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The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | march 21, 2018 | Volume 108 | Issue 131
SNOW CONES
UNION SUPPORTERS DISCUSS INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY Samuel Ruppert For The Pitt News
Students eat free Rita’s Italian Ice Tuesday as snow falls on the first day of spring. Sarah Cutshall STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Friends remember student Chris Dayer
Janine Faust
Assistant News Editor Friends of Pitt student Christopher Dayer are remembering him as a kind person with a contagious smile after learning of his death. Dayer, 21, committed suicide Friday, according to the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s office. He jumped off the Panther Hollow Bridge early in the morning. He was studying chemistry and would have graduated this year. Amanda Nichols, Dayer’s girlfriend, shared a 10-photo post on Instagram in which she thanked him for their time together and for loving her. “I know you would’ve stayed for me and for everyone that cared about you and loved you if you could,” Nichols, a junior psychology major, wrote in her post. “I’ll miss you forever and I’ll never forget the time that we had together, I’ll never take knowing you for granted.”
Dayer was going to enter graduate school at Temple University next year, with the intention of studying pharmacy, Nichols said. He was also a member of the Phi Chi pre-medical society at Pitt. Nichols said in a Facebook message Tuesday that after Dayer told her he was depressed, she spent the past three months trying to “get him to go back out into the world that loved him so much, that he brought so much light into.” “When he told me he had started feeling better, I was so happy,” she said. “I told him that even with how hard the past few months had been, I never stopped being grateful to know him and love him and be on his team.” Nichols described Dayer as a friendly person who made efforts to get to know people and make sure they were comfortable. “He wasn’t afraid of being honest and he was
one of the kindest, most special people I’ve ever known,” Nichols wrote. “I feel lucky to have gotten to love him and know him as well as I did.” Dayer loved music and knew a lot about hiphop and other genres, cared about fashion, played the trumpet and enjoyed going to museums. Nichols noted that he taught himself how to juggle in 10 minutes and learned how to drive stick by reading wikiHow. Damaria Roberts, a junior studying business administration, marketing and management at Harrisburg Area Community College, said Dayer was one of her first friends. She and Nichols met each other in kindergarten and attended high school together. The two stayed connected on Snapchat when Dayer left for Pitt, and would meet when he came back to Harrisburg during school breaks. See Dayer on page 2
The current campaign to create a faculty union at Pitt focuses on a host of issues, including job security, benefits and wages. Union supporters also want to figure out who owns the PowerPoints they make. A group of about 15 gathered in David Lawrence Hall Tuesday afternoon to have a panel discussion on intellectual property rights for Pitt faculty members and how those rights tie into the formation of a union. The Pitt Faculty Organizing Committee hosted the panel. Organizers have focused on intellectual property in their campaign to create a union. According to their site, organizers are calling for a union contract with the University specifying what rights Pitt faculty has in regards to the material they create. Pitt policy on patents says the University can claim ownership and control of the intellectual property rights which result from activities of its faculty, staff and students. If the inventor or another institution believes the circumstances warrant another action, they can request a review. The University’s copyright policy maintains that authors affiliated with Pitt retain copyright ownership in any material which is a copyright work in the author’s field of expertise. But the University does retain a “non-exclusive, irrevocable, perpetual, royalty-free license” for course material a faculty member creates at the school. The panel brought four guests together to discuss the topic. The guests included Jacob Rooksby, Gunduz Caginalp, Lauren Collister and Robin Sowards. See Property on page 2
Maletestinic described Dayer as a generous person who “gave everything to everyone.” “I couldn’t tell you one person who’d say a bad thing about him and that’s an honest to God truth, not just because he’s my best friend,” Male-
