2-18-19

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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 | february 18, 2019 ­| Volume 109 | Issue 107

BUY ME A DRANK : T-PAIN TO HEADLINE BIGELOW BASH

HILLMAN HONORS BLACK HISTORY MONTH

Brian Gentry

Assistant News Editor T-Pain will headline this year’s Bigelow Bash on April 7. Pitt Program Council announced the headline performer on Saturday night at their annual Black and White Ball and posted about it shortly after via Instagram. According to Farrell Healy, the special events director of Pitt Program Council, the organization decided on T-Pain after much deliberation on who to book. “We like to have at least one more mainstream hip-hop artist, so since we had an alternative artist in the fall, we were trying to find a hip-hop artist in the spring,” Healy said. “From there, it was just suggestions from the committee, and going back and forth there. That’s where we decided on T-Pain.” Healy declined to comment on the cost of booking T-Pain for the concert, citing contract privacy. Last spring’s Bigelow Bash was headlined by MisterWives, an indie pop band based in New York. This year’s Fall Fest featured Young the Giant, an American rock band with hits including “My Body” and “Cough Syrup.”

“Ferguson Voices” will be on display in the lobby of Hillman Library through the end of February in support of Black History Month. Hannah Heisler | staff photographer

HILLMAN EXHIBIT SHOWCASES STORIES OF FERGUSON

Nithil Harris Manimaran

“Activism is believing that people can be persuaded to act in a collective way that also For The Pitt News benefits their humanity,” the quote reads. Pitt students walking through the front This quote is part of Ferguson Voices: doors of Hillman Library during the month Disrupting the Frame, a collaborative initiaof February are greeted by a quote on one tive between PROOF: Media for Social Jusof the exhibits featuring Elizabeth Vega, a tice and the University of Dayton Human Chicana artist and educator from Ferguson, Rights Center commemorating the life and Missouri. death of Michael Brown Jr. The exhibit at

Pitt is being featured in the lobby of Hillman Library throughout February in support of Black History Month. PROOF is a nonprofit organization based in New York City that uses visual storytelling to inspire attitude and policy changes across the globe. “Ferguson Voices” was launched in January 2017, then under the name of “The See Ferguson on page 2


News Ferguson, pg. 1

Moral Courage Project.” The multimedia storytelling initiative consists of a physical traveling exhibit and a podcast, and is based on original interviews and photographs collected in 2016. The physical exhibit on the first floor of Hillman consists of more than a dozen standing banners, with half featuring portraits of Ferguson residents — taken by photographer Mark Katzman — whose lives were touched by the death of Brown after he was shot by a Ferguson police officer in 2014. Quotes taken from interviews conducted in 2016 with those Ferguson residents, including Vega, are featured on the other half. The full interviews, along with several hours’ worth of other interviews with more residents, can be found at www. fergusonvoices.org. Brown, a black teenager, was shot and killed by a white police officer in Ferguson on Aug. 9, 2014. The officer, Darren Wilson,

“Ferguson Voices” was created by students at the University of Dayton working in conjunction with PROOF Media for Social Justice to draw attention to problems of state violence and structural racism. Hannah Heisler | staff photographer claimed Brown was violent and he shot him in self-defense. Police accused Brown of robbing a convenience store minutes before the shooting. Brown had no prior criminal record and was unarmed. When Wilson was not indicted by the

grand jury, the situation escalated, resulting in militarization of the police. The incident stirred unrest among the residents of Ferguson, who took to the streets with the slogan “Hands up, don’t shoot.” By the end of the final wave of protests, more than 300 mem-

bers of the public were arrested. Michael Goodhart, director of the Global Studies Center at Pitt, offered his own perspective on the protests. “While there are many similar incidents [to Ferguson], I don’t know of any similar exhibits that combine a physical and an online presence and offer a comprehensive treatment of the context surrounding the infamous events themselves,” Goodhart said. According to Goodhart, the GSC believes this project would deepen conversations on such issues that are widespread globally and are not just unique to the United States. “Global Studies mobilized partners to bring the exhibit to campus, not because Ferguson and the killing of Michael Brown are somehow more important than other examples of police violence or structural racism, but because the exhibit gives us an opportunity to think about the broader issues in transnational perspective — to think about the global processes and connections that help to shape the racial regime in the See Ferguson on page 3

