The Pitt News
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | november 8, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 64 Courtesy of Heinz History Center
THE FORGOT TEN CHAMPIONS The Pittsburgh Pipers were the ABA champions in 1968. Now, 50 years later, the players reflect on their time on the team — a footnote in Steel City sports history.
Grant Burgman
Staff Writer Pittsburgh is often considered one of the premier sports cities in America — laden with a prosperous history of baseball, football and hockey championships. But the city was once home to a championship basketball team, too — a small blip in the timeline of Steel City sports. The Pittsburgh Pipers were the inaugural champions of the American Basketball Association in 1967 — 50 years ago this year.
They won the league’s first title in a seven-game series against the New Orleans Buccaneers. For Steve Vacendak, one of the guards on the team, the seventh and final game against New Orleans stands out as a moment of hope and accomplishment. “I think the final game in Pittsburgh was such a wonderful conclusion to the season to have the fans turn out like that and for us to win in such a dominant manner,” Vacendak said. “That last game stands out because it’s what we had been working for all season.”
The summer of ‘68 would be the only one in Pittsburgh for the Pipers before they moved to Minnesota when Minnesota-based lawyer Bill Erickson purchased a majority share of the team. The Pipers replaced the Minnesota Muskies, another one of the ABA’s founding teams that failed because of lack of fan support. The team returned to Pittsburgh in 1969, but never found the same support or success. While they are often overlooked today, the ‘67-’68 Pipers were a seminal team in a league that would eventually See Pipers on page 9
Artist’s Name POSITION
News
Election
Results
justice of the pennsylvania homestead property supreme court tax amendment Dwayne: 48% Mundy: 52% Yes: 54% No: 46%
STUDENTS LAMENT LOW VOTER
pittsburgh home rule charter amendment Yes: 73% No: 27%
Provost to TURNOUT step down
Hannah Schneider
For The Pitt News
Students and community members voted in Posvar Hall Tuesday. About 80 people cast their vote at the polling station. Thomas Yang SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
After last year’s presidential election results, Zoe Kovacs didn’t expect to be one of the only people at the polls Tuesday. But when she showed up at Posvar Hall at 2 p.m., she was “appalled” to find she was only the 40th person to show up. “[The poll workers] were all cheering, ‘40!’” she said. “And I said, ‘Are you serious?’” Kovacs, a senior English writing and classics major, thought more people would be aware of Pennsylvania’s local elections since she saw a lot of people on social media encouraging participation in the election. But she said she was a victim of what she called “bubble syndrome” — surrounding herself with people who cared about voter turnout “We’re in Posvar! People have class in here, people are walking by, there’s no line, I could’ve been in and out of here in 10 minutes if I wanted to. That’s just shocking to me,” she said. Kovacs was one of about 80 people to vote at the Posvar polling station. Pitt students and members of the Oakland community came to vote on amendments and for elected offices, including justice of the state supreme court and local judgeships. It was an off-year election — an election held on an odd-numbered year in which See Election on page 4
PEEPER POSSIBLY SPIED ON STUDENTS Ashwini Sivaganesh Editor-in-Chief
A nurse at the Veteran Affairs Pittsburgh Healthcare System in Oakland was charged Monday with spying on Pitt students in upper campus dorms. Paul May, 56, a nurse at the hospital near Pitt’s upper campus, was charged with loitering and prowling, invasion of privacy and possessing instruments of a crime, according to a court document.
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VA police arrested May in the hospital’s parking garage. The VA said Tuesday it is taking steps to fire May. “This behavior is not in line with the norms and values of the VA, and as a result the employee has been suspended from all duties,” VA Press Secretary Curt Cashour said in a statement. “VA has initiated the process for removal from employment right away.” Pitt police said in a crime alert that the suspect was possibly spying into upper campus
dormitory windows from the garage. According to Joe Miksch, a University spokesperson, Pitt heard about the incident Tuesday morning and was told the man used a spotting scope. “The University is cooperating with VAPD to determine if students may have been impacted and is working to directly inform the residents of nearby residence halls of the investigation,” Miksch said in a statement Tuesday.