testinic said. “That’s just the person he was.” Maletestinic said Dayer’s passing has created a new chapter in his life, but that Dayer would want his friends and family to move on. “We’re going to mourn, but Chris would want us to keep going,” he said. Kevin Zwick, a Pitt spokesperson, said the University community is saddened by Dayer’s death. “We extend our deepest sympathies to his family, friends and all who knew him. The University Counseling Center is available for students grieving after this tragic loss,” Zwick said. A funeral will be held Saturday, March 24, at 10 a.m. in the Pillars of Orthodoxy Church, which is located at 350 West Old York Rd. in Carlisle. Where to get help if you or someone you know is in crisis: Contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-8255 Contact the Pitt Student Counseling Center: (412) 648-7930 Contact Allegheny County’s Resolve Crisis Hotline: 1-888-7-YOU CAN Text for Crisis Support: TEXT “GO” TO 741741
you.” Sowards, an adjunct lecturer and researcher at Chatham’s English department, sided with these arguments, and mainly focused his discussion on what should be done once a union has been created. He discussed several different routes a union could take, including negotiating specific intellectual property policy language in a collective bargaining agreement or negotiating a joint faculty-administration committee to create, enforce and revise policy language. “Having a union is one of the only ways to get a seat at the table,” Sowards said. “Once you’re at the table, there are multiple things that you can do.” Collister, the University Library System scholarly communications librarian, was also a strong proponent of unionizing, but she argued that allowing the University to own some of the faculty’s intellectual property was better than handing over information to forprofit journals, something professors have to often resort to. “Scholars have to publish works in order to get positive views,” Collister said. “They have to sign a contract to sign them over to forprofit journals, for free.” Collister said these journals often do very little with the information given to them, but simply sell it back to universities. She said
unions should be created to negotiate changing promotion and tenure policies so that professors are in better circumstances to adhere to University policies regarding property rights. Collister believes that there should be greater support for open-access journals so that more people can access articles. “People who need it can’t get it because they aren’t affiliated with wealthy universities,” said Collister. “People can’t access it, people can’t read it, so the impact is minimal.” Irene Yelovich, a patent and trademark librarian at Carnegie Library, said she came to the panel because she was interested in intellectual property issues and also wanted to learn about the union organizing going on at Pitt. “I work with inventors and people who have questions about copyright,” Yelovich said. “So I try to stay up to date with the field.” Jeffrey Williams, a professor of literary and cultural studies at Carnegie Mellon University said he thinks Pitt and other universities are too focused on financial gain and “drifting towards mercantilism.” “I’ve been very invested in criticizing the drift towards the privatization of higher education,” Williams said. “My interest is more that every aspect of life is becoming privatized and why can’t something like intellectual property be public.”
Dayer, pg. 1 Roberts said Dayer was always putting other people first. “Chris was always the highlight of my day,” she said. “Every time I had a bad day and I had a class with Chris and he knew something was wrong, he would do his best to make me laugh.” Matej Vukovic also remembered Dayer as a positive person. He said he’s known Dayer for about 10 years — they became friends in middle school. “Every room he stepped into he brightened. He motivated me to do better,” Vukovic said over a Facebook message. “Without his friendship and support I wouldn’t be where I am. I will never forget you Chris Dayer.” Anthony Maletestinic, a junior studying management administration at Bloomberg University, has been best friends with Dayer since they were 13. They lived five minutes away from each other in Harrisburg — Maletestinic drove Dayer to school every morning in high school. “He’s my brother. It’s really tough to lose somebody like that,” Maletestinic said. “He’s one of those friends I’d always want to catch up with during breaks.”