FIFTH AVENUE POPEYES SAYS LAST GOODBYES Brian Gentry

Assistant News Editor The Popeyes on Pitt’s campus closed permanently on Monday, Feb. 11. The restaurant, located at the corner of Fifth and Atwood, replaced a Wendy’s that closed in February 2010. A sign posted on the door announcing the closure did not list a reason for it, but noted that another Popeyes location in South Side remains open. The Popeyes on Fifth was temporarily closed following health inspection violations in May last year due to mouse droppings found throughout the restaurant. Pest control eventually removed the mice and the restaurant reopened after passing a reinspection. Former patrons of the Popeyes were torn about its closure and took to social media to commemorate the restaurant. Reddit user crazygoattoe had primarily good experiences there. “The service may have been inconsistent as hell but getting rid of a Popeyes is a travesty,” crazygoattoe wrote. “I loved that place.” Others had more negative perceptions of the Popeyes.

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Pitt’s campus Popeyes closed permanently on Monday, Feb. 11. Knox Coulter | staff photographer “Sometimes you’d get what you wanted in there and sometimes you’d get berated by an employee because you wanted something they didn’t have,” Reddit user pittpanthers95 wrote. Some had extremely fond memories of the restaurant, detailing events that brought joy to the patrons at

February 18, 2019

the expense of the restaurant. “In April 2016, an error with the app OrderUp allowed anybody to get unlimited free Popeyes,” NordyNed wrote. “My entire floor and I went there, asked for 100 biscuits and a fuckton of chicken, and they just handed it over no questions asked.”

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Ferguson, pg. 2 United States today,” he said. Roger Rouse, a visiting global studies core instructor, shares a similar view. “What happened in Ferguson and what the implications of that are [not only] for things like the ‘Black Lives Matter’ movement, but also to recognize that what we’re offering is a different angle on these events that cause people to relate them to developments elsewhere in the world,” Rouse said. The idea behind this is to create an

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atmosphere that enables students and faculty to consider these events in new perspectives that may contribute to a deeper understanding of the processes behind them, Goodhart said. “Our primary goals in bringing the exhibit were to draw attention to global dimensions of the problems of state violence and structural racism, and to provide a space for conversation about these issues,” Goodhart said. “I hope the event inspires students to think about the broader social impact they can have and want to have.” The GSC and its partners have planned a series of events to take place throughout

the month to bolster the exhibit. Upcoming events include an interactive session titled “Racial Regimes in Transnational Context” with Dr. Michael Hanchard, chair of the Africana studies department at the University of Pennsylvania, and a hands-on community writing workshop with poets and artists Saretta Morgan and Bekezela Mguni, whose work focuses on social justice issues. Abhijith Segu, a Ph.D. student from India in the chemical engineering department at Pitt, said the exhibit made him reflect on his own experience in the United States.

February 18, 2019

“I traveled halfway across the globe, like many aspiring people who come to this country, to focus on my education, to learn,” Segu said. “We come here expecting better experiences, and the most important thing we can do is be broad-minded and communicate better. What we can do now is learn from the past and move on to a better future.” According to Rouse, Ferguson Voices encourages people to step forward and talk about the event in ways that other exhibits about Ferguson haven’t. “The whole point is to encourage more conversation,” Rouse said.

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Opinions

column

from the editorial board

The wall isn’t a national emergency When Congress denied President Donald Trump’s demands for enough money — almost $6 billion — to fund a border wall separating Mexico and the United States, he decided to find a way to sidestep this crucial check on his power. He did so by declaring a national emergency, a presidential power that was codified in the National Emergencies Act in 1976 and has been used dozens of times since. With this declaration, the president now has powers outside of what he can normally do as head executive, including the ability to move money from other government projects to fund “military construction projects not otherwise authorized by law.” What Trump fails to recognize in all this is that there is no crisis at the border. His national emergency creates far more problems than it solves and is a complete overextension of executive powers. Past presidents have used their powers to declare a national emergency following natural disasters or terrorist attacks. George W. Bush declared a national emergency after 9/11. Others have used national emergencies to limit business dealings with other countries. Barack Obama used one in 2009 during the swine flu epidemic. The Trump administration has treated the wave of asylum-seekers at the border as a national emergency, but the administration believes the real national emergency is Congress refusing to let him get his way. Trump even acknowledged it himself. “I want to do it faster,” Trump said in a press conference from the Rose Garden on Friday. “I could do the wall over a longer period of time. I didn’t need to do this, but I’d rather do it much faster.” Since one of the purposes of Congress is to keep the president in check, Trump not getting his way isn’t unusual. It’s hardly a