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Janine Faust
Assistant News Editor Provost Patricia Beeson will step down from her position in fall 2018, Pitt announced Tuesday. The University currently has three deans who will also be stepping down at the same time as Beeson, leaving a multitude of leadership positions to fill by the start of the next academic year. Beeson will return to the economics department where she first began her career at the University in 1983. She has lead Pitt’s academic affairs since she was named provost in 2010. In a press release, Chancellor Patrick Gallagher praised Beeson’s tenure, saying she helped enhance Pitt’s position as a “leading university.” “From enhancing the caliber of our student body to championing key issues such as sustainability and diversity to bolstering professional development opportunities for faculty — [Beeson’s] role in shaping Pitt’s success has been nothing short of sweeping and transformative,” Gallagher said. Beeson helped establish the University’s Innovation Institute in 2013 and the School of Computing and Information, which opened this fall as the University’s first new school since 1995. She also led Pitt’s “Year of” programs — including last year’s Year of Diversity and this year’s Year of Healthy U. Recently, Beeson announced the University’s position against the graduate student unionization efforts — which angered some students and organizers. More than 30 years earlier, Beeson came to Pitt in 1983 as a professor of economics after earning her doctorate at the University of Oregon that same year. Before being elected provost and senior vice chancellor in 2010 by the Board of Trustees, she held several administrative roles at the University, including associate dean for undergraduate studies in the Dietrich School, vice provost for graduate studies and vice provost for graduate and undergraduate studies. Beeson will stay in her position for the rest of the school year as Pitt conducts a national search for her replacement.
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SGB CALLS BEESON “CHAMPION OF STUDENT INPUT”
Madeline Gavatorta Staff Writer
In response to Provost Patricia Beeson’s announcement that she will be stepping down from her current position, Student Government Board President Max Kneis referred to the Pitt provost as a “champion of student input” at Tuesday’s meeting. Beeson has spent eight years as provost, following 17 years as a Pitt administrator. Kneis said she had been a great partner for SGB in her years as provost. “I think the provost has done really great things for the University,” Kneis said. “Whenever we’ve brought an idea to her, she’s always been willing to engage, to listen. Proposals we send to her don’t get ignored [and] she’s able to give great feedback.” Kneis said he wants SGB to be involved in the search for the new provost.
Last year, then-President Natalie Dall contributed to the search for the new Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences dean, Kathleen Blee. “I imagine we will be involved in some capacity again. I don’t know what that capacity will be, but we will definitely advocate for student input,” Kneis said. Continuing their efforts from last meeting, SGB passed B.R. 2017.04, “Urging the passage of Pennsylvania Senate bill No. 196 and renaming it ‘Alina’s Law.’” The bill would give judges the option of putting a GPS tracker on a person who has a protection-from-abuse order filed against them. The resolution also included naming the bill “Alina’s Law” after Pitt student Alina Sheykhet, who had a PFA against her ex-boyfriend Matthew Darby, who was later arrested in her homicide. SGB president Max Kneis responded to Patricia Beeson’s announcement of stepping down from her current position at last night’s SGB public meeting. See SGB on page 11 Isabelle Glatts STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
The Pitt News SuDoku 11/8/17 courtesy of dailysudoku.com
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Election, pg. 2 neither a presidential nor a midterm election takes place. Allegheny County saw about 212,000 ballots cast Tuesday, compared to about 660,000 in last year’s election. Some of Tuesday’s voters noticed this major difference in turnout. Lauren Schlusser, a senior environmental studies and political science student, remembered last year’s presidential election drawing a much larger crowd. She said people do not pay as much attention to local elections compared to national elections, despite local results having a greater impact on people. “I would say that overall, like everyone in the country, people tend to forget about [local elections],” she said. “Where I grew up is more like a small town, so elections were based on whose sign you saw the most in the yard.” Schlusser said she no longer relies on lawn signs and now tries to take time to do research on political candidates. Not wanting to make an uninformed decision, she didn’t fill out certain parts of her ballot because she didn’t know enough about those candidates’ standings.
