Since 1916
Volume 99, Number 49
Thursday, April 23, 2015
www.marquettewire.org
Editorial
MUSG fiscal budget
MUSG President Zack Wallace signs 2015-’16 expediture plan
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Tomb cover lies under the Joan of Arc Chapel
All undergraduates could utilize end of year surveys PAGE 11
2010, 2011, 2012, 2014 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper
Men’s golf favored in SC Golden Eagles look to ursurp champion St. John’s in bid for NCAA Tournament PAGE 13
Flaws in sexual assault reporting 2010 2011
Sexual assaults included here are all incidents represented in the Department of Public Safety’s morning reports, spanning October 2011 to April 2015.
2012 2013
2014 2015
By Andrew Dawson
andrew.dawson@marquette.edu
Tuesday night Mass in the Joan of Arc Chapel is as packed as usual, with chairs removed to accommodate the large crowd. Students sit on the floor and wooden benches that line the walls. Little to their knowledge, a tomb cover lies beneath them. In the back corner beside the altar, students sit atop a stone door on the floor. The door is cemented shut and was once an entrance, but not to a basement. Rather, it was an entrance to the tomb of Chevalier de Sautereau, who likely died in the 15th century. “I knew it was an ancient, historic place but I never expected a tomb to be here,” said Lexi Dossey, a senior in the College of Business Administration who has attended mass at Joan of Arc since her freshman year. “I’d be more freaked out if there were a body down there just because graveyards freak me out, but it’s empty so I’m cool with it.” Having a tomb under a chapel is irregular in this day and age but was very common in the 15th century. “It is pretty typical of European churches to have people of local importance buried there, especially in a family chapel,” said Julie Baumann, a Joan of Arc Chapel docent. Joan of Arc Chapel was built in the 14th century in Chasse, France. It was built as an extension to an unknown family’s house. The family’s son was de Sautereau, the Chatelain of Chasse who died in battle and was buried in the chapel. At that time it was named Chapelle de St. Martin de Sayssuel. De Sautereau’s family’s coat of arms remains painted on the chapel walls. They used to be on every corner of the chapel, but the paint has worn away. The chapel was used for centuries until it was abandoned after the French Revolution. It then fell
No Location Given
Infographic by Robert Gebelhoff/robert.gebelhoff@marquette.edu
CALENDAR...........................................2 DPS REPORTS.....................................2 CLASSIFIEDS.....................................5 MARQUEE..........................................8 OPINIONS.......................................10 SPORTS.............................................12
student on August 24, 2014 in the 800 block of N. 14th Street. Even though DPS put the incident in its crime log three days after it occurred, it won’t be counted in the university’s 2014 count submitted to the federal government, Mascari said. That doesn’t mean, though, that Marquette can choose when to publicly report sexual assaults. Marquette must report all sexual assaults that take place in its “patrol jurisdiction” — a loosely defined term. While many universities limit their patrol jurisdiction to their physical Clery geography, Mascari said Marquette has expanded the patrol jurisdiction to its one-mile radius. “We’ve expanded it, and we can contract it as well,” Mascari said. “But we want to serve our students, not only where they go to school, but also where they’re living in the offcampus area. We’ve expanded it
MARQUEE
OPINIONS
SPORTS
By Rob Gebelhoff, McKenna Oxenden and Patrick Thomas
See Tomb, Page 6
INDEX
Over a three-year period starting in 2011, Marquette reported a total of 30 sexual assaults to the federal government, but that only accounts for just over half of the sexual assaults that took place in its one square-mile patrol zone. The Department of Public Safety reported 53 sexual assaults in its daily morning reports during the same time period represented in its reports to the U.S. Department of Education, an analysis of DPS’s documents shows. But the discrepancy isn’t a mistake, and in fact, it’s common among reports from
colleges across the country. “It’s kind of tough looking at those two (sexual assault counts) and reconciling them,” DPS Chief Paul Mascari said. Mascari attributed the difference in reports to the specific boundaries in which universities are required to report crime to the Department of Education by the Clery Act of 1990. Clery statistics include crimes that occur on property owned by the university; the property adjacent to university-owned property such as the sidewalks and streets; and non-campus property leased by the university or owned or leased by an approved student organization such as fraternity and sorority houses. Those boundaries exclude any non-university house or apartment building where students live, where a large percentage of sexual assault incidents occur. Take, for example, a sexual assault that was reported by a
Significant portion of incidents missed in report to government
NEWS
Paul: Lunch with Lovell
Lovell pledges sustainability
Sitting down with the president helped inform students of initiatives.
University president Michael Lovell signs St. Francis pledge on Earth Day.
Recognition in psychology PAGE 6
WLax looks for 1st BE win
MU gets last chance for its first and only conference win in Cincinnati.
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PAGE 4
Professor’s work in the field of neuroscience recieves award.
See Assaults, Page 2
Revord reveals MU truths
Junior’s photo project displays student’s insecurities in a positive way. PAGE 8
Fransen: Beer in Brew City
High-quality brews can lead to better overall experiences with drinking. PAGE 10
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