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MUSG hosts Palermo’s Pizza forum in AMU
EDITORIAL: College athletics needs student focus, even in offseason
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Helfaer Theatre’s ‘Urinetown’ tackles pee and people
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SPJ’s 2010 Best All-Around Non-Daily Student Newspaper
Volume 97, Number 54
Thursday, April 18, 2013
www.marquettetribune.org
Blue to enter 2013 NBA draft Junior guard will forgo his senior year to pursue pro career
After a breakthrough 2012-13 season during which he blossomed into an offensive force, Marquette junior Vander Blue will forgo his senior season and enter the NBA draft, the university announced Tuesday. Blue led Marquette in scoring with 14.8 points per game last season. He struggled for consistency in his first two seasons but took a major step forward as a go-to scorer in last year’s offense. “I’ve had three great years here and appreciate everything Marquette has done for me during that time to help me develop,” Blue said in a press release Tuesday. “At this point I want to pursue my dream. I’ve prayed about it and discussed it with my family and think this is the right decision for me at this time.” Blue, a native of Madison, decommitted from Wisconsin to join the Golden Eagles in 2010. He thanked the coaches and fans for a memorable three-year career in Tuesday’s release. “I really want to thank all of the coaches and staff at Marquette for helping me become a better player and a man,” Blue said. “I also loved and appreciate the support shown by Marquette fans across the country during my career, especially during home games at the Bradley Center.”
Resentment toward Blue misguided
Patrick Leary
Photo by Danny Alfonzo/daniel.alfonzo@marquette.edu
Just more than a year ago, as I sat courtside at the Bradley Center working for Marquette Athletics, I heard a constant diatribe from one particular fan in the student section behind me. “Tran-sfer, Van-der, (clap clap clap clap, clap clap),” the fan screamed. And for much of the last three years, most fans had these kind of feelings toward Vander Blue, the highly-touted Madison native who could never quite reach his potential. Fans called him everything from a bust to a failure. This season changed everything for Blue. On a team without any true stars, Blue
Marquette guard Vander Bliue came into his own in the NCAA tournament, helping Marquette to the Elite Eight.
See Leary, page 13
Marathon runners Two years later, Wild reflects recall Boston blasts on tenure and retirement Professor and student present during race thankful for support By Jacob Born and Sarah Hauer
jacob.born@marquette.edu sarah.hauer@marquette.edu
While investigators sift through photos and videos to identify a suspect in Monday’s Boston Marathon bombing, members of the Marquette community continue to process and reflect on the events that transpired. Gary Krenz, professor and chair of the department of
mathematics, statistics and computer science, ran the marathon Monday and said he hopes justice will be served in a responsible manner. “Hopefully people won’t be in a rush to judge, convict. (I hope) that they actually look at it,” Krenz said. “Three people are dead, more than 170 injured, some with limbs blown off, absolutely devastating. Just as devastating is a rush to judgment, so I’m hopeful that there will be a careful investigation, that justice will prevail but they are not rushed to assign blame.” Monday was Krenz’s ninth time competing in Boston. He said he knew from the start
By Melanie Lawder
melanie.lawder@marquette.edu
From 1996 to 2011, former Marquette President the Rev. Robert A. Wild oversaw a host of changes on campus. Admissions applications increased from 5,000 to 20,000, the campus underwent construction resulting in the Al McGuire Center and Eckstein Hall, a new mission statement was introduced and the men’s basketball
Photo by Danny Alfonzo/daniel.alfonzo@marquette.edu
See Wild, page 5
The Rev. Robert A. Wild is doing things “on a much lower key” in retirement.
See Boston, page 4
INDEX
DPS REPORTS.....................2 CALENDAR.......................2 VIEWPOINTS......................6
Former president still lives in Jesuit Residence on campus
MARQUEE......................8 SPORTS..........................12 CLASSIFIEDS.....................14
NEWS
VIEWPOINTS
SPORTS
Genocide
Goodman
Men’s Soccer
A Rwandan genocide victim told her family’s story. PAGE 3
The way we think about wisdom skews recognition. PAGE 6
Check in with Louis Bennett’s squad as it prepares for 2013-14. PAGE 12