The Pitt News
T h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t ude nt ne w spap e r of t he U niversity of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | September 17, 2018 | Volume 109 | Issue 23
game day takeaways: ollison, scarton and offense
SINGIN’ ON A SUNDAY
Trent Leonard Sports Editor
After a morale-crushing 45-point blowout loss to Penn State last weekend, Pitt’s football team got back on track with a 24-19 win against Georgia Tech Saturday. It was a rebound game for the Panthers’ season and revenge for their 3517 loss to the Yellow Jackets in 2017 — and Saturday gave Pitt its first win in a crucial ACC play. A conference victory is certainly a step in the right direction for the Panthers (2-1 overall, 1-0 ACC), but there were times where the team still The Diamante Trio and Lilly Abreu perform salsa and tango songs by Argentinian and Brazilian artists at Heinz looked more flawed than improved. Accounting Memorial Chapel Sunday afternoon. Maria Heines | staff photographer for all the highs and lows, here are some of the foremost takeaways from Pitt’s third game. Ollison has the keys to the backfield After the Panthers’ week one win over Aland Stella’s storefront on Fifth Avenue. Pitt plans University-owned grocery store. Christian Snyder bany, it remained unclear who was the lead runto incorporate the bakery into the upcoming Zuri Kent-Smith, a senior Africana Studies Editor-in-Chief ning back in Pitt’s backfield. Senior Darrin Hall and philosophy major who served as executive grocery store on Forbes Avenue, which is set to For the grand re-opening of the 12-year-old finished as the team’s leading rusher in 2017 but vice president on last year’s Student Government open by Nov. 1 — two months later than origicard and gift store Maggie and Stella’s on campus received only four carries in the opener, while Board, said he organized Friday’s noontime pro- nally planned. fellow senior Qadree Ollison rushed seven times Friday, Pitt hired a DJ and parked its new SodexoOakland had a grocery store up until April test because University administrators ignored for 73 yards. Surprisingly, sophomore AJ Davis owned food truck in the quad while administrastudents’ voices — something he thinks is a pat- 2017 — IGA, an international franchise, had a tors gathered around. ended up leading the Panthers with 13 carries. branch by the name of “The Market on Forbes” tern. Past that — in the middle of the quad — a Head coach Pat Narduzzi revealed that the “We’re protesting a lack of student engage- on Forbes Avenue. The owner, Ron Levick, said distribution of carries against Albany was more group of students gathered holding signs reading ment and input,” he said. “We lost our bakery for his store had to close due to competition with of a facade in Pitt’s second game versus Penn “Transparency Please” and “Living conditions other larger grocery stores. a Hallmark store.” State — Ollison carried the Panther offense, and Learning conditions.” These protestors at“My store was only 5,000 square feet. You Kent-Smith was referring to Oakland Bakery, amassing 21 carries for 119 yards and a touch- tended the reopening to protest what they saw as which until last year was in the current Maggie See Protest on page 2 See Takeaways on page 6 Pitt prioritizing a gift shop over the forthcoming
pitt progressives protest maggie and stella’s
News Protest, pg. 1
can go to Giant Eagle in the Market District and there’s 100,000 square feet. I can’t compete,” Levick said in an interview last year with The Pitt News. When Levick closed the store, the nearest groceries were all outside of Oakland — meaning students were left with no full-service grocery options within walking distance. Pitt recognized this, according to Jim Earle, Pitt’s assistant vice chancellor for business who is overseeing the creation of the University grocery store. “There’s no grocery stores in Oakland because they can’t afford to make money,” Earle said at the reopening event and the protest. The planned Pitt grocery store will be called the “Forbes Street Market: Grocery and Deli” and will accept Dining Dollars, Panther Funds, cash, credit and debit. The store will sell fresh produce, deli products, dairy, bakery products and vegetarian, vegan and kosher options, according to Student Government President Maggie Kennedy. In a Facebook post the night before the protest, Kennedy explained in a statement unrelated to SGB and based upon conversation with Earle that the construction of the grocery store and the construction of Maggie and Stella’s are separate projects being carried out by different contractors. She said the gift shop was never intended to be finished first and noted that Maggie and Stella’s is a private business that the University does not profit from. “I agree that Oakland has been a food desert for too long now and I agree, there are real concerns regarding college student food insecurity. I also wish the University Grocery Store could have been ready sooner, but unfortunately construction projects often have to adapt to unforeseen challenges,” she wrote. Earle confirmed that Pitt owns Maggie and Stella’s, but said it is run as a break-even operation. He hopes the grocery store will profit, but thinks Pitt is taking a risk in opening it. The student protest was originally going to include a sit-in, but due to the police presence in and around Maggie and Stella’s, the attendees decided to contain their presence within the quad. A large piece of paper was laid out for students to write ideas for solutions to Pitt’s lack of food