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Still, she said she thinks local political involvement is important, regardless of what the results of the national elections are — especially if the results aren’t to the voter’s liking. “I wasn’t a fan of the presidential outcome, but if I want to complain about how things are, I at least should exercise my rights as a citizen,” she said. Senior political science major John Cubic, the 41st visitor to Posvar’s polling station, said he was always planning on voting. But the results of the presidential election inspired him to do more at the local level for the Democratic Party, including helping out with Mayor Bill Peduto’s campaign. He had hoped last year’s election results would similarly motivate his friends, but he wasn’t sure they had. “I don’t know if they’re involved in the election as much as they like to talk about it,” he said. “They are more politically inclined now, but they still don’t participate as much.” Cubic said he was shocked when poll workers told him he was the 41st person to come vote in Posvar — he said the numbers were already in the triple digits when he went last year. “Last year I think I voted at 11 a.m. I was already 200 at like 11 p.m. And it’s what, 2
p.m. and it’s 41. It’s not ideal,” he said. Senior business student Haley Grajewski voted for the first time in a Pittsburgh local election Tuesday — although she hadn’t planned to even visit her polling place until a friend sent her a Snapchat encouraging her to participate. Grajewski said she feels local elections receive little attention compared to national and international politics and therefore less people are aware of them. “I should be more cognizant of it because it has more real impacts than sometimes the national ones do,” she said. “So I tried to get out today. But normally I don’t vote in the [smaller] elections.” Keith Long, a graduate student studying pharmaceutical sciences, also participated in the local elections for the first time, citing last year’s presidential election as a motivator. He said he would have been inspired to vote in the local elections this year, regardless of the outcome last year since the debates between the presidential candidates had been so intense. “Recent political outcomes have led me to realize that elections, no matter how small, are an important part of politics, an important part of [being] an American citizen ... I made it kind of my duty to stop by and vote
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today,” he said. Kovacs said she thinks local elections are more important than most people realize since the elections focus on more localized issues and officials. “And if you’re not voting, then you’re not getting a say in something that’s probably going to affect you pretty directly,” she said. Kovacs and her friends didn’t get more involved in this year’s local election compared to other years, but regardless of their campaign involvement and their political affiliations, they still found it important to place their ballots. “I mean, even the fact that last night we were all sitting at our computers cramming and trying to figure out who to vote for I think is more than probably most people do,” she said. Grajewski said voting in the local election was “much easier” than in the presidential one, although she thought the reason behind it was disappointing. “There was a huge line when I came [during the presidential election], now they’re trying to get 50 people, which is a little sad,” she said. Editor’s note: Zoe Kovacs used to work on the copy desk at The Pitt News.
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Opinions from the editorial board
column
Paradise Papers demand transparent tax reform What do Nike, George Soros, Facebook, Queen Elizabeth II, Apple, Bono and the Kremlin have in common? Their allegedly evasive financial maneuvers were exposed Nov. 5 in a massive project called the Paradise Papers. Ring a bell? Just like the 2015 Panama Papers, Sunday’s trove of documents was leaked by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists publicized Sunday’s trove of documents in collaboration with numerous news agencies worldwide — including The Guardian, The New York Times and BBC. And just like 2015, the leak shows a need to reform tax laws to better support today’s complex systems of taxbased social support. The report revealed how numerous wealthy individuals and corporations use offshore trusts to hide investments and income usually in the multi-millions, namely through the Bermudabased firm Appleby. By keeping its firms in tax havens like Bermuda, Guernsey, Isle of Man or Jersey, Appleby’s clients are able to evade corporate income taxes in their home countries. Perhaps the most egregious example of a company obscuring profits in the Paradise Papers leak is Apple. Using ICIJ’s report, The New York Times found Apple had more than $230 billion stored in offshore accounts — what this means is Apple’s $230 billion, exempt from U.S. income taxes, doesn’t contribute to the social services it was supposed to. But the scariest thing about these tax loopholes is it’s not all dirty money going into the hands of corporate giants. People like Bono, front man for the famous U.K. band U2, were “distressed” by the allegations. While Apple’s massive
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involvement points to knowledgeable involvement in tax evasion schemes, people such as Bono are only involved because they own shares of implicated mutual funds. And others are even more vague. Queen Elizabeth II, according to the documents, used a Cayman Islands fund to invest in a British rent-to-own company infamous for levying interest rates as high as 99.9 percent for household items. Madonna had investments in a medical supplies firm, and ultrawealthy individuals like mathematician and hedge-fund billionaire James H. Simon made massive political contributions to political action committees supporting 2016 Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton from offshore funds. Tax loopholes like these introduce moral gray areas — is Bono really to blame for an investment he probably knew nothing about, even in a Lithuanian mall accused of tax evasion? Is Apple really to blame if U.S. tax laws specifically designate profits made abroad as non-taxable until they return to the United States? Most of these companies and individuals actually followed the law to a tee, regardless of whether they used the money morally or not. Because tax laws are so complex, deciphering the moral gray areas in them is challenging work. But what this leak shows above all is the need to clarify U.S. tax laws from a citizen-based perspective so that massive profits made off of U.S. citizens actually benefit them the way they should. After all, there’s no way of ensuring our social structure succeeds without enforcing the laws designed to support it.
