The Marquette Tribune | Tuesday , Oct. 3, 2017

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Celebrating 100 years of journalistic integrity

Sexual assault case DA delays charging decision on Sept. 22 incident at house party until November NEWS, 3

Walk-on hopefuls try out Men’s basketball held tryouts, and some didn’t do as well as expected

Volume 102, Number 06

SPORTS, 12

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

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

Coping with tragedy away from home

Photo courtsey of Giovan Cordero Colon

Maria takes its toll, students stand by Puerto Rican peers By Caroline Gallo

caroline.gallo@marquette.edu

Britney Roman, a freshman in the College of Health Sciences, finally got in touch with her family almost two weeks after Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico Sept. 20. The storm left behind widespread devastation

as it moved through the Caribbean, tearing through cities and villages, leaving residents isolated from the outside world. Roman is one of a group of Marquette students facing a dire situation. After the hurricane hit, ninetyfive percent of Puerto Rico’s cell towers were out of service, according to a statement from the island’s Federal Communications Commission released Sept. 23. Some students, like Ali de Luca, a sophomore in the

College of Communication, has only been able to make contact with her parents through WhatsApp calls. “When I do get through though, he either can’t hear me or I can’t hear him,” de Luca said. “All I know is the home I left a month ago isn’t the same one I’ll be coming back to, whenever I even get to go back.” de Luca said it has been hard to focus on her studies and live a normal life at Marquette. “I’m over here living more

than comfortably with everything I could ever need at an arm’s length, while people back home can’t even shower or eat a decent meal,” de Luca said. “I’ve felt overwhelmed and helpless.” Ariana Jimenez, a sophomore in the College of Health Sciences, said her family did not get the opportunity to evacuate until after the storm hit due to previous damages and flooding. “My family is okay, but there are a lot of families that aren’t right now,” Jimenez said. “Puerto

However, the event has not been met with excitement from the entire community. The prom isn’t scheduled to happen until April 14, 2018, but a petition is circulating the internet, urging President Lovell to shut the dance down. The petition was started by TFP Student Action and can be found on their website. TFP, which stands for Tradition, Family, Property, is a group that works with students and parents on college campuses across the country to defend traditional moral values and restore the values of Christian civilization,

according to their website. Director of TFP Student Action, John Ritchie, cites the planned location of the Pride Prom as one of his major objections to the event. “To promote ‘pride’ for any sinful lifestyle cuts at the root of Catholic education,” Ritchie said. “What’s worse is the disrespect shown for the house of God, because the ‘Pride Prom’ is scheduled to happen in the same building that houses the Chapel of the Holy Family, where the Holy Eucharist is kept and where Mass is celebrated.”

The petition, shared via email and other social media sites, currently has just over 18,000 signatures from Marquette affiliates and strangers alike. One signature on that list is from Bruce Murray, a former Marquette professor. Murray taught reading education and was the director of the Harman Literacy and Learning Center for the 1995-’96 academic year. Now the coordinator of reading education in the department of curriculum and teaching at Auburn University, he voiced his concern

INDEX

NEWS

MARQUEE

OPINIONS

Anniversary of flood

Students show talent

NFL kneeling protest

Rico is absolutely destroyed. My high school is not recognizable.” Jimenez stressed the importance of creating awareness of the situation Puerto Rico. Despite being on campus, she and other students are finding ways to help from abroad. Last week, Marquette students organized a fundraiser in the Alumni Memorial Union to accept money, canned food and water donations. See MARIA page 4

Planned LGBTQ prom receives public backlash Resource center plans event, petition surfaces online By Caroline White

caroline.white@marquette.edu

The LGBTQ Resource Center announced plans to hold a Pride Prom in the spring of 2018 for members of the LGBTQ community and the general public. If the plan goes through, Marquette will be the first Catholic university to do so.

CALENDAR......................................................3 MUPD REPORTS.............................................3 MARQUEE.......................................................8 OPINIONS......................................................10 SPORTS..........................................................12 SPORTS CALENDAR .....................................13

Two years later, Schroeder Hall incident remains unsolved

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Previewing Marquette’s Got Talent acts at Varsity Theater PAGE 7

on Facebook about the Pride Prom when he received news via email from TFP Student Action a few weeks ago. “Our Catholic faith rules out promoting intrinsically disordered acts, actions that alienate us from God and weaken or destroy the family structure,” Murray said. “Celebrating homosexual relations and denigrating God’s design is not something Marquette should sponsor or promote … It is a rejection of the mission of a See LGBTQ page 2

HARRINGTON: criticisms miss point of demonstration PAGE 11


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