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national emergency on par with tragedies like 9/11. In fact, the “crisis” at the border is hardly a national emergency. The number of people arrested for illegally crossing the border was at a 46-year low as of 2017, and the waves of people trying to enter aren’t terrorist groups but families and individuals seeking refuge. What we need at the border isn’t a wall to keep a handful of people from attempting to enter illegally. What we need is better facilities for processing, holding and caring for the migrants who have every right under both U.S. and international law to seek and be evaluated for asylum. The wall is the campaign promise Trump just can’t let go, despite the 58 percent of Americans who oppose its expansion on our southern border — not to mention the majority of Congress. Most people seem to recognize that it will do more harm than good. Government projects that have actually been approved by Congress to receive funding will lose that funding to finance the wall. Landowners along the border will have their property taken away by eminent domain for a project that most don’t actually want. California, New York and advocacy group Public Citizen have already filed lawsuits against the president and will likely be joined by many more similar suits. Trump shouldn’t be able to declare a national emergency just because he didn’t get what he wanted. He’s setting a dangerous precedent by which any future president could declare a state of national emergency to bypass Congress and institute any number of changes that should involve congressional approval. This is just another example of how willing Trump is to overlook the rules of governance to get what he wants.

THE IMPORTANCE OF USING GENDERNEUTRAL VOCABULARY

Anne Marie Yurik Staff Columnist

Many of my go-to phrases include words like “girl,” “queen” and “dude,” whichiare gendered. Even though I used to say these phrases nonchalantly they could have triggered someone who didn’t identify with the genders in these phrases. Gender’s deep roots in our language — pronouns, nouns, possessives, phrases, etc. — never occurred to me until I tried to talk about a person who identified as nonbinary, meaning they identify as neither male nor female and use they/them pronouns. My position of privilege as a cisgender woman allowed me to breeze through daily interactions without considering how gender in speech is triggering to many. The person I had difficulty describing was Bethany C. Meyers, the host of the bodyneutral fitness program called “the be.come project,” which is designed for people who want to become healthier and to accept and love their bodies, regardless of their shape or size. But as I was trying to explain Meyer’s fitness program to my mother, I noticed myself slipping into the conventional she/her pronouns instead of actually using their preferred pronouns, because I never thought much about how gendered my everyday speech was. I’m lucky that I wasn’t talking to Meyers while I tripped over the pronouns and kept saying she/her instead of they/them. Even though I don’t know how they would have reacted, it is important to not assume that misgendering is something trivial.

February 18, 2019

Pronouns, for the cisgender community, might not seem like a big deal. But many individuals who identify as non-binary lose accurate representation and feel excluded when people are unfamiliar with the gendered phrasing they’re using. Instead of assuming a person’s gender identity based on outside appearance, ask them what pronouns they use. Even if you don’t currently know a person who would benefit from gender-inclusive grammati-

Eli Savage |

contributing editor

cal choices, it is important to attend to what you say, so you don’t run into the same problem that I faced. Gender-neutral language demonstrates inclusion for people who do not identify with the stereotypical gender binary. It also ensures that you don’t dredge up potentially harmful memories for people through incorrect language usage.