WHEN THE WHOLE WORLD COLLIDES: International influence hits the charts Levko Karmazyn Columnist
If you turned on your car radio during the summer of 2016, chances are you came under the influence of the tropical pulse of Drake’s “One Dance.” As the first song to hit one billion plays on Spotify, it marked one of the 2010s’ biggest music stars hitting a viral peak. But it wasn’t just Drake’s magical touch that made the song a success — sweeping samples of UK funk, Jamaican dancehall and featured Nigerian afrobeats artist Wizkid are what made it truly important. With “One Dance” and songs like it consistently at the top of the charts, it’s clear dance is the universal language that defines popular music in 2017 — and this integration is the product of music streaming, social media and a world more connected than ever before. After “One Dance” gave up its number one spot, other songs with global sounds took its place. Well-known pop artist Justin Bieber appeared on a remix of Puerto Rican artist Luis Fonzi’s song, “Despacito,” which led the US Billboard 100 for 16 straight weeks, despite being sung mostly in Spanish. This ties Mariah Carey and Boyz II Men’s “One Sweet Day” for the longest run ever. And like Drake, Fonzi drew from global sounds for his hit single. “Despacito” is rooted in reggaeton, a form of Latin music born in Puerto Rico that takes roots in hip-hop, reggae and dancehall. And it is all over the US charts. A Beyonce remix of J. Balvin’s “Mi Gente” joined “Despacito” as the second
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mostly-not-English song on the October Billboard Top 10 — a feat never seen before. Balvin’s catalogue is dense with songs that can have major global appeal, such as the winding and gyrating “Safari,” which features American singer and producer Pharrell. But this international flavor is nothing new — over the past decade pop, hip-hop, dance and other urban music have long acknowledged their multicultural roots. Electronic music trio Major Lazer regularly captures global textures like dancehall, Brazilian baile-funk and Latin sounds, and has since its inception in 2009 — and the group’s multicultural roots are always at the root. In fact, regarding the music video for the tropical, syncopated smash-single “Lean On” shot in India, the band said the choice was representative of the cultural mashup the group has always been. This international influence isn’t just limited to ambitious electronic groups or producers — and it seems like music sometimes falls flat without it. Currently, cold, noir trap music dominates mainstream U.S. hip-hop. An emergence of artists such Lil Yachty and Lil Uzi created a popular subgenre dubbed “mumble rap,” a sort of punk-rap movement, where the traditional rules and lyricism of hip-hop are exchanged for rawness, quantity of output and virality. It may be a valid form of expression, but it lacks longevity or broad appeal. Take for example Desiigner’s “Panda,” one of the genre’s best charting singles to date. The song reached No. 1 after 41 weeks See Karmazyn on page 7
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Karmazyn, pg. 6
Abby Katz STAFF ILLUSTRATOR
The Pitt news crossword 11/8/17
of foreign artist domination — and after just two weeks, “One Dance” stole the spot. Trap and mumble rap are fun to listen to on a Friday night, but without engaging with global roots they simply don’t earn longevity. There’s one genre that bridges this gap — the recently flourishing afrobeats, which combines African pop, dancehall, hip-hop and a UK strain of punk called grime. The result is a compelling stark contrast that even artists like Kanye West are fascinated by. And it seems like the global influence changes more than just the sound. In afrobeats, there is a welcome sense of respect for the women that U.S. hip-hop notoriously lacks. In afrobeats, a fascination with movement replaces money and strippers. The songs might seem simple, but they focus on rhythm and music’s connection to dance. The music videos often feature a diversity of women in forms and appearance that doesn’t manifest itself in the same way as in commercial hip-hop. But maybe trap or hip-hop and afrobeats aren’t quite as different as they seem. Hip-