Property, pg. 1 All the panelists supported the creation of a faculty union and an examination of intellectual property laws at Pitt, but each had different ideas about how to approach the issue. Rooksby, the associate dean of administration at Duquesne law school, said his stance was that faculty members should have more flexibility to choose if they own something or grant the University ownership instead. “The University should take a closer look at what rights specifically they think they should own,” Rooksby said. “It is naive to believe that the University is the only one to be trusted.” Caginalp, a professor in Pitt’s mathematics department, also argued against the University’s ability to claim ownership over individual intellectual property, pointing out that if a professor does work on their own time they don’t receive a raise for it. Though faculty can challenge Pitt’s ownership if the discovery was made without the support of the University, Caginalp believes that the only way to fix this is to unionize and negotiate with the University. “I do work on my own free time,” Caginalp said. “Instead of getting paid, the University tells you they are going to take it away from
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Christopher Dayer with his girlfriend Amanda Nichols. COURTESY OF AMANDA NICHOLS
March 21, 2018
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March 21, 2018
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Opinions
The Pitt News
from the editorial board
PA GOP’s impeachment efforts threaten democracy Ever since they redistricted in 2013 after winning the state legislature, Pennsylvania Republicans have played ball by their own set of rules — and now that those rules are being threatened, they’re going after the refs. The Commonwealth’s GOP suffered a serious blow to its continued hold on power last month when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled the boundaries of the 18 Congressional districts unconstitutional. The old map strongly favored Republican candidates, the court proclaimed — and the Supreme Court reaffirmed when the GOP appealed the decision. In a midterm election environment this fall that’s already speculated to lean heavily against President Donald Trump’s party and in favor of Democratic insurgents, the added disadvantage of losing structural district benefits has Pennsylvania Republicans understandably worried. But instead of redoubling efforts to woo voters to support the GOP in the new districts in November, the party has begun to pursue a much more worrisome strategy — getting back at the justices who ruled against them. A core group of 12 Republicans in the State House of Representatives Tuesday introduced legislation that would bring impeachment proceedings against four justices on the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania’s bench. The four justices in question, all Democrats, voted to end the GOP’s stranglehold on Pennsylvania’s Congressional seats. At first glance, it’s almost impossible to tell whether Republicans in the state House intend the impeachment effort to actually remove the justices from their
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seats, or whether it’s simply the party’s way of intimidating the judiciary by flexing its political strength. But either way, state House Minority Leader Frank Dermody, of the 33rd District, is right that it’s clearly based in “political vendetta.” “This is an absurd attack on common sense,” Dermody told the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review Tuesday. “It’s an attack on the independence of every judge in our state, one of the bedrock principles of our democracy.” Even if the move by Republicans in the state House is meant as nothing more than a politically charged gesture, Dermody is right that the legislative majority’s attempts to intimidate the justices who disagreed with it bears an uncomfortable resemblance to an autocratic system of government. Republican leaders in the state House need to condemn the proposal from the 12 extremists under their leadership or else risk getting lumped in with the authoritarian elements in their party. Otherwise, Pennsylvania’s judiciary runs the risk of becoming even more of a partisan football to punt back and forth than it is already. In Pennsylvania, justices on the Supreme Court are elected to their positions in statewide elections with 10-year terms in office. Because they’re elected by the entire state and not the constituents of a carefully drawn district, it seems fair to say the court’s five-totwo Democratic advantage more fairly represents Pennsylvanians’ political preferences than our Congressional delegation’s 12-to-six GOP advantage. And that seems to frighten our elected Republicans.
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Janine Faust | Assistant News Editor Salina Pressimone | Assistant News Editor Sarah Shearer | Assistant Opinions Editor Jordan Mondell | Assistant Sports Editor Issi Glatts | Assistant Visual Editor Christian Snyder | Multimedia Editor Rachel Glasser | Assistant Layout Editor Amanda Reed | Online Engagement Editor
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Editorial Policies Single copies of The Pitt News are free and available at newsstands around campus. Additional copies can be purchased with permission of the editor in chief for $.50 each. Opinions expressed herein are not necessarily those of the students, faculty or University administration. Opinions expressed in columns, cartoons and letters are not necessarily those of The Pitt News. Any letter in tended for publication must be addressed to the editor, be no more than 250 words and include the writer’s name, phone number and University affiliation, if any. Letters may be sent via e-mail to letters@pittnews.com. The Pitt News reserves the right to edit any and all letters. In the event of multiple replies to an issue, The Pitt News may print one letter that represents the majority of responses. Unsigned editorials are a majority opinion of the Editorial Board, listed to the left. The Pitt News is an independent, student-written and
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student-managed newspaper for the Oakland campus of the University of Pittsburgh. It is pub lished Monday through Friday during the regular school year and Wednesdays during the summer. Complaints concerning coverage by The Pitt News, after first being brought to the editors, may be referred to the Community Relations Com mittee, Pitt News Advisory Board, c/o student media adviser, 435 William Pitt Union, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15260. The editor in chief has the final authority on editorial matters and cannot be censored, according to state and federal law. The editor in chief is selected by the Pitt News Advisory Board, which includes University staff, fac ulty and students, as well as journalism professionals. The business and edito rial offices of The Pitt News are located at 434 William Pitt Union, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15260.
