Marquette Tribune, September 10, 2015, Vol. 100, No. 2, p. 1 |
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INDEX CALENDAR...........................................3 MUPD REPORTS.................................3 MARQUEE..........................................10 OPINIONS.......................................14 SPORTS...........................................16 NEWS MARQUEE PAGE 11 Three students create networking club for musicians on campus. OPINIONS PAGE 15 TempurPedic injustice MURPHY- Student athletes get TempurPedic beds. Is this fair? PAGE 15 Millennials and politics HIGHES- Students need to reshape ideas about political interest. SPORTS OPINIONS PAGE 16 Club Crew gets new home The new location and boats are start of a new direction for the program. PAGE 6 Engineering and design Joint program between MIAD and Marquette will teach new skills. PAGE 7 Most and least majored Check out a compilation of the most and least popular programs of study. www.marquettewire.org Thursday, September 10, 2015 Since 1916 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper Volume 100, Number 2 The redshirt senior leads the team in scoring after year off. Islami’s comeback Hear about ideas the Title IX Coordinator plans to enact. Coordinator Q&A Overloaded schedules not the answer. Relax. Editorial PAGE 8 PAGE 14 PAGE 18 By Jennifer Walter jennifer.walter@marquette.edu After The Broken Yolk in The Marq apartments on 2040 W. Wisconsin Ave. closed in April, a new restaurant called Mendy took its place. The closure led to plans of extended hours for Bro-Yo Campustown. Its hours are 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday through Sunday. Bro-Yo’s owner, Jim Gatto, said he considered extending the hours, but the restaurant, lo-cated in the 1600 block of Wells St., has constraints. “We have parameters… space limitations in the kitch-en, (but) in terms of open-ing longer hours, sure, we’d like to stay open, but it’s just a matter of (finding) reliable people,” Gatto said. He had negative experiences with employees who cut cor-ners with their shifts or didn’t show up for various reasons. Because of that uncertainty, he said there are not enough back-up workers to keep the restau-rant running earlier and closing later in the day. Mendy is a Middle Eastern restaurant managed by Ahmed Yafai. It opened about a month ago and is one of the few res-taurants in Milwaukee to spe-cialize in food from the Arabian Peninsula. Its signature dish, called Mendy, is steamed lamb. “We’ve been doing 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.,” Yafai said about Mendy’s hours. “We’re open seven days a week--we may go earlier for students.” Yafai also discussed the pos-sibility of delivering in the New eateries bring foreign tastes, breakfast classics Schlegel, sitting in his office, reflects on the past several months, which has been filled with international travels. Photo by Nolan Bollier/nolan.bollier@marquette.edu Interview with MU Alumnus & Pixar Director James Ford Murphy See page 10 The Rev. John Schlegel, pastor of the Church of the Gesu, has al-most 1,200 pictures on his phone. They include an infant’s baptism, his twin great-nephews and a war between a cat and a squirrel in front of Raynor Library. While flipping through them, he stum-bled upon one taken in a hospital. “My last hospital visit,” he said with a laugh. “I got everything on here.” He’s listening to a classical mu-sic station based in New York. Cards and letters with warm wishes sit on his desk. His com-puter screensaver circles through photos from England and Italy, also taken on his phone. The photos are all part of his “kalei-doscope of visual memories” col-lected during his travels over the past several months. Gesu’s pastor discusses experiences, faith By Kathleen Baert kathleen.baert@marquette.edu Schlegel accepting terminal diagnosis, offering counsel On-campus restaurants add variety, familiarity AN AVID TRAVELER Schlegel, 72, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in late January. He was told it is inoperable. He announced his diagnosis in a let-ter to his congregation, saying he would use palliative treatment--no chemotherapy or radiation. Since the diagnosis, he has traveled to many places from his past to visit friends, family and former colleagues. Those include his hometown in Iowa, Creighton University in Nebraska--where he served as president for 11 years-- and the Vatican in Rome. A pho-to of him meeting Pope Francis hangs in the hallway of Gesu’s parish center. “I must say, the way I’ve de-cided to do it my way has re-ally worked out really well,” Schlegel said. “Without the bag-gage of chemo and radiation, I’ve really had a high quality of life. I’ve had the opportunity to travel widely.” Margi Horner, director of lit-urgy at Gesu Parish, has worked with Schlegel throughout the journey of his illness. She said she has seen God’s mercy and grace in Schlegel. “We who work with him here at Gesu, we really have been walking See Schlegel, Page 4 See Food, Page 8
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Marquette Tribune, September 10, 2015, Vol. 100, No. 2 |
Newspaper Title | Marquette Tribune |
Date | 2015-09-10 |
Volume and Issue No. | Vol. 100, No. 2 |
Subject | Marquette University -- Newspapers ; Marquette University -- Students -- Periodicals ; College student newspapers and periodicals -- Wisconsin -- Milwaukee |
Creator | Students of Marquette University |
Publisher | Marquette University |
Digital Reproduction Information | PDF copy provided as is by Tribune staff and editors at end of production workflow. Files were renamed to reflect project naming conventions. |
Copyright | This item is issued by Marquette University Libraries. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit the Department of Special Collections and University Archives, Marquette University Libraries. |
Collection | Marquette Tribune |