hop originated as the voice of the unheard and misrepresented — specifically black, urban youth. Afrobeats is the reactionary voice of a misrepresented continent shedding preconceived notions of what it means to be African, so similarities naturally arise from struggles. Regardless, the widespread appeal of globally integrated music like afrobeats compared to the short-lived viral fame of trap shows audiences today demand more diverse, thoughtful music. The success of global music across genres shows that young people desire to feel more connected to other parts of the world in a way we’ve never seen before. Without the viral forces of music streaming and social media, many of these collaborations simply wouldn’t be possible. And whether you like global influence or not, music is way to escape sometimes horrible realities — when put into a global perspective, infectious rhythm and sound serve as great ways to break down our cultural divides. But more than anything, the result is some really great music. Levko primarily writes about environmental issues, cultural topics and alternative lifestyles. Write to Levko at ldk14@pitt.edu.
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Sports Pipers, pg. 1 help change the way basketball is played. During its first season in 1967, the ABA had 11 teams in several markets the NBA hadn’t reached yet. The teams included New Orleans, Houston, Denver and Oakland in the Western Division, and Minnesota, Indiana, New Jersey and — of course — Pittsburgh in the Eastern Division. The league was a new brand of basketball in comparison to its counterpart in the NBA — which was established in 1946 — defined by an exciting style of play. Ira Harge, who played center for the Pipers during their championship season, recalls the innovations the ABA introduced — including its iconic red, white and blue colored ball. “It was easier to track [the ball],” Harge said. “You didn’t have that big brown thing floating in the air. We had more of a running game, a fun game. Our teams were running up and down the floor with this red, white and blue ball and shooting the three pointer.” The 3-point shot was first introduced in the less successful American Basketball League in 1961, and was forsaken when the league dissolved in 1963. The ABA reintroduced the idea in 1967, along with the first dunk contest — two ideas the NBA would eventually adopt. In its inaugural season, the ABA drew a respectable total attendance of 1,200,439 compared to the NBA’s 2,935,879 the same year. Some ABA franchises, like the Indiana Pacers, averaged had impressive turnouts. The Pipers, though, weren’t exactly packing the Civic Arena with fans. Jim Jarvis, who played point guard for the Pipers, remembers the unimpressive crowds the Pipers drew in the first season, but he says it never bothered him. “The crowds were not that big, but we had a lot of good guys on that team,” Jarvis said. “The crowd situation was not something I remember being a big issue
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with us. We just loved to play basketball.” The first Dr. J Fans who did attend were treated to a show from one of the best teams in the league. The Pipers started the season strong with a 24-12 record by the end of December, thanks in large part to star player Connie Hawkins and head coach Vince Cazzetta. Cazzetta only coached the Pipers in that first season and was forced to leave after a contract dispute led to his resignation. He passed away in 2005 on the 37th anniversary of the Pipers’ ABA title win. His players respected him and praised his ability as a coach. “I don’t think Vince played the game, but he understood the game,” Jarvis said. “He had to have the ability to get across what he wanted to have done and have the players do it even though there was a difference in personality on the team.” Two guards from that ‘67-’68 Pipers team, Arvesta Kelly and Steve Vacendak, also remember Cazzetta as a great leader and coach. “He was a tremendous communicator, and he knew the game,” Kelly said. “He knew the Xs and Os of the game.” Vacendak said the coach’s experience in raising children “kind of helped him in dealing with [the players].” “He was a great father, and I think he had wonderful relationships with his children and his entire family,” Vacendak said. “He had the gift of being able to communicate ... in a way that made you accept it and want to execute it.” Just as the season was reaching its halfway point, the Pipers made sweeping changes to the roster, ending the season with just four of the players who began it. But Hawkins, one of the best players in the league, led the team through the personnel mix-up. Hawkins led the ABA in scoring that first season, and is enshrined in the Basketball Hall of Fame for his accomplishments in the ABA and later the NBA. He