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Culture
STUDENT STAND-UPS TAKE THE MIC
Zach Donovan Staff Writer
The crowd erupted in laughter as Nektarios Kasamias — whose parents immigrated from Greece — regaled them with tales of white friends who wished they had “more ethnicity.” “[They’re like,] ‘I’m just plain old regular normal American,’” he said. “Normal American? Let’s not go throwing the word normal around here.” Along with fellow Pitt students Tyler Bobik and Evan Lewis, Kasamias took to the mic to perform stand-up comedy in front of an audience of about 15 people Wednesday night at Nordy’s Place in the William Pitt Union. The event was all three comics’ first times performing stand-up. Kasamias, a first-year urban studies major, opened the show by performing the set he wrote just two hours prior. Kasamias’ material provided an introduc-
maintain a relaxed presence on stage during his first comedy performance. “The difference with stand-up is you have to make yourself very personable, and kind of write yourself into a character,” Kasamias said. Bobik, a senior computer science major, took the approach of self-deprecation. Describing his formerly bearded self as looking like a “murder hobo,” Bobik entertained the crowd with a couple of humiliating stories. The culmination of these tales was a firsthand account of handling the call of nature while on a date at Point State Park — where a restroom was nowhere to be found. The next day, Bobik arrived at work just in time to First-year urban studies major Nektarios Kasamias jokes about his home- overhear a conversation between coworkers town of Youngstown, Ohio, at Wednesday’s stand-up comedy open mic. who had also been at the Point the previous Thomas Yang | VISUAL EDITOR day. “They were like, ‘Yeah, they had to turn tion to himself — poking fun at the difficulty “It was right below Siberia,” he said. “Sibepeople often have with pronouncing his last ria deserves better than this, let’s not compare the fountain off for some reason,’” he said. “‘They think there was a sewage leak by the name and mentioning that he found his it to Youngstown.” hometown of Youngstown, Ohio, on a list of Kasamias said his high school experience See Stand-Up on page 7 “Worst Places in the World to Live.” on the speech and debate team allowed him to
Halal: Is it meat you’re looking for? Shahum Ajmal Staff Writer When asked about my diet, I’ve stated the same phrase countless times. “Depending on my options, I’m either a vegetarian, pescatarian or meat eater,” I say. I am a 19-year-old Muslim, so when it comes to eating, the wheres and whys are a little more complicated than deciding between a sweet or savory dish. Dating back to my youth, my parents outlined basic Islamic diet restrictions — don’t eat meat outside of the house unless told otherwise. As I got older, I didn’t have to be told otherwise. I was simply more aware when eating out. Specifically laid out within Islam’s religious text, the Quran, there are dietary restrictions that Muslims are expected to follow. Food is divided up into two cat-
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egories, either acceptable — halal — or prohibited — haram. People often ask me, “What do you mean by halal?” Instead of breaking out into a lecture, I keep it short and simple by saying, “Halal just means blessed meat.” Before I came to college, I ate meat primarily in my house that my dad would buy from halal butchers. Some people are still alarmed when I tell them I’ve never tried Chick-fil-A, but how could I miss something I’ve never tried? This past week I ignored my healthy diet and ate out at three of my favorite halal restaurants in Pittsburgh — Salem’s Market & Grill, Forbes Gyro and Beta Bites. Salem’s Market & Grill My first stop was Salem’s — located on Penn Avenue in the Strip District. I grew up eating at Salem’s after Jumuah,
or Friday prayer. After prayer at my local mosque, my dad would take me and my younger brother to Salem’s original location — a small grocery store on Atwood Street, where I live now. Salem’s current location is crowded with tables. Customers can either order from the hot bar or choose something from the grill section of the menu. Options from the grill are particularly appealing — out of all the halal restaurants I’ve gone to, Salem’s is the best in making up for all of the cheeseburgers I have missed out on. I went with the restaurant’s traditional two-meat and one-veggie dish from its ready-made food, which added up to $8.50. Overall, it’s a nice getaway from Oakland and great for a monthly nostalgic group outing. Salem’s opens at 11 a.m. and closes at
