Marquette Tribune I November 8

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Celebrating 107 years of journalistic integrity

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Skates and Breakfast

Marquette students come together for a 70’s themed rollerskating experience at AMU

A Clean Sweep

Both basketball teams defeat opponents in home openers SPORTS, 15, 16

NEWS, 3

Volume 105, Number 9

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

WWW.MARQUETTEWIRE.ORG

2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020 SPJ Award-Winning Newspaper

From clown to priesthood: A unique calling

Marquette Jesuits share pathways to spiritual vocation By Skyler Chun

skyler.chun@marquette.edu

A community clown by day and campus priest by night, Rev. John Naus S.J., former associate professor of philosophy at Marquette, was not afraid to let his humor and faith intertwine. Often found dressed as “Tumbleweed the Clown” in a blue-and-white plaid shirt, white painted face and red nose, Naus would make balloon animals and tell jokes to the Marquette community. Naus passed away in 2013 at the age of 89, but his legacy has lived on. Naus was a prime example of someone filled with good stories. But members of the Marquette community have followed unique paths in order to live out their own vocations. Rev. Ryan Duns S.J., assistant professor of theology, studied chemistry and theology at John Carroll University as an aspiring doctor, but that all changed at the Mass of the Holy Spirit at the university in 2003.

“I was at mass with a good friend of mine, and in the homily, the priests’ line was ‘In life, it is better to burn out than to rust out,’” Duns said. “(The priest) developed that thought and then said, ‘Many of you pray and ask what God wants from me. That’s the wrong question … Ask instead what God wants for me.’” At the intersection of where you get excited and terrified, Duns said that’s where God is speaking to you. “I’m not one for crying, but I had this sudden wave of emotion. I turned and said (to my friend) ‘I want to be a Jesuit,’” Duns said. Duns said his friend then turned to back him and said he had been waiting for Duns to realize that for the past two years. “There were people who saw it in me, but I didn’t see it quite yet,” he said. Duns began a new route to becoming a Jesuit priest through seminary school and now teaches philosophy and theology at Marquette. “I love the big questions and I love the details, and so philosophy and theology allow me to do both,” Duns said. “I can pose what I think are See CLOWN page 2

Photo courtesy of Marquette Archives

Rev. John Naus S.J. often made balloon animals and told jokes as “Tumbleweed the Clown” while at Marquette.

Marquette continues to increase undergraduate tuition, room and board Costs have risen throughout Lovell’s tenure as president By Julia Abuzzahab

julianna.abuzzahab@marquette.edu

Since University President Michael Lovell has been at Marquette, tuition has raised by 39.4%. Every year since Lovell became president in 2014, either

tuition or room and board, sometimes both, has increased annually. Tuition has always increased except for the 202122 academic year, when just room and board increased by 3.5%. Before Lovell took office in 2014, Marquette’s undergraduate tuition was $34,200. Today, the 2022-23 academic year is at $45,860. This year was a 2% increase from the 2021-22 academic year and it will continue INDEX FAST FACTS...................................................3 CROSSWORD................................................7 COMICS.........................................................7 A&E................................................................8 OPINIONS....................................................10 SPORTS........................................................12

to increase next year. For the 2023-24 academic year, undergraduate tuition will increase by 4% to $47,690. Room and board is also increasing by 4%, an average of $7,621.60 per semester and $15,243.20 for the academic year. The average increase in tuition from 2014 to 2024 is 3.4%. In comparison, Creighton University, a Jesuit school and

a part of the Big East conference, raised its tuition in by 2.5% to $43,684 in 2022. Although this was 0.5% greater than Marquette’s tuition development in 2022-23, Creighton’s tuition was $2,176 cheaper. Creighton also raised its room and board rate by 2.5% that year. Despite Creighton’s increase, the university officials said that they “diligently strive” to decrease tuition and

fee growth as they develop their university. Marquette is also raising the student wellness and recreation fee to $150. The higher rate will help fund the new wellness and recreation facility and its programs that will take over the Recreational Center by 2024. “We must constantly balance the economic realities that See TUITION page 2

NEWS

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

OPINIONS

Marquette unveils plans for temporary recreational spaces

Stavros Sardella DJs for local Milwaukee venues in free time

Columnists give seasonal recommendations to MU

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Finding space for fitness Staux on the Aux

Autumnal Awards PAGE 10,11


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