Connie Hawkins led the Pipers to their ABA championship in 1967. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
See Pipers on page 10
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Pipers, pg. 9 passed away this year on Oct. 6, but his teammates have clear memories of his game. “He was really the predecessor to today’s game with his physical abilities,” Jarvis said. “He could run the floor, he could rebound. He wasn’t a deep shooter, but he could turn and face the basket.” Jarvis, Harge, Vacendak and Kelly all remembered Hawkins the same way — as the best player they ever shared the court with. “He’s the top of the list,” Jarvis said. “I always thought Connie was the best thing that happened, not to [disparage] Julius Erving or Rick Barry or anybody,” Harge said. “Connie Hawkins was the first real Dr. J,” Vacendak said. “He’s definitely the best ball player that I’ve ever played with,” Kelly said. Kelly also remembers Hawkins’ struggles with a leg injury during the second half of the ‘67-’68 season. “Connie was the one that really kind of spearheaded everything. And I think he was hurt, there was something wrong with his leg, but he played and he said, ‘Come on, we got to win this,’” Kelly said. If Hawkins was bothered by injuries, it didn’t show. In the second half of the season, the Pipers found momentum, finishing with a 54-24 record. Hawkins averaged 30.9 points per game over the last 30 games and won the first ever ABA MVP award. Harge was one of the players who was traded during the midway point, ending up at the Oakland Oaks. That trade meant he was forced to match-up against the 6-foot-8 star when the Oaks faced off
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against the Pipers. “He gave me a little fake and he went by me and he said something to the effect of ‘Well, I’m glad you didn’t stay with us in Pittsburgh ‘cause here I am on one leg and I went by you,’” Harge said. “Did you see me block that shot?” The Pipers beat the Indiana Pacers and Minnesota Muskies in the Eastern Division playoffs to reach the finals against the New Orleans Buccaneers. In the finals, PittsburThe Heinz History Center has a display case dedicated to the championship Pipers squad. Aaron Schoen STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER ghers jumped on the bandwagon. “I remember that we did have a pretty good crowd Even with Heyman’s antics and I live. Art was always doing something.” for that series,” Heyman was famous for his eccen- Hawkins’ leg injury, the Pipers pulled Jarvis said. “I don’t know if they gave tricity. Jarvis, who roomed with him on through to win in game seven against away tickets or what.” “Those last games that we played, the the road, recalled a habit Heyman had the Buccaneers, beating New Orleans 122-113. Hawkins was the MVP of the after games. arena was packed,” Kelly added. “Art was the guy that constantly series. According to Kelly, the final series Forgotten legends against the Buccaneers was tension filled needed praise. After a game he’d come Pittsburgh hardly had a chance to and — on one occasion — that tension back in the motel room late and wake me up and say, ‘Gosh, what did you think celebrate the new champions — there led to a fight with a fan. “We were going into the locker of that pass I made, wasn’t that a great were no parades, no rallies. The players room and one of the fans was heckling pass? Did you see me block that shot?’” left after game seven and most never returned to the Steel City. Art Heyman,” Kelly said. “Art Heyman Jarvis said. “I think most of us left Pittsburgh “He’d call you up at two or three in punched him and we had to get the police to give us an escort out of the sta- the morning, I’m saying ‘dude go to during the summer months and weren’t dium. I will never forget that as long as bed,’” Kelly said. See Pipers on page 11
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Pipers, pg. 10 back there, so soon as the season was over you loaded up your car and went across the country,” Jarvis said. By the start of the next season, the Pittsburgh Pipers were the Minnesota Pipers. The franchise never capitalized on the success of its first year in Pittsburgh. The Pipers weren’t able to draw any bigger crowds in Minnesota, and Erickson and co-owner Gabe Rubin lost more than $250,000 on the team. Rubin decided to move the team back to Pittsburgh at the end of the ‘68-’69 season. By that time, Hawkins was in the NBA and support for the team had further died down. The team changed its name in an attempt to create a buzz around the team. By 1971 they were the Pittsburgh Condors, but the name change failed to attract more interest. According to Kelly, the move in 1968 may have been the death knell for professional basketball in Pittsburgh. “We left and then we came back without Connie, and that was a big reason why the team did not succeed,” Kelly