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Maggie and Stella’s Cards and Gifts relocated to Oakland Bakery’s former location on Fifth Avenue this summer. Anne Amundson | staff photographer
Students gathered in Schenley Quad Friday morning and wrote solutions to their complaints that the University opened Maggie and Stella’s before the proposed grocery store. Bader Abdulmajeed | staff photographer
September 17, 2018
options around campus, including “more democratic school leadership” and “more transparency.” Earle explained that the construction of the grocery store was taking longer than anticipated because he and his team “really felt like we needed to get it right.” “We’re doing it for the students, we’re taking a risk … and yet our students seem to think we’re perpetually delaying the grocery,” Earle said. Maura Deely, an environmental science major, said she came to the protest because she wanted to put pressure on Pitt so that they would take measures to actively listen to students. She was both against the installation of Maggie and Stella’s as well as it opening before the grocery store. “Instead of putting up another option for people to have access to food [like Oakland Bakery], they put up a trinket shop that nobody can afford,” she said. “Instead of opening the grocery store, they open Maggie and Stella’s first and that really kills me. They could’ve channeled their efforts into putting up a grocery store and they didn’t — it’s super frustrating.” Anais Peterson, a junior urban studies major who formerly worked as a columnist for The Pitt News, came because she wants the University to be more transparent in its proceedings and wants students to have easy access to affordable food, although she insisted she should not have to speak up about this. “I feel really strongly that it’s not our responsibility to make Pitt work, to make Pitt change. We are the reason Pitt exists, it’s for students, but we shouldn’t have to come out here and be like ‘This is what you should be doing, this is how you make the University better,’ it’s their job to take care of us, not our job to monitor them,” she said. Earle acknowledged the students’ concerns about the grocery store’s delay and hopes the delay will be worth it. “I hope they’re going to love it when it’s open,” he said. Kent-Smith encouraged attendees at the rally to reach out to administrators, come to Board of Trustees meetings and do whatever they can to make their voices heard and insist upon open and frequent communication between the administration and students. “Without students, there would be no Pitt. Without students, administrators would have no jobs,” he said.
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Opinions
BEYOND REFORM: Trump plays victim as ABOLISH ICE Hurricane Florence hits
from the editorial board
Jason Henriquez
While Hurricane Florence battered the Carolinas these past few days, President Trump took to Twitter to praise the Federal Emergency Management Agency and first responders and to retweet North Carolina emergency phone numbers. He also tweeted about Hurricane Maria — which tore through Puerto Rico one year ago — claiming that the current official death toll of 3,000 victims is a fabrication by Democrats to make him “look as bad as possible.” Trump is treating the death toll from the aftermath of Puerto Rico’s hurricanes like a personal attack and a disputable opinion, rather than indisputable fact. Both the timing and the contents of his tweets suggest that he is inept at handling natural disasters and isn’t open to learning from past mistakes. The “3,000 people” statistic the president references comes from a George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health study that estimated nearly 3,000 excess deaths — deaths outside of the normal mortality rate — in Puerto Rico in the 6 months following Hurricane Maria. These deaths can largely be attributed to the aftermath of Hurricane Maria and, in many people’s eyes, America’s inadequate response to the storm. Contrary to the president’s claim, the study was not a political move. Dr. Lynn R. Goldman, Dean of the Milken Institute School of Public Health, wrote in a guest column for The Washington Post Saturday that the “study was carried out with no interference whatsoever from any political party or institution.”
