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Link links up with the Riverside for symphony show
EDITORIAL: Are there Women suffer any alternatives to high narrow defeat priced, unused textbooks? to No. 12/13 Louisville PAGE 14
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SPJ’s 2010 Best All-Around Non-Daily Student Newspaper
Volume 97, Number 33
Thursday, January 24. 2013
www.marquettetribune.org
Tuition to rise in 2013-14
Marquette announces plan to raise price by $1,390, 4.25 percent By Melanie Lawder
melanie.lawder@marquette.edu
In the 2003-2004 academic year, tuition at Marquette stood at $20,350. Now, a decade later, a year at the same university will cost more than 40 percent – and almost $15,000 – more. Marquette announced a tuition increase in a university news brief to faculty, staff and students Tuesday. At $34,200 per year, the new tuition for the 2013-2014 academic year is a 4.25 percent, or $1,390, hike from the current year’s price of $32,810 per year. Tuition has been increasing at a relatively steady rate for the past four years. From 2009 to 2012, tuition went up $1,360 each year, and for the 2012-2013 year, the price increased $1,410. Though tuition will continue to increase every year, Marquette Vice President of Finance John Lamb said the university is working to decrease the rate of tuition increase over the next few years. “We’ve had 4.5 percent increases (over the past two years),” Lamb said. “What we want to try over the next five years is take that increase down.” Lamb attributed the increased See Tuition, page 7
Tribune File Photo
University President the Rev. Scott Pilarz (above) informed faculty, staff and students of the tuition raise for next year in an email Tuesday afternoon.
Water under the Wisconsin Q & A with aspiring Ave. bridge for local business high court professor MKE shops recover Law prof. Ed Fallone from nearby bridge discusses his run for rehabilitation project the WI Supreme Court By Rob Gebelhoff
By Jason Kurtyka
Uhle’s Tobacco Company at 114 W. Wisconsin Ave. is a small cigar shop and smoking lounge nestled eature between the flashing martory quee of the Riverside Theater and the Milwaukee River. The shop, frequented by
On Feb. 19, Marquette associate professor of law Ed Fallone will go up against incumbent Justice Patience Roggensack and Milwaukee attorney Vince Megna in a primary election for a ten-year term on the Wisconsin Supreme Court. A general election will be held April 2. Fallone has been teaching constitutional law and corporate law at Marquette for the
robert.gebelhoff@marquette.edu
jason.kurtyka@marquette.edu
F S
Photo by Rebecca Rebholz/rebecca.rebholz@marquette.edu
The Wisconsin Avenue bridge was closed for 11 months for rehabilitation. INDEX
DPS REPORTS.....................2 CALENDAR.......................2 CLASSIFIEDS.....................6
MARQUEE.........................10 VIEWPOINTS......................14 SPORTS..........................16
See page 8
past 20 years. In a Jan. 7 interview with WISN, he called the Court “dysfunctional,” citing personality conflicts prohibiting the Court from carrying out its duty to fairness and partiality. Fallone said his experience in corporate and contract law and involvement with Latino organizations in Milwaukee will allow him to be a fair judge with broad political appeal. He recently sat down with the Tribune to talk about the campaign. Marquette Tribune: Where did you grow up? How did that influence you to go to law school? See Fallone, page 7
NEWS
MARQUEE
SPORTS
Dean
Mueller
Leary
First Arts & Sciences dean candidate visits campus PAGE 3
Matt planned to review “Kidz Bop 23.” Then he got hungry. PAGE 13
Uprooting a professional sports franchise never ends easily. PAGE 19