Find the full story online at

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February 18, 2019

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Sports

Seminoles steamroll Pitt women’s basketball, 78-46 pittnews.com

Weekend Sports: Wrestling rolls, softball stumbles

column

WWE NEEDS TO LET KOFI KINGSTON FLY

Alexa Marzina Staff Writer

WWE superstar Kofi Kingston is in his late 30s and still has as much dexterity and agility as an Olympic gymnast, but has yet to hold a world title in WWE. At the “Elimination Chamber” payper-view Sunday, Kingston got a chance at one in an elimination chamber match with an enthusiastic crowd fully on his side in the Toyota Center in Houston. But WWE still couldn’t — or rather, wouldn’t — pull the trigger on giving him the belt. WWE hasn’t had a black world champion since Mark Henry’s 2011 stint with the World Heavyweight Championship. Kingston has been a reliable worker for the company since his main-roster debut in 2008, providing countless entertaining matchups as well as just being a fun performer to watch. He has had main-event and championship caliber his whole career. He has also won multiple lower-card and tag team titles, so it’s curious that Kingston hasn’t drawn WWE’s eyes as a potential face of the company. In fact, Kingston wasn’t even supposed to be part of the chamber match in the first place — he replaced an injured Mustafa Ali. Ali is still too green in the ring to hold a world title, so it seemed that putting Kingston in his place would still serve as a throwaway character. But on last week’s episode of “SmackDown LIVE,” Kingston earned the iron man moniker during a gauntlet match to determine which superstar would enter the chamber match last, which is a huge advantage. Competing for more than an hour, Kingston managed to eliminate

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three competitors before tapping out to A.J. Styles. While that accolade wouldn’t do Kingston any favors in the chamber, it showed a hint of hope that WWE might finally greenlight a long overdue Kingston world title run. At Sunday’s show, Kingston entered the match third out of six men, already putting him at a disadvantage. But The New Day’s head guy performed as spoton as ever, delivering fun spots and exciting offense throughout his duration in the ring. Seeing him compete one-on-one with WWE Champion Daniel Bryan as the last two men in the main-event chamber match felt just like 2009, when it felt certain that the newcomer would cement himself as a young champion. Kingston was able to counter and endure Bryan’s signature offense for much longer than anticipated, but wasn’t able to capitalize in the end. Since WrestleMania is fewer than two months away, it would normally be strange to have a title change so close to the show — despite the three that happened earlier in the PPV. The veteran Kingston deserves not only a lengthy run with a big championship, but also his first singles match on the grandest stage of them all. Kingston has competed in nine WrestleManias so far, but only in multiman matches. While he still shines in a crowded ring, like during his famous Royal Rumble elimination saves every year, it is a crime that he hasn’t been able to show his true wrestling ability at WWE’s equivalent of the Super Bowl. While The New Day could have just

Griffin Floyd Staff Writer

Redshirt freshman Micky Phillippi, pictured here against North Carolina on Feb. 2, also won his match against Duke on Friday. Bader Abdulmajeed| staff photographer

WRESTLING Duke 19 Pitt 20

BASEBALL Villanova 2 Pitt 7

Iowa 10 Pitt 1

GYMNASTICS -

SOFTBALL

Wisconsin 8 Pitt 0

Milwaukee 9 Pitt 8

3rd Pitt, 195.100

4th Cornell, 193.075

Nebraska 14 Pitt 1

Nebraska 16 Pitt 2

quad meet

1 2 USU, 196.075 WVU, 195.575 st

Marshall 7 Pitt 2

nd

Wisconsin 8 Pitt 0

TENNIS

Bowling Green 2 Pitt 5

See WWE on page 7

February 18, 2019

Find the full story online at

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WWE, pg. 6

Kofi Kingston, pictured here at the September 2016 WWE Raw Tag Team Championship, was a last-minute addition to the Elimination Chamber. via miguel discart | wikimedia been the tag team of three black men whom WWE had no idea what to do with, the team has soared since its inception without looking back. Professional wrestling is weird, which is why it makes total sense to have pancakes or cereal thrown at you during a show. Crowds across the world cheer hard for The New Day and its power of positivity, but it’s almost shocking that it’s still intact, considering Kingston’s starpower eliminates the team from the “greater than the sum of its parts” mold. The pairing certainly helped Xavier Woods and Big E become more mainstream names, but being in a goofy gimmick for as long as he has really isn’t doing much for Kingston’s long-term career. The man is 37 years old and is certainly not the oldest performer in WWE, but wrestlers competing after their prime usually don’t have the success they imagine. If WWE ever hopes to rake in the profits that a Kingston world title reign will bring, he needs to be in that picture within at least the next four years. WWE is notorious for treating its tag team di-