Collection Information | For more information on Marquette student publications see: http://www.marquette.edu/library/archives/SuperD/D-6_Student_Publications.shtml |
Identifier | trib_2015_09_10 |
Order Form | http://www.marquette.edu/library/archives/OrderForm.shtml |
Description
Title | Marquette Tribune, September 10, 2015, Vol. 100, No. 2, p. 1 |
Date | 2015-09-10 |
Volume and Issue No. | Vol. 100, No. 2 |
Page No. | p. 1 |
Transcript | INDEX CALENDAR...........................................3 MUPD REPORTS.................................3 MARQUEE..........................................10 OPINIONS.......................................14 SPORTS...........................................16 NEWS MARQUEE PAGE 11 Three students create networking club for musicians on campus. OPINIONS PAGE 15 TempurPedic injustice MURPHY- Student athletes get TempurPedic beds. Is this fair? PAGE 15 Millennials and politics HIGHES- Students need to reshape ideas about political interest. SPORTS OPINIONS PAGE 16 Club Crew gets new home The new location and boats are start of a new direction for the program. PAGE 6 Engineering and design Joint program between MIAD and Marquette will teach new skills. PAGE 7 Most and least majored Check out a compilation of the most and least popular programs of study. www.marquettewire.org Thursday, September 10, 2015 Since 1916 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper Volume 100, Number 2 The redshirt senior leads the team in scoring after year off. Islami’s comeback Hear about ideas the Title IX Coordinator plans to enact. Coordinator Q&A Overloaded schedules not the answer. Relax. Editorial PAGE 8 PAGE 14 PAGE 18 By Jennifer Walter jennifer.walter@marquette.edu After The Broken Yolk in The Marq apartments on 2040 W. Wisconsin Ave. closed in April, a new restaurant called Mendy took its place. The closure led to plans of extended hours for Bro-Yo Campustown. Its hours are 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday through Sunday. Bro-Yo’s owner, Jim Gatto, said he considered extending the hours, but the restaurant, lo-cated in the 1600 block of Wells St., has constraints. “We have parameters… space limitations in the kitch-en, (but) in terms of open-ing longer hours, sure, we’d like to stay open, but it’s just a matter of (finding) reliable people,” Gatto said. He had negative experiences with employees who cut cor-ners with their shifts or didn’t show up for various reasons. Because of that uncertainty, he said there are not enough back-up workers to keep the restau-rant running earlier and closing later in the day. Mendy is a Middle Eastern restaurant managed by Ahmed Yafai. It opened about a month ago and is one of the few res-taurants in Milwaukee to spe-cialize in food from the Arabian Peninsula. Its signature dish, called Mendy, is steamed lamb. “We’ve been doing 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.,” Yafai said about Mendy’s hours. “We’re open seven days a week--we may go earlier for students.” Yafai also discussed the pos-sibility of delivering in the New eateries bring foreign tastes, breakfast classics Schlegel, sitting in his office, reflects on the past several months, which has been filled with international travels. Photo by Nolan Bollier/nolan.bollier@marquette.edu Interview with MU Alumnus & Pixar Director James Ford Murphy See page 10 The Rev. John Schlegel, pastor of the Church of the Gesu, has al-most 1,200 pictures on his phone. They include an infant’s baptism, his twin great-nephews and a war between a cat and a squirrel in front of Raynor Library. While flipping through them, he stum-bled upon one taken in a hospital. “My last hospital visit,” he said with a laugh. “I got everything on here.” He’s listening to a classical mu-sic station based in New York. Cards and letters with warm wishes sit on his desk. His com-puter screensaver circles through photos from England and Italy, also taken on his phone. The photos are all part of his “kalei-doscope of visual memories” col-lected during his travels over the past several months. Gesu’s pastor discusses experiences, faith By Kathleen Baert kathleen.baert@marquette.edu Schlegel accepting terminal diagnosis, offering counsel On-campus restaurants add variety, familiarity AN AVID TRAVELER Schlegel, 72, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in late January. He was told it is inoperable. He announced his diagnosis in a let-ter to his congregation, saying he would use palliative treatment--no chemotherapy or radiation. Since the diagnosis, he has traveled to many places from his past to visit friends, family and former colleagues. Those include his hometown in Iowa, Creighton University in Nebraska--where he served as president for 11 years-- and the Vatican in Rome. A pho-to of him meeting Pope Francis hangs in the hallway of Gesu’s parish center. “I must say, the way I’ve de-cided to do it my way has re-ally worked out really well,” Schlegel said. “Without the bag-gage of chemo and radiation, I’ve really had a high quality of life. I’ve had the opportunity to travel widely.” Margi Horner, director of lit-urgy at Gesu Parish, has worked with Schlegel throughout the journey of his illness. She said she has seen God’s mercy and grace in Schlegel. “We who work with him here at Gesu, we really have been walking See Schlegel, Page 4 See Food, Page 8 |
Copyright | This item is issued by Marquette University Libraries. The user is responsible for all issues of copyright. Please Credit the Department of Special Collections and University Archives, Marquette University Libraries. |
Collection | Marquette Tribune |
Collection Information | For more information on Marquette student publications see: http://www.marquette.edu/library/archives/SuperD/D-6_Student_Publications.shtml |
Identifier | trib_2015_09_10 |
Order Form | http://www.marquette.edu/library/archives/OrderForm.shtml |