The Marquette Tribune | Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Page 1

Celebrating 100 years of journalistic integrity

Campus goes green Wild Commons features rooftop garden, related projects as part of master plan NEWS, 2

Swede shines in debut

Freshman forward Lukas Sunesson makes early impression on MSOC

Volume 103, Number 02

SPORTS, 12

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

WWW.MARQUETTEWIRE.ORG

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

New PA school in works

Shooter protocol updated

By Donna Sarkar

MUPD identified campus safe rooms during summer

Old location may be candidate for redevelopment

adwitiya.sarkar@marquette.edu

Marquette University’s current home for the Physicians Assistant Studies program was meant to be temporary, but that was 20 years ago. A new $18.5 million facility is underway on the intersection of W. Clybourn and N. 18th Street, beginning construction as part of the campus master plan. See TEMPORARY page 4

By Sarah Lipo

sarah.lipo@marquette.edu

Photo by Andrew Himmelberg andrew.himmelberg@marquette.edu

The new Physicians Assistant school, as shown in the rendering (left), will replace the current location.

MUSG revamps work space in AMU $23,000 upgrades meant to foster welcoming culture By Emma Tomsich

emma.tomsich@marquette.edu

Marquette University Student Government welcomed students into its renovated space in the Alumni Memorial Union Aug. 31. The cost to renovate the space totaled just under $23,000, Meredith Gillespie, president of MUSG and senior in the College of Arts & Sciences, said. Renovations include blueand gold-painted walls and new front desks. The lounge and study area got new furniture and now features a dry-erase wall with new lighting. A television and couches are expected to be installed soon. “Our previous president wrote the legislation to allocate a fund to redo our office from our reserve fund,” Gillespie said. “It

was approved by the senate last year, so we’re just implementing what got passed in senate last semester.” The money spent on the renovations was taken from budget, with the little amount of leftover money getting returned to the reserve fund. “We have a budget, and whatever is not used in our budget or picked up by other student organizations goes into our reserve fund, and we can only allocate that money through senate approval, and it can be used for anything,” Gillespie said. “(The reserve fund) is just for extra things we need,” Gillespie added. MUSG used previous reserve fund allocations for Bublr bikes, scoreboards, coffee containers and other things they deemed necessary on campus. MUSG’s student offices were the last in the AMU to get done, Photo courtesy of Nicole Tlachac Gillespie said. Student government upgraded its AMU offices over the summer. Gillespie said a lot of lounges See GOALS page 2 INDEX

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

The Marquette University Police Department worked on revamping its active shooter program this summer. Capt. Jeff Kranz said that due to a recent increase of shootings throughout the United States, it is important to be prepared. “I think one of the driving forces behind it was the uptake in spring 2017 through this year, there were a lot of cases of active shooters,” Kranz said. Renee Piquette Dowdy, assistant director of student staffing and training for the university, said she worked carefully with Kranz to come up with a program to train desk receptionists and residence assistants this fall. Dowdy said this program is not new, but adjusted. This year, 132 RAs were trained. The DRs were all trained online or in person. Kranz added that classes have also been offered in the AMU before, but they were not advertised heavily. This year, he said posters will be put up to advertise it further in advance. “We are trying to raise awareness,” Kranz said. Gabriella Lorance, a sophomore in the College of Arts & Sciences, is a first-time RA at Schroeder Hall. She said she See TRAINING page 3

NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

OPINIONS

Nursing anesthetics

Harley’s 115th year

MU relationship ban

New doctorate program is first in state’s southeastern region

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Bikers from across the world voyage for eventful weekend PAGE 8

Clear stance needs to be taken on student-faculty relationships PAGE 11


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