The Marquette Tribune | Tuesday, February 18, 2020

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Celebrating 100 years of journalistic integrity

Pedestrian safety

With crossing guard initiative delayed, students feel concerned over intersections NEWS, 2

Johnson replaces Morrow Following departure of redshirt senior, grad transfer sees more action

Volume 104, Number 19

SPORTS, 12

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

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2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper

Remembering Joe College of Business dean’s life celebrated in Gesu Church By Annie Mattea

anne.mattea@marquette.edu

Hundreds of people walked up the steps of the Church of the Gesu Monday morning, gathering in the chapel and filling every pew. As light shone through the church’s numerous stained glass windows, the family and close friends of Joe Daniels spoke to the crowd in a celebration of his life. Daniels, dean of the College of Business Administration, died Feb. 11 after being struck by a vehicle while crossing the intersection of 10th Street and Wisconsin Avenue. He was 60 years old. After a visitation earlier in the morning, the funeral took place from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. A reception followed in the Alumni Memorial Union’s Monaghan Ballroom. The university cancelled all College of Business

Administration classes from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. to allow students and faculty to attend the funeral. The ceremony began as Daniels’ wife and children stood before the crowd to share their memories of Daniels. He is survived by his wife, Lora, and his three children, Bill, 31, Leigh, 29, and Wesley, 25. Lora and Joe were married 39 years. They were high school sweethearts, both from Daleville, Indiana. With a smile, Lora told the gathering that Joe would often say he was on “Joe time” when relaxing and taking time for himself and his family. At the end of her speech, she wished that the members of the crowd would find their own “Joe time.” Each of the family members spoke into a microphone at the front of the chapel. Their speeches included a reverence for Joe’s constant presence in their lives. They spoke of the significant impact that Joe had on the Marquette community, as well as the impact that the community had on Joe. They described him as uniquely passionate, selfless and forgiving, and they

spoke fondly of his love for music. Following their stories, there was a Mass in which people close to recited readings and prayers to commemorate their loved one’s life. Daniels became dean of the College of Business Administration in January after serving as acting dean since May 2019. Prior to that, he was the chair of the Economics Department at Marquette. He was a faculty member at Marquette for more than 30 years. He was a cancer survivor, diagnosed in 2006 with stage four lymphoma before fighting the illness and becoming cancer-free for 14 years. At his funeral, Lora told the crowd that Daniels did not let the illness slow him down, and he was cancer-free just five months after the diagnosis. Daniels’ family asks that wellwishers donate to Marquette to help establish a scholarship in his name. Gifts can be sent to the address University Advancement, PO Box 1881, Milwaukee, WI 53201-1881 or at See JOE page 3

Photo courtesy of the Office of Marketing and Communication

Bullet hits hall window The Commons 8th floor struck Sunday, no injuries reported By Sydney Czyzon

sydney.czyzon@marquette.edu

A bullet entered the eighth floor window of a study room in Wells St. Hall in The Commons residence hall Sunday shortly before midnight, according to a Marquette University Police

Department safety alert. No one was injured in the incident. The shooting happened between two cars near N. 17th Street and W. Highland Ave., which is less than half a mile from The Commons. Wells St. Hall runs parallel to 18th and Wells streets and houses nearly 500 undergraduate students. Andrew Tyrrell, a first-year student in the College of Business Administration, was in the study room with another firstyear student when the bullet

INDEX CALENDAR......................................................3 MUPD REPORTS.............................................3 A&E..................................................................8 OPINIONS......................................................10 SPORTS..........................................................12

struck. He was studying for a test the next day. “I heard a big boom and instantaneously the glass shatters,” Tyrrell said. When he realized the noise came from a bullet, Tyrrell said he told the other student, and four additional students who were in an attached common area, to get on the floor. “I was just shocked,” Tyrrell said. “I never expected myself to See BULLET page 4

Demonstration policy released

revisions following pushback against the original policy. The policy provides guidelines for university community members who wish to demonstrate on campus. The new policy replaces a previous policy issued By Annie Mattea anne.mattea@marquette.edu May 16, 2019, and later revised Aug. 27, 2019. Main provisions The university released an of the original policy remain in updated demonstration policy Thursday after four months of See POLICY page 5

Protest document finalized after 4 months of feedback

NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

OPINIONS

Counselors of color

Hot tamale sale

Lacking sustainability

Students continue to work with university to see more diversity

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Student organization raises funds, cultural awaremess PAGE 9

Administration is failing to prioritize environmental efforts PAGE 10


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