The Marquette Tribune | September 29, 2020

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Marquette Academic Workers Union responds to university’s COVID-19 actions NEWS, 4

Club sports struggles Six-step process proves difficult for some

SPORTS, 12

Volume 105, Number 6

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

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Cobeen Hall in quarantine Students protest Breonna verdict

Peaceful walkout, march following jury’s decision By Ben Wells

benjamin.wells@marquette.edu

Marquette University community members organized a peaceful walkout and march that called for justice for Breonna Taylor after a grand jury ruled Sept. 23 that none of the officers involved in her shooting would be charged with her death. Taylor was killed in her apartment after Louisville Metro Police Department officers Jonathan Mattingly, Brett Hankison and Myles Cosgrove fired bullets into her apartment March 13. Her death had been at the center of protests calling for racial justice across the country

Photo by Joceline Helmbreck joceline.helmbreck@marquette.edu

Following in Schroeder Hall’s footsteps, Cobeen Hall has been instructed to quarantine for two weeks.

Residents ordered to stay inside for two-week period By Megan Woolard

megan.woolard@marquette.edu

Cobeen Hall has been ordered by the Milwaukee Health Department to quarantine for the next two weeks. The quarantine began Sept. 25 at 11 p.m. The news was delivered in an email from the university earlier that night. This comes in response to a confirmed number of cases within the hall. Cobeen residents who live on floors eight, five and four were all tested for COVID-19 throughout the day after a

number of cases were confirmed on those floors. Ethan Jacoby-Henrickson, a first-year in the College of Communication, was one of the Cobeen residents who got tested. He tested negative but will still have to quarantine. “I just feel like we’re already doing all of the social distancing things, like, what else is there to be done? But I guess we just have to quarantine the whole building,” Jacoby-Henrickson said. Regardless of their test results, all students living in Cobeen are required to quarantine for two weeks. Additionally, any residents who did not get tested today will be required to get tested next week. “I’m upset. I’m sure others are

INDEX

MUU TV

COVID-19 TRACKER........................................3 MUPD REPORTS.............................................3 A&E..................................................................8 OPINIONS......................................................10 SPORTS..........................................................12

upset as well. One of the reasons we’re here is to be on campus and learn and hang out with each other. Being locked up in a hall doesn’t allow us to do that” Jacoby-Henrickson said. Other Cobeen residents were not surprised at the news of the quarantine. “I kind of expected it to happen,” Mairead Littleton, a firstyear in the College of Health Sciences, said. “We were a little surprised that it was on a Friday night and not a Monday. It just seems weird to be on a weekend.” In order to prepare for the next two weeks, many residents went to 7-Eleven and Sendik’s Fresh2Go to stock up on See COBEEN page 4 NEWS

See BREONNA page 2

Virtual town hall addresses COVID-19

Meeting covers finances, response to coronavirus By Megan Woolard

megan.woolard@marquette.edu

The university held a virtual town hall to discuss COVID-19, spring break and the university’s finances Sept. 28. Cobeen Hall’s quarantining was first on the agenda. “The percentage of cases or certain number of cases in a hall is not the trigger for quarantine,” Keli Wollmer, executive director for the Medical Clinic and member of the COVID-19 response team, said. “It’s the transmission rate between

close contacts and in what amount of time that transmission occurs.” Cobeen Hall had a positivity rate of 6%, while Schroeder Hall had a positivity rate of 3%, both of which equates to about 17 students. The number of cases and the transmission rate are identified through contact tracing on campus. If a group of cases is found, it could prompt mass testing. With evidence of residence hall transmission, Wollmer was asked if there was any evidence for transmission within the classroom. “Fortunately, we do not have any evidence of classroom transmission,” she said. “We do effective contact tracing and have not identified any direct transmission in See COVID-19 page 3

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Organization urges administrators to divest

and has since resurfaced after news came out that only one of the officers involved would be charged with wanton endangerment of her neighbors. However, one of the officers was charged with wanton endangerment of her neighbors, which is a Class D felony. In the state of Kentucky, this can be comparable to possession of a firearm by a convicted felon or unlawful use of a credit card. The protest, which was organized by Black Student Council, started in front of the Alumni Memorial Union. Black Student Council leaders spoke about the recent verdict and their own personal struggles toward achieving racial justice in the world. Dijana Zenelay, a junior in the College of Arts & Sciences, attended the Wednesday afternoon

Get out to vote PAGE 10


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