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said. Vacendak agrees with Kelly. He thinks the franchise even had potential to join the NBA through the eventual NBA/ ABA merger in 1976 if they had stayed in Pittsburgh. “I don’t think there’s any question about it,” Vacendak said. Instead, the Condors never even made it to 1976. The ABA shut the team down in 1972 due to the lack of fan support. It’s been 50 years now since the Pipers won that title, and all the City of Pittsburgh has to show for it is a small display at the Heinz History Center. Even the Basketball Hall of Fame makes no mention of the Pipers, Kelly noticed. “The last time that I was at the Basketball Hall of Fame, they didn’t even have a picture or nothing about the Pipers and us winning the first championship of the ABA,” Kelly said. Now, Kelly feels like the team he spent so long playing for has been left behind by history. “It’s like we were the forgotten team,” he said, “I don’t understand that, when we were the first team to win the ABA championship.”
SGB, pg. 3 “And we will continue to lobby for this cause in all of our meetings that we have up in Harrisburg and with our local, federal and state lawmakers,” Kneis said. At the University level, Vice President and Chief of Finance Maddie Guido also announced plans to bring back “SGB Updates” — a UPTV segment filmed weekly or biweekly where members of SGB can speak about projects or initiatives from the past week, which was last aired during the 20152016 school year. “We represent the undergraduate student body of Pitt so I think it’s extremely important that they understand what’s going on,” Guido said. “If they have a problem with it, if they have a suggestion ... we get their feedback and people get to stay informed of what we are doing as SGB.” Guido said it’s important to get student feedback from these updates, especially as SGB makes an effort to be more transparent with the Pitt community this year. “I think the worst thing you can have is a governing body, even just for undergraduate students, that kind of keeps to themselves,” Guido said. “The more feedback we can get,
November 8, 2017
whether it be positive or negative, the more we know how to do our jobs better.” Board member Ami Fall said she is working on a proposal to make additions to the student syllabus. This would include extended information on sexual assault, mental health resources on and off campus and a possible section on protocol for a death in the family. She also wanted to inform students that professors are mandated reporters — people who have to report a crime. “It’s a part of removing the stigma, talking about these issues and assuring that every student is given the opportunity to find these resources and to reach out to them,” Fall said. “Assuring that students know that they’re not alone, in whatever they’re going through and there are people here that really care about them and are able to help them.” Allocations Pitt Ballroom Club requested $836 for a competition expense. The board approved in full. Pitt Archery requested $1,494 for their Indoor Nationals Event’s registration and lodging. The board approved in full. Pitt Racquetball Club requested $1,200 for a competition expense. The board approved in full.
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I N D E X
Rentals & Sublet • NORTH OAKLAND • SOUTH OAKLAND • SHADYSIDE • SQUIRREL HILL • SOUTHSIDE • NORTHSIDE • BLOOMFIELD • ROOMMATES • OTHER
For Rent North Oakland 3,4,6 houses available January and August 2018. Lawn St. Ward St. Call 412-287-5712. 6 or 7 BR House on N. Dithridge St. Available beginning in August 2018. 3 full bathrooms. 2 kitchens. 10 rooms total, on 3 levels, with one bathroom on each level. Refridgerators, ranges, ovens, dishwashers included. A/C. Washer and dryer in basement. On Pitt and CMU shuttle routes. $3600/month + gas and electric. Owner pays water, sewer, and city garbage collection charges. Please leave message at 412-372-9185.