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8 p.m. Monday to Thursday. On Friday, it closes at 1 p.m. for Friday prayer and reopens from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. On Saturday it is open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday from 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. Forbes Gyro Next on my list was Forbes Gyro — located on Forbes Avenue — which serves up great portions at ideal prices. I went through the numerous pickup specials before settling on “pick up special six” — a ranchero chicken hoagie, french fries and a ginger ale — all for $8.49. Forbes Gyro offers a relaxed environment great for catching up with friends. With limited seating, the small shop adds to the feeling of enjoying a home-cooked meal. On the right side of the restaurant, there is a running counter with black leather high chairs, perfect for a quick bite in between classes or a place to sit See Halal on page 7
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Stand-Up, pg. 6
Halal, pg. 6
pump house.’” Lewis viewed this performance as an opportunity to get started in the stand-up comedy game. After hearing about the open mic, the first-year political science and communication major prepared his routine for almost a month. Lewis’ act covered a multitude of topics, from his experiences on the Grindr dating app to his “racist” dog. “He actually bit a friend of mine that came over for break,” he said. “The only Asian guy who stayed with us — everybody else was white — and my dog decided to single him out.” Lewis, who closed out the show with his set, said that although he had been writing his material prior to the open mic, the performance came naturally once he got on stage. “I was pretty inspired. When I went up there, I didn’t have any notes or anything like that,” Lewis said, “I just touched on the topics that I wrote about and put a few jokes in there, and it just sort of happened.” Sophomore psychology major James Kim hosted and organized the event, hoping to encourage new and inexperienced comics at Pitt to try out their material. Kim said he has tried out a few open mics back home in New York City as well as in Pittsburgh but wanted to create a less nerve-wracking space where college students specifically could perform. “Open mics are for testing out material,” Kim said. “It’s for rough drafts, it’s for trying things out. Ninety percent of what I write is trash, but I have to test it out.” Kim said he recalled one particular open mic in New York, during which a 29-year-old comic, who had been performing for just a few months, told Kim that he first knew he wanted to do stand-up when he was 19. “He waited 10 years, just having this dream inside of him,” Kim said. “Imagine psyching yourself out for 10 years. That’s horrible.” At most open mics, Kim said the audience will quickly catch on to the inexperienced performers, deserting the venue and leaving behind a group of comics who are free to bounce any material off each other. He organized the stand-up open mic at Pitt in the hopes that it will foster a better community among students who are just venturing into the realm of comedy. “If I could just get people who want to do stand-up to just try it, that would be good enough for me,” Kim said.
while waiting for a to-go order. The sincere service makes you feel valued, as employees come up to you and personally hand you your order. The menu offers foods including cold appetizers, pizza and sandwiches. I’ve heard that what sets Forbes Gyro apart is its milkshakes and ice cream items, which I have yet to try — I plan to when it starts to actually feel like spring. Forbes Gyro opens at 10:30 a.m. every day. It closes at 11:30 p.m. Sunday to Thursday and 2:30 a.m. Friday and Saturday. Beta Bites My last stop was Beta Bites, tucked away on South Bouquet Street. The appeal for me at Beta Bites is mainly the proximity between it and my apartment. I first became familiar with the restaurant when it started selling combo boxes of food at my hometown mosque after Jumuah. The interior is simple, with a few tables around the edges of the room, coolers stocked with various drinks and a few frames of Pittsburgh hotspots on the walls, such as Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens. The menu is divided up into categories including salads, pizzas, paninis and many others. After glancing over the menu, I went with a dish with meat I had yet to try this week — a steak sub, french fries and a Brisk lemonade — costing $12.71. It was a well-prepared and satisfying meal and a solid end to my halal food ventures. Beta Bites opens at 11 a.m. every day. It closes at 11 p.m. Monday to Wednesday, 2 a.m. Thursday, 3 a.m. Friday and Saturday and 9 p.m. Sunday. I stay away from making Islam complicated by trying to find loopholes around eating meat that may not be halal. Looking into my social scene amongst Muslims, I only know a few individuals who strictly stick to the halal and haram dietary restriction. I am grateful that my parents laid out the concept of eating halal early on, so my diet isn’t seen as a sacrifice. To be honest, after last week, I need to stay away from all kinds of meat, be it halal or not — and go on a weeklong juice cleanse at Salud Juicery.