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vision poorly or as an afterthought, and avoiding singles competition could lead Kingston into obsoletion. Even if the company is dead set on keeping The New Day together, it should entertain the idea of letting Woods, Big E and Kingston also compete as individuals. Sure, it’s entertaining when The New Day freebirds their tag titles, but imagine how much better The New Day would be if it consisted of WWE Champion Kingston flanked by the now sixtime tag team champs, Woods and Big E. The New Day could be what WWE wanted the Nation of Domination to be — a staple promoting and displaying black excellence. Based on the crowd reaction at the “Elimination Chamber,” Kingston would make a wonderful babyface champion who could appeal to child and adult fans alike as well as sell tons of merch. That’s a win-win for WWE and its fans. WWE’s next PPV on the road to WrestleMania is “Fastlane,” at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Sunday, March 10. The show kicks off at 7 p.m. live on the WWE Network.

February 18, 2019

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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 BR Apartment on 732 S. Millvale Ave. Available August 1, 2019. $1320‑$1630 +gas & electric. 412‑441‑1211. info@­ forbesmanagement.­ net. www.forbesman­ agement.net Two ‑ 4BR apart­ments available Au­gust 2019. 4821 Cen­tre Ave. Photos on­line, check out www.­ forbesmanagement.­ net, or call 412‑441‑1211. Apt. #1 ‑ $2690+gas/electric. Apt. #2 ‑ $2580+gas/­ electric.

South Oakland **August 2019 ‑ Large 2BR/2Bath apartments. Clean, walking distance to campus. Great loca­tion. $1200. All util­ities included. Wash­er/dryer on site. Off‑street parking avail­able. No pets/ smok­ing or parties. Call 412‑882‑7568 or email tsciulli123@ g­mail.com 1,2,3,4,5,6 bedroom houses in South Oak­land. Available Au­gust 1st or May 1st. Newly remodeled. Bouquet, Meyran, At­wood, Semple St. Call 412‑287‑5712 for more information. 2 and 3 bedroom lo­cated on Meyran. Newly renovated, air‑conditioning,

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Employment • CHILDCARE • FOOD SERVICES • UNIVERSITY • INTERNSHIPS • RESEARCH • VOLUNTEERING • OTHER

dish­washer, and wash­er/dryer. Avail‑ able Summer 2019. 412‑915‑0856 or email klucca@veri‑ zon.net. 2 Bedroom Apart­ ment. Rent: $1690 + electric. Avail‑ able August 1, 2019 on Louisa St. 412‑441‑1211. info@­ forbesmanagement.­ net. www.forbesman­ agement.net. 2BR houses and apart­ ments available in August. Unfur­nished, no pets. At­wood/S. Bouquet. Call 412‑492‑8173 3408 Parkview Ave. Studios, 1‑2‑3 BRS Available June &Aug. Pet Friendly & Park­ ing. CALL NOW! 412‑455‑5600 3436 Ward. Spacious 2‑Bedroom, 1 bath, equipped kitchen, $1,195 + electric, Heat included. 412‑271‑5550 3444 Ward St. ‑ Stu­ dio and 1bedroom apartments. Free heating, free park­ing. Available May & August 2019 move‑in. Call 412‑361‑2695

Classifieds

For sale

• AUTO • BIKES • BOOKS • MERCHANDISE • FURNITURE • REAL ESTATE • PETS

services

• EDUCATIONAL • TRAVEL • HEALTH • PARKING • INSURANCE

Heat included;­ parking. Charles Greve Company Real Estate 412‑261‑4620. Brand new remod‑ eled spacious duplex. 5BR, 2BA, second and third floors. Laundry room in apartment. $3000 +utilities. Call 412‑871‑5657 M.J. Kelly Realty. Studio, 1, 2, 3 and 4 Bedroom Apart­ments, Duplexes and Houses. N. & S. Oakland from $750‑$2500. mjkellyrealty@gmail.­ com. 412‑271‑5550. www.mjkellyrealty.­ com Newly Updated 4‑bedroom, 2‑bath townhouse. Laun‑ dry & new bath in base­ment. $2000+ Utili­ties. Call 412‑292‑1860 Now Renting Fall 2019! Various Two BR units in South Oakland, Bates, Coltart, Edith, Halket Place, Ward Street; rent starting from $975‑$1410 Contact: John C.R. Kelly 412‑683‑7300