South Oakland ** 3 and 4 Bedroom Houses/Apartments in South Oakland. Available for rent August 2018. Very clean with different amenities (dishwasher, laundry, A/C, washer and dryer, 1-3 baths, off-street parking, newer appliances & sofas). Check out my Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/KenEckenrodeRealEstate/. Call Ken at
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Employment • CHILDCARE • FOOD SERVICES • UNIVERSITY • INTERNSHIPS • RESEARCH • VOLUNTEERING • OTHER
412-287-4438 for more information and showings. **AUGUST 2018: Furnished studios, 1,2,3,4 bedroom apartments. No pets. Non-smokers preferred. 412-621-0457. 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 Bedrooom Houses. August 2018. Bouquet St, Meyran, Semple, Neville, Chesterfield. 412-287-5712. 2-3-4-5-6-7 bedroom apartments and houses available in May and August 2018. Nice, clean, free laundry, includes exterior maintenance, new appliances, spacious, located on Meyran, Bates, Oakland, Semple, Wellsford, Dawson, Juliet. 412-414-9629. 4 BR Home - Semple Street, located near Louisa. Equipped Kitchen, Full Basement. New central air added. Renting for August 2018. (412) 343-4289 or 412-330-9498. Apartments for rent. 2,3,4, and 5 bedroom apartments available. Some available on Dawson street, Atwood street, and Mckee Place. Newly remodeled. Some have laundry on site. Minutes from the University. For more info please call Mike at 412-849-8694
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South Oakland
August 2018 rental. 3 BR/1 BA apartment. 2 off-street parking spaces included. Large storage room. Wall-wall carpeting, Kitchen w/dishwasher, Washer/Dryer in laundry room. $1800/ month+ utilities. 724-934-0653.
South Oakland Student Housing: 2, 3, 4 & 5 BR House. Updated Kitchen, Baths, A/C, Laundry, some with parking. August 2018 Availability. 412-445-6117.
Furnished 6 BR House. 3 bath, a kitchen and living room. Greek-life friendly. Atwood St. Call Helen at 412-461-5709 Immediate- Large Updated 2BR 2BA Apt. Washer/Dryer with Porch. $875+ Call Jeff at 412-445-7681 Oakland Ave. - Garden Court Apartments. Charming 2BR, hardwood floors, free heat. Move in May 1 or Aug. 1, 2018. Call 412-361-2695.
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Two business days prior by 3pm | Email: advertising@pittnews.com | Phone: 412.648.7978
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South Oakland
Before signing a lease, be aware that no more than 3 unrelated people can share a single unit. Check property’s compliance with codes. Call City’s Permits, Licensing & Inspections. 412-255-2175.
R A T E S
Ward & S. Bouquet Streets - Studio, 1, 2 & 3BR apartments. Free parking. Move in May 1 or Aug. 1, 2018. Call 412-361-2695
Squirrel Hill 1655 Shady Avenue, First Floor Apartment: 3 BR, 2 Full Bath, spacious LR, Office, Enclosed Porch. Lovely, large, bright apartment steps from the Squirrel Hill shopping district, an easy bus or bike ride to Pitt. Monthly rent $1750, with about $100 for utilities. Laundry on-site, parking available. Contact Larry Newman @ 412-421-3720 or lsnsss@verizon.net for a tour.
Rental Other 1,2,3 BR. Apartments, prices range from $450-$750 per person. Some include utilities, some you have to pay. Call Jarrad 814-403-2798
Employment Other Seeking an experienced, female Elderly Caregiver to start work immediately. $25/hour, she would be working for up to 5 hours daily Mon-Fri for my diabetic Grandma. All applicants email stephen. lamar@outlook.com directly for further details.
Services Services Other Busy? Hate doing laundry? Personal laundry for Shadyside, Oakland, and Squirrel Hill. Call Eva 412-334-1743. Exclusive Discounted Business Class Air to Europe and Worldwide. Also, coach fare for US Travel and Worldwide. I have 35 years experience. Call 412-884-0543 or email me your request joann.uts@gmail.com. Phlebotomy Training Centerwww. justphlebotomy.org 2 evening classes weekly, 5 weeks + excellent Clinicals. Call 412-521-7334.
November 8, 2017
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