimenez organized the forum, which they hosted in
Schroeder Complex. Seniors in the College of Education Alyssa Goodwillie and Elizabeth Killian said they received a “cryptic” email the first week of school announcing that “changes are being made (to the college).” They said they also received an email from the dean of the College of Education William Henk, saying the college would do its best to keep students informed. The emails refer to structural shifts and a possible merge with another college. “When we heard about this I was
really angry,” Jimenez said. “I’m going to do something, I’m not just going to take a slap in the face like this lying down. Brooke was just as angry, if not more angry.” During the forum, students and faculty discussed some of the inconsistencies among the reasons university administration gave for the restructuring of the college, such as cost management and demographic changes. Jimenez said he doesn’t agree
See COLLEGE page 2
NEWS
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
OPINIONS
Forbes 30 Under 30
“West Side Story”
City under pressure
Senior Zoya Shams named a 2019 scholar, to attend summit
PAGE 6
Marquette alumnus acts in groundbreaking production PAGE 8
Milwaukee must declare a climate emergency, take action PAGE 11