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In fact, it was the government of Puerto Rico that reached out to George Washington University to request the study — not any representatives for the Democratic party. Trump’s unfounded attempt to blame Democrats for a problem he failed to appropriately address is characteristic and especially ill-timed. To argue over a death toll as a political tool is disrespectful and useless, but to do so in the midst of another deadly hurricane shows that his priorities lie in defending himself and not the American people. Instead of boasting about his administration’s response to Maria, Trump should work toward allocating funds to help Puerto Rico rebuild and he should do the same thing for areas damaged by Hurricane Florence. Unfortunately, he’s already worked against aid to victims of Florence. A budget document released last Tuesday by Democratic Sen. Jeff Merkley showed that at the beginning of hurricane season — which lasts from June 1 to Nov. 30 this year — the Trump administration transferred $9.8 million from FEMA to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Even in the wake of Hurricane Maria, the administration failed to use hindsight to its advantage — Maria showed that this administration needs to have a bigger, better response to natural disasters, but it has already done the exact opposite. Trump obviously hasn’t learned from the mistakes he made following Hurricane Maria. Democrats don’t need to commission hurricane studies to make the Trump administration look bad — it’s done that all on its own.
For The Pitt News
In a country increasingly concerned with government overreach and misallocated taxpayer dollars, one particular government agency has received and will continue to receive expanded powers and billions of dollars in funding annually. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement recently obtained a $200 million boost in funding — $10 million of which came from the Federal Emergency Management Agency directly before Hurricane Florence hit the East Coast. The purpose of this agency is not border security, a function solely delegated to Customs and Border Protection. ICE, an organization predicated on deporting people already inside the country, is the flagship of government overreach. It has the ability to detain individuals suspected of illegal immigration indefinitely, and it has done so before. It can also deport naturalized citizens without the slightest respect for their rights. The implications of these capabilities are broad and dystopian. Both conservatives and liberals can see this agency for what it is — an extension of big government. Giving the power to deport naturalized citizens to an undemocratic organization — one that is dominated by the executive branch and whose officials aren’t elected — opens the door to a multitude of injustices. Citizens should not have to worry about facing deportation because of their ethnicity or color of skin, but that is the reality that many Americans are facing if a despotic regime is elected to the White House. There is the possibility that the judiciary can protect against executive dominion by not wrongfully prosecuting citizens, but the current president has even suggested deporting people without trial. The best hope of preserving the rights of everyone is to dissolve this corrupt organization.
September 17, 2018
The movement to #AbolishICE first gained steam on social media because of the family separation crisis earlier this year that sparked concern for the emotional trauma inflicted on children — largely from Central American migrant families — detained in immigration camps. It went on to become a battle cry for victims of deportation of all ages. #AbolishICE has skyrocketed in popularity — in a July poll by Pew Research Center, 47 percent of Americans had a negative view of the agency, compared to the 70 percent approval rating of Trump’s immigration policies in 2017. In a matter of months, the number of congresspeople who have announced their support for terminating the organization has increased from zero to nine, including two senators and seven representatives. The movement itself is not entirely groundbreaking. It is predated by the movement for sanctuary campuses and cities across the country in 2016, which fought for lack of cooperation with ICE in certain facilities, counties and municipalities across the country. While students at Pitt have advocated for the University to become a sanctuary campus, it has yet to take this step, unlike multiple other campuses and cities. But lack of cooperation with federal authorities will not be enough. The most effective way to protect both undocumented and documented immigrants — who as a whole overwhelmingly exhibit lower levels of criminality than citizens — from being forced out of the only home many have ever known is to eradicate the organization that is attacking them. Proponents of ICE are correct in the sense that it serves important purposes. The organization has multiple duties beyond deportation. The task of targeting human rights violations and trafficking can be See Abolish ICE on page 4
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Abolish ICE, pg. 3
Several thousand people gathered in Minneapolis this June to call for the abolishment of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement after the Trump administration enacted policies separating migrant children from their parents. Fibonacci Blue | flickr with the ability to permanently revoke citi- billions of dollars each year to attempt to zenship or bar an innocent civilian from remove every undocumented person in the entering a country. These powers are cor- country. This plan is clearly ineffective beruptive and representative of an authoritar- cause even after 15 years of nonstop effort, there are still millions of undocumented ian government. Our government should not dedicate migrants here. Instead of wasting taxpayers’
The Pitt news crossword 9/17/18
managed more efficiently through separate organizations. These functions not related to deportation of men, women and children must be carried out competently and effectively by institutions that are better equipped to handle them, such as the Human Smuggling and Trafficking Center. ICE is not deeply rooted in the annals of U.S. history. In actuality, it has only existed since 2003 and was passed in the same epoch as the USA Patriot Act, which increased federal surveillance upon citizens after the events of Sept. 11, 2001. Both the agency and the Patriot Act were overreactions to terrorism that have eroded individual liberties. Now that our country is not in a state of panic, it is time to advance from the darkness. The next generation must be steadfast in decrying the autocratic and immoral nature of ICE. Although it has certainly been abused by President Trump, ICE was utilized to great negative effect by former President Barack Obama. In fact, the Obama administration oversaw more reported deportations than the sum of all the presidents of the 20th century. No leader can be trusted
money on a fool’s errand, we should do everything in our power to make sure that the undocumented people already in the U.S. can contribute to society and have basic human rights. The presence of undocumented laborers disadvantages legal workers by endowing employers with a workforce that can be paid below the minimum wage. The only solution to this problem is to provide a pathway to citizenship to migrants who arrive illegally in the country so that businesses cannot exploit cheap labor. As long as ICE continues to exist, no such pathway will be possible and corporations will still hire undocumented laborers. The injustices of ICE will continue into perpetuity — and potentially worsen — if we do not act soon. The expansion of executive powers to deport well-established and naturalized people may grow to the deportation of American-born citizens. This agency is an affront to our republic that threatens complete despotism if not checked quickly and effectively. The first step toward a more vibrant democracy is repealing this artifact of a forgotten era. In the name of justice, we must abolish ICE.