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March 22, 2018
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Sports
Panthers put on a show for pro scouts
Mackenzie Rodrigues News Editor The newest Panther football players are just getting used to life in Oakland at spring practices. The draft-eligible former players, however, had a chance Wednesday morning to impress NFL scouts and potentially find their new homes. Representatives for all 32 NFL teams gathered in the UPMC Rooney Sports Complex to witness 11 draft-eligible Panthers demonstrate their skills. The players participated in various tests, and while not every athlete took part in each one, they all had the chance to stand out. James Conner — a former Pitt star running back and current Pittsburgh Steelers Redshirt junior offensive lineman Brian O’Neill (70) practices drills with teamrunning back — joined the crowd of onmate Jaylen Twyman (55). Mackenzie Rodrigues | CONTRIBUTING EDITOR lookers along with Steelers linebacker Ryan Shazier. pro timing day including: quarterback Max ceivers Quadree Henderson and Jester Weah, The Panthers sent 11 players to this year’s Browne, tight end Matt Flanagan, wide re- offensive linemen Brandon Hodges, Jaryd
Jones-Smith, Alex Officer and Brian O’Neill, defensive backs Avonte Maddox and Jordan Whitehead and punter Ryan Winslow. The day began with height and weight measurements for the standout players. After these evaluations, the athletes practiced bench pressing before the opening test, in which they were to bench 225 pounds as many times as they could. Junior defensive back Jordan Whitehead topped the list with 24 reps, and redshirt senior tight end Matt Flanagan was close behind with 23 reps. “You never know what’s gonna happen,” Whitehead said. “I kind of just keep working every day, and the results will pay off.” Whitehead ran into problems early during the 2017 season when he was suspended for three games — and this isn’t something that’s gotten past NFL scouts. “They definitely did bring [the suspension] See Pro Day on page 9
column
NEW MLB RULES MAY GO TOO FAR
Max Sirianni Staff Writer
We’ve all been at a baseball game that just never seems to end. There are nonstop pitching changes and tedious at-bats. By the seventh-inning stretch, everyone likely wants to go home. Major League Baseball has taken notice, and the game times have slowly increased over the last two years after dropping below three hours a game in 2015 when rules were first introduced to speed up the pace of play. Most of these new rules won’t provide drastic changes to the speed of the game, but they’ll help eliminate some of the downtime that makes fans lose interest. One rule, however, threatens to take away one of baseball’s hallmark traits — late-inning drama. The first new rule regulates mound visits — when a player or coach walks out to the
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Elise Lavallee | CONTRIBUTING EDITOR mound to talk to a pitcher. Teams will only be allowed six of them per nine innings, and they will receive an additional one for every extra inning played.
