Since 1916
Volume 100, Number 10
Thursday, November 12, 2015
www.marquettewire.org
Logo waffle makers Three dining halls will get them in the spring
PAGE 5
Editorial
Tobacco-free policy inaccurately represents PAGE 14
2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper
Teammates reunite
Three women’s basketball freshmen played AAU ball in Milwaukee
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Reactions to Golden Eagle Basketball Preview possibility of tobacco-free campus Top-10 freshman class
New kids on the block brings different skill sets to new-look team
President Lovell needs to approve legislation before it’s enforced
By Dan Reiner
daniel.reiner@marquette.edu
At 6:15 a.m. on any given morning, while most of Marquette’s campus sleeps, you can find freshman Matt Heldt in Kasten Gym at the Al McGuire Center practicing his post game and working on free throws. Not long after, around 7 a.m., fellow freshman Henry Ellenson joins Heldt to refine his own game. Such is life for the Marquette men’s basketball team, a group full of self-described “gym rats” who can be found working out at any time of day. It’s a culture that was revitalized by the onslaught of new players, highlighted by the highly touted 2015 recruiting class. “This team is just different,” said redshirt junior guard Duane Wilson, who is one of only four returners from last year’s team. “Everyone is on the same agenda, ready to work... We’re doing things as a team.” In assembling his five-man recruiting class, head coach Steve Wojciechowski took a page out of Noah’s playbook when he built the ark–the Marquette coach found a player to fill each position on the court, which not only benefits the current team, but builds the foundation for future teams. The class, ranked No. 5 in the country by Scout, No. 10 by ESPN and No. 11 by CBS, is arguably the best in program history. Yet, Wojciechowski and his
staff landed those five players–Ellenson, Heldt, Sacar Anim, Haanif Cheatham and Traci Carter–against improbable odds. The Golden Eagles were coming off a 13-19 record under an entirely new coaching staff and the future of the program was uncertain. Persistent communication and general friendliness with the recruits were ultimately the factors that catapulted Marquette into the national radar. “When Wojo was recruiting me, it was only him,” said Ellenson, the 5-star gem of the class. “It was the head coach
recruiting me instead of the assistants, so I could tell he was really invested in me. When I was about to commit to my school, I swear he was at Rice Lake (High School) every other week. It was special.” Ellenson will jump right into his role as the team’s starting power forward who will control much of the offensive tempo with his personal style of play. The 6-foot-10 player has all the tools of an NBA player and some scouts are projecting him as a potential top-10 NBA draft pick. “There’s going to be a lot
placed on Henry’s shoulders to be as good as he can be in a short period of time,” Wojciechowski said. “He’s got the highest ceiling too…it would be good to see him really make some serious strides as a player.” While Ellenson will certainly have a learning curve with each game inching toward BIG EAST play, the roles of his freshman comrades are not as clearly defined. For Anim and Cheatham, it will be figuring out which position they fit and how they will contribute to
Students have mixed reactions to Marquette Student Government’s decision to prohibit tobacco use on campus. MUSG voted 16-3, with four members abstaining, to pass the tobacco-free campus legislation Nov. 9. It is being sent to University President Michael Lovell for final approval. The legislation approves creating a temporary committee of students, faculty and staff who will be responsible for writing the tobacco-free campus policy by Aug. 1, 2016. If Lovell approves, the committee is slated to be formed by the end of this semester. Marquette is considered a smoke-free campus, meaning that the public is not allowed to smoke within 10 feet of any university-owned buildings. Blake Hartman, MUSG senator and freshman in the College of Business Administration, voted against the legislation. He said it won’t do much to discourage smoking and will be a waste of time and resources. “I don’t think it’s going to be as effective as (MUSG) says it will be,” Hartman said. “It’s just not going to do enough.”
See Freshmen, Page 17
See Tobacco, Page 3
INDEX
NEWS
MARQUEE
OPINIONS
CALENDAR...........................................3 MUPD REPORTS.................................3 MARQUEE..........................................10 OPINIONS.......................................14 SPORTS...........................................16
By Gary Leverton and Sophia Boyd
gary.leverton@marquette.edu sophia.boyd@marquette.edu
Photo by Ben Erickson/benjamin.a.erickson@marquette.edu
Every member of the highly touted recruiting class has made adjustments to their game since arriving in June.
Go away, Gofundme!
MUPD pizza incentive
MURPHY: The best crowdfunding program isn’t Gofundme, it’s a job!
Coupons being handed out to pedestrians who follow street laws.
Studying social support
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Staff basketball predictions
Wire sports writers pick BIG EAST, postseason finishes for MU teams.
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PAGE 6
Professor draws connection between health, community values.
SPORTS
Anthony Hecht Prize
English professor recieves poetry award for light-hearted writing. PAGE 10
Millennial-focused values COMSTOCK: Companies try to market to millennials in chill ways. PAGE 15
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