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September 17, 2018
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Sports
WWE: Hell in a Cell pittnews.com
WEEKEND RECAP: VOLLEYBALL, SOFTBALL SCORE
Griffin Floyd
another two-run home run to make it 5-0. Slippery Rock produced a small three-run rally in the sixth and seventh innings, but eventually fell 5-3. The Panthers will play anPitt’s sports teams represented the University well over the other double-header next Sunday against Wright State and Ohio weekend, going a combined 4-1. The volleyball team continued its State in Columbus. torrid play at the Pitt Invite, reaching 11-0 on the season, while softball had a productive fall ball opener, going 2-0 in a double-header Sunday afternoon. Meanwhile, the women’s soccer team began Playing its first game in nine days after the last game against conference play this weekend but fell to Louisville at home. Kansas was cancelled, the women’s soccer team started out rusty in For The Pitt News
Soccer
Volleyball
The No. 9 Panthers won 3-1 against the College of Charleston on Friday night to improve to 10-0 — the team’s best start since 1983. Pitt took the first set handily by a score of 25-16 after several early ties. The Cougars clawed their way back in the second set, putting up a solid fight before losing 25-19 in a much closer contest. Charleston would eventually break through in the third set, squeaking away with a 25-22 win. The Panthers gave no chance for a comeback, however, putting the game away with a 25-11 finish. Sophomore outside hitter Kayla Lund was Pitt’s top performer, tallying a career-high 23 kills. First-year Sabrina Starks added 10 kills in another impressive performance. The Panthers closed out the Pitt Invite with another 3-1 victory on Saturday, this time against High Point University. High Point’s Panthers met Pitt’s with tough play in the first two sets, with Pitt winning 25-21 and 25-19. Once again, Pitt struggled to close out the match in the third set, losing 25-18, before escaping with a 2522 victory in the elimination fourth set. Lund once again led with 14 kills, and junior Stephanie Williams added another 11, along with five digs. The Panthers begin ACC play this week as they face Virginia at home this Wednesday at 7 p.m. before traveling to Virginia Tech Sept. 21.
its ACC opener against Louisville, allowing a second-chance goal just six minutes into the game. The Panthers settled down after that, with goalkeeper Amaia Pena making several quality saves — including one on a breakaway — to finish the half. Offensively, Pitt’s best chance of the half came from a free kick just before halftime, but Louisville sophomore goalie Gabby Kouzelos remained perfect through the first 45 minutes. The Panthers came out of the break slowly once again, surrendering a goal within the first 10 minutes. Pitt’s defense didn’t allow any goals after that, but received no help from the offense as Louisville managed to preserve the shutout. That loss brought Pitt’s record to 4-3-1 overall and 0-1 in the ACC, but the Panthers have a difficult schedule ahead — next week, they face No. 6 North Carolina in Chapel Hill on Thursday before closing out the week at No. 17 NC State Sept. 23. Both opponents are formidable and in the ACC, so it will take a big push to improve the conference record in the upcoming week.