er to throw his last warm-up pitch, which he must throw in the next five seconds. At the 20-second mark, the leadoff batter will be announced, and the pitcher must begin his windup for the first pitch of the inning within five seconds of the clock hitting zero. These may seem like small changes, but they will go a long way in keeping the fans focused and the pace of the game moving along. Nothing kills the momentum of a good inning like a mound visit or a slow pitcher. These rules will hopefully alleviate some of that downtime and boredom, even if downtime is what makes up the majority of time in a ball game. Perhaps the most controversial of these new rules is the decision to begin extra inAnother modification aims to better ennings with a man on second base to help force the time between innings. When there bring the game to a close sooner. Although are 25 seconds left in the inning break, the umpire will signal that it is time for the pitchSee Sirianni on page 9
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Pro Day, pg. 8 up and I tell them what happened. I handled it like I was supposed to, like a man,” Whitehead said. “They understand, I learned from it and I won’t make that mistake again.” From the weight room, the players, scouts, teammates and media moved to the indoor facility. Players took part in the vertical jump, broad jump, 40-yard dash, proshuttle drill, three-cone drill and 60-yard shuttle. Panthers head coach Pat Narduzzi took the day to reflect on his time with the players that have declared to the draft. “You get old when you watch these guys come in as freshmen, and you have a part in recruiting them,” Narduzzi said. “It’s really their last time wearing Pitt gear, that’s why we dress them nice. It’s kind of their going away present ... It’s sad, but you’re happy for them in the future.” Pitt junior wide receiver Quadree Henderson decided to enter the draft a year early, foregoing his senior season. He said he made the decision for the opportunity to play at a higher caliber. “I feel like this is the best opportunity
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for me. I’ve been dreaming of this moment since I was 5 years old,” Henderson said. “It’s here on the table — run that risk of getting hurt next year, have a season-ending injury, not get drafted at all and my dreams are crushed.” Redshirt junior offensive lineman Brian O’Neill announced his plans to enter the draft in December. At the time, he said it was the best decision for him to achieve his goals, and even months into intensive training, he still doesn’t see football as a job. “If it feels this way for the rest of my life, I don’t think that I’ll ever work as long as I’m playing,” O’Neill said. “This is fun. This is cool. I get to play football. It’s less of a job than college — I don’t have to go to night class for three and a half hours tonight.” For redshirt senior punter Ryan Winslow, the NFL situation is a bit different. Generally, teams have very limited space for the type of specialist player he is. He said this is why he has to understand each team’s specific punter circumstance. “You kind of have to match up the situation,” Winslow said. “Basically, you just want to go to an organization where you have the best chance to compete and earn a job.”
Sirianni, pg. 8 the MLB has not officially adopted this new rule yet, it has decided to test it out in the minor leagues, as is often the case with new rule proposals. The MLB had hoped to use it in spring training this season, but the MLB Players Association rejected the proposal. One of the major reasons for this change was to lessen the likelihood of injury to pitchers, along with speeding the game up for the enjoyment of the fans. And while beginning with a runner on second does add more intrigue to the game because the possibility of a run becomes much greater, extra innings are what separate baseball from other major American sports. Many fans enjoy staying at the ballpark to watch two teams battle it out well past regulation, as in the 19-inning game last September between the Red Sox and Blue Jays at Fenway Park, which concluded with a Hanley Ramirez walk-off single. Moments like that, and the long innings that build them, are part of the experience for baseball fans. Last year’s World Series featured two
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thrilling extra-inning games that went on for upward of four and five hours. Yet, it only seemed to add to excitement, not detract. “We just watched a World Series game that lasted over five hours and my wife hung with me the whole night. I would probably say I’m a traditionalist and let them play,” Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno said at the Hall of Fame news conference. These moments only exist in baseball, and the MLB would be sacrificing that if it eventually adopt the proposed change in extra innings. It also seems fairly obvious that most teams will simply sacrifice the runner to third before using their last two outs to try to get him home, so this might not even shorten games that much, since scoring will become much easier for both teams. It would be in the best interest of the MLB to leave extra innings untouched. The change wouldn’t make much of a time difference anyway, as extra-inning games are rare. The small changes intended to speed up the game are fine, but it would be better to keep the larger rule change to extra innings in the minors. Bringing bigger changes could lead to the MLB striking out with fans who love the game exactly the way it is.
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• AUTO • BIKES • BOOKS • MERCHANDISE • FURNITURE • REAL ESTATE • PETS
South Oakland
South Oakland
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.
M.J. Kelly Realty. Studio, 1, 2, 3 and 4 Bedroom Apartments, Duplexes and Houses. N. & S. Oakland from $750-$2500.