notices

• ADOPTION • EVENTS • LOST AND FOUND • STUDENT GROUPS • WANTED • OTHER

www.jcrkelly.com info@kellyrealtyinc.­ com Now Renting for Fall 2019 One Bedrooms located conveniently throughout South Oakland Rents Starting at: $740‑$825 Contact: John C.R. Kelly Office: 412‑683‑7300 Email: info@kellyre­ altyinc.com Website: www.­ jcrkelly.com Oakland near Magee Hospital. 1,2,3 BR available immedi­ ately. Long or short term lease, furnished or unfurnished. By the week, month or semester. Available for April or May also. Call 814‑403‑2798 or 412‑881‑1881.

Shadyside Shadyside: 1 and 2BR, great location, hardwood floors. Free heat. Immedi‑ ate occupancy. Call 412‑361‑2695

Rental Other Fall Rentals ‑ 1 bed­

R A T E S

Insertions

1-15 Words

16-30 Words

1X

2X

3X

4X

$6.30

$11.90

$17.30

$22.00

$7.50

$14.20

$20.00

$25.00

5X $27.00 $29.10

6X $30.20 $32.30

Add. + $5.00 + $5.40

(Each Additional Word: $0.10)

Deadline:

Two business days prior by 3pm | Email: advertising@pittnews.com | Phone: 412.648.7978

room apartments very close to campus, well maintained, 24 hour laundry, secured buildings. Rates start­ ing at $775 with some utilities in­cluded. Call us today at 412‑682‑7622 Studios, 1, 2, & 3 Bedroom apartments available August 2019 & sooner. Oak­land, Shadyside, Friend‑ ship, Squirrel Hill, Highland Park, Point Breeze. Photos & current availabil‑ ity online, check out www.forbesmanage­ ment.net, or call 412.441.1211

Employment Employment Other Busy executive indi­vidual seeking part‑time personal assis­tant. Must be person­able, friendly and have great communi­cation skills. Must have a good com­puter skill Hours are 20‑30Hrs Weekly. Salary is $25.50/hr. applicant apply to jobinquiries820@

g­mail.com OFFICE INTERN Shadyside Manage­ ment Company seeks person w/ min 2 yrs. college, for upcom­ing spring semester, to interview & pro­cess rental appli­cants, do internet post‑ ings & help staff our action‑central of­fice. Part time or full time OK starting in January; full time over the summer. $13/hour. Perfect job for sophomores & ju­niors, seniors plan­ning to enter grad school, returning grad students, and first‑year law stu­dents!

wood St. in Oakland. Competitive wages, flexible hours, full or part time. Email atwoodcommon­s@ hotmail.com

For Sale

fur­nished house, Air Conditioned for $1,200 plus utilities on North Avenue, Mellville. Need Secu­rity Deposit and Credit Check. Please call: 412‑315‑8024.

Real Estate

Services

August “Best Value” Few remaining, Fur­ nished 2‑bedroom apartments in South Oakland. Call/ text Tim TMK Properties 412‑491‑1330. Visit our website www.­ tmkrentals.com Available Now! 2‑bedroom fully

Educational The Phlebotomy Training Center www. justphlebotomy.org 2 evening classes weekly, 5 weeks + excellent Clinicals. Call 412‑521‑7334.

Mozart Management 412‑682‑7003 thane@mozartrents.­ com Personal, profes­sional masseuse needed. Long term position. 2X/week. Washington County location. Call 724‑223‑0939 or 724‑229‑8868 any time. Wanted Baristas and counterhelp‑ experi­ enced only. New restaurant on 352 At­

Apartments for rent. 2 and 3 bedroom apart‑ ments 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 August 2019 rental. Studio & 1 Bed­rooms.

February 18, 2019

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