Pitt softball began its season Sunday afternoon with 8-1 and 5-3 victories in a doubleheader against Slippery Rock. Kaycee Orwig | staff photographer
Softball
The Pitt softball team began its fall session Sunday with a home double-header against Slippery Rock. It didn’t take long for the Panthers to break the first game open, as they put up five runs in the second inning thanks to a three-run home run from junior Kaitlyn Kruger. Pitt added three more points in the fourth and fifth innings, and the bullpen took it the rest of the way as the Panthers won 8-1, with senior pitcher Sarah Dawson tallying the win. Neither team got much rest in between the action, with the second game starting just two hours after the first began. Junior pitcher Brittany Knight got the start for the Panthers in this one. Pitt took the lead in the bottom of the third when Hannah Bach hit an RBI single. The Panthers added to their lead the next inning when Kruger hit her second home run of the day, this time a two-run shot. In the bottom of the fifth, Knight provided her own run support with
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Junior defensive player Cheyenne Hudson loses control of the ball during the Panthers’ 0-2 loss to Louisville Saturday night. Bader Abdulmajeed | staff photographer
September 17, 2018
The Panthers remained undefeated Friday night with a 3-1 victory over the College of Charleston. Kaycee Orwig | staff photographer
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Takeaways, pg. 1 down. No other running back carried the ball more than seven times. This week, Ollison confirmed that the Penn State game was no fluke. He once again dominated the backfield touches, producing 17 rushes for 91 yards and two touchdowns. Ollison displayed both speed and power on his first 31yard touchdown run, breaking several tackles as he toasted the Georgia Tech defense. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=755L_ NfbNRQ With Saturday’s performance, Ollison now ranks fifth in the ACC with 283 rushing yards on the season. He’s been the most consistent player on Pitt’s offense this year and has rightfully taken the keys to the backfield. Expect Ollison to keep things rolling when the Panthers face off against a weak North Carolina team this upcoming week. The Panthers have a second-half scoring problem Pitt has now played three games this season and has scored 63 points in those three games combined. Only three of those points have come in the second half. It was fair to give the Panthers a pass for not scoring any second-half points against Albany — they were up 33-7 at halftime and made the decision to take their foot off the gas. In an ugly, penalty-ridden second half against Penn State, the Pitt offense routinely started with awful field positions, which also made it difficult to move the ball toward the end zone. But against Georgia Tech, there’s no excuse for scoring only three points in the second half. This was a very important game and Pitt essentially laid an egg after halftime. Luckily, the Panthers built up a 21-0 lead by halftime and the defense managed to stall the Yellow Jackets’ rushing attack just long enough to bail out Pitt’s listless offense. Through three games, it appears the Panthers officially have a second-half scoring problem. Their offense consistently drops off after halftime, as shown by the half-by-half yardage splits in each contest — 270 then 137 against Albany, 231 then 69 against Penn State and 215 then 120 against Georgia Tech. It’s not entirely clear whether opposing defenses keep figuring out Pitt’s offensive strategy during halftime and making adjustments, if offensive coordinator Shawn Watson resorts to overly conservative play calling when his team has a lead or if Pitt’s offensive players simply clam up in the game’s final frame. Whatever the problem may be, the Panthers need to figure it
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September 17, 2018
Senior running back Darrin Hall (22) leaps over Georgia Tech senior linebacker Brant Mitchell (21) at Heinz Field Saturday. Thomas Yang | assistant visual editor
out quickly if they want to be a contender in the ACC. Hopefully, someone on Pitt’s offense will step up to score the team’s first second-half touchdown of the season this Saturday at North Carolina. Jake Scarton: X-factor There’s an old saying that goes “You don’t know what you got ‘til it’s gone.” Well, Pitt found that out the hard way against Penn State, when little-known first-year backup kicker — and most importantly, field goal-holder — Jake Scarton missed the game because of an undisclosed arm injury. The coaching staff had to scramble for a backup holder, plugging first-year punter Kirk Christodoulou into the role. The results were disastrous — Christodoulou bobbled an extra point attempt and a 35-yard field goal attempt, erasing at least four points off the board in the 51-6 loss. Thankfully, Scarton was back in action this week. The field goal unit operated smoothly with its primary holder at the helm, as sophomore kicker Alex Kessman converted all three extra point attempts, as well as a 33-yard field goal. Field goal holder isn’t the most glamorous position, but — as the Penn State loss showed — it’s an extremely vital one. It’s also a harder job than most assume, as the holder must catch the high-speed long snap then simultaneously spin and place the ball so that the laces face away from the kicker — all within a matter of seconds. There’s only one man for the job on the Panthers and that’s Jake Scarton — so remember the name.
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