311 Semple St., two blocks from Forbes Ave. 2BR, living room, updated kitchen with dishwasher and disposal, front porch, basement, back patio, carpeted. Must see - clean! $1320/mo plus utilities. Call 412-389-3636. 3BR apartment, central air, washer/dryer, water included in rent, available 8/1/18. $1,340/mo. Call 412-398-6119. 3BR house on Niagara Street $1000/mo +all utilities. Recently renovated with new windows, wiring, cable installed in all rooms. No pets. On Pitt shuttle route. Near Pittsburgh Playhouse. Call 412-303-4716.
pittnews.com
Apartment/house for rent. Available immediately. Newly remodeled 2, 3 or 7 BR, utilities included, laundry available. 37 Welsford St. 412-337-5736 or email hfarah1964@ yahoo.com
com. 412-271-5550. www.mjkellyrealty.
STUDENT HOUS-
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
Insertions
1X
2X
3X
4X
5X
6X
Add.
1-15 Words
$6.30
$11.90
$17.30
$22.00
$27.00
$30.20
+ $5.00
16-30 Words
$7.50
$14.20
$20.00
$25.00
$29.10
$32.30
+ $5.40
(Each Additional Word: $0.10)
Deadline:
Two business days prior by 3pm | Email: advertising@pittnews.com | Phone: 412.648.7978
Rental Other 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 houses available. August 2018. South Oakland: Bouquet St, Lawn St, Ward St. North Oakland: Bigelow, & Craig St. Call 412-287-5712.
Employment Employment Other
ING. Updated 4, 5 &
Babysitter needed for
6 Bedroom Houses w/
Spring semester part
multiple baths. Dish-
time and full time
washer, laundry, some
for Summer. Close
w/ air conditioning
to campus. Contact
and/or parking.
tbeltz@gmail.com
August availability. 412-445-6117.
Apartments for rent. 2, 3, and 4 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
• ADOPTION • EVENTS • LOST AND FOUND • STUDENT GROUPS • WANTED • OTHER
mjkellyrealty@gmail.
com 2BR houses available in August. Unfurnished, no pets. $950+ gas and electric. Call 412-492-8173
notices
services
• EDUCATIONAL • TRAVEL • HEALTH • PARKING • INSURANCE
Join KEYS Service Corps, AmeriCorps.
Studio & 1 Bedrooms Available Fall 2018. Heat included. 412-261-4620.
Mentor, tutor, and inspire Pittsburgh area youth. Summer and fall positions with bi-weekly stipend and
Ward & S. Bouquet Streets - Studio, 1, 2 & 3BR apartments. Free parking. Move in May 1 or Aug. 1, 2018. Call 412-361-2695
Southside SOUTHSIDE FLATS 1, 2,and 3 BR houses and apartments, some with AC. Call Mike 412-708-1695.
education award. Full and part-time. Possible internship credit. Call 412-350-2739. www.keysservicecorps.org
Seasonal Marketing Assistant Shadyside property management firm established in 1960 needs two Seasonal Marketing Assistants to work with Excel,
March 22, 2018
10
Word and the internet from approximately NOW to August; four days/week from 9am-6pm. Saturday and/or Sunday hours a must; some flexibility in days and hours will be considered; most hours will be solitary on the computer with no phone work; 40 words per minute and strong computer skills required; no experience needed & we will train you at our Shadyside office;
The Pitt News SuDoku 3/22/18 courtesy of dailysudoku.com
free parking. $13/hour plus generous season end bonus. Mozart Management 412-682-7003. thane@mozartrents. com
Employment Other TAKING APPLICATIONS FOR SUMMER, Ice company close to campus. Some weekend work available. Production/driving/ maintenance positions available. Good pay, part-time/full time. Contact Mastro Ice Company 412-681-4423. mastroice@aol.com
Great summer job!!! WAITER/WAITRESS, DISHWASHER/COOK: 20hr/wk, great working environment. Cafe Sam, 5242 Baum Blvd. Apply Monday-Friday 2 p.m. - 4 p.m.
pittnews.com
March 22, 2018
11
pittnews.com
March 22, 2018
12