The Pitt News
Q&A with Mayor Bill Peduto page 2
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | May 10, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 1
SCHOOL BOARD CANDIDATES DEBATE POLICY
RUN FOR YOUR LIFE
Henry Glitz News Editor
THE PITTSBURGH MARATHON full gallery online
Marathon runners near the front of the pack race past Dippy the Dinosaur on Forbes Avenue during the 2017 Pittsburgh Marathon. John Hamilton EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
PITT NAMES TWO NEW DEANS
Henry Glitz and Caroline Bourque
The Pitt News Staff Pitt is set to welcome two new deans and an entirely new school this fall. The University named a new dean of the Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences last week and an inaugural dean for the new School of Computing and Information Monday. Kathleen Blee is set to start as dean of the Dietrich School on August 15. She is currently the school’s associate dean and has been a professor of sociology at the University since 1996. Paul R. Cohen will become the first dean of the SCI — the first new school established at Pitt since 1995 — which will enroll its first students in the fall. Courses and programs in the SCI will be de-
signed around three main themes — connected life, health and medicine; synergistic computing in education; and computing at the extremes, according to a press release. Students already enrolled in existing courses will be able to join the new school or continuing taking their classes as planned and remain outside it. “[Cohen] is a visionary leader who will quickly drive our School of Computing and Information to the forefront of academic excellence,” Chancellor Patrick Gallagher said in a release. “He is also an expert collaborator and a leading authority on utilizing data, technology and information in new ways to solve some of the most challenging and complex issues facing society today.” Cohen has held positions at the University of Southern California, the University of Massachusetts and the University of Arizona, where he
founded the School of Information in 2008. He is the author of a book, published in 1995, “Empirical Methods for Artificial Intelligence,” and is the editor-in-chief of the International Journal of Intelligent Data Analysis. He also worked as a program manager for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. Aside from Cohen, most faculty for the new SCI will come from the School of Information Sciences and Department of Computer Science. Blee, the first of Pitt’s two new dean hires in May, said in a release she is “humbled and honored” by the appointment and emphasized the importance of the Dietrich School’s success to the University as a whole. “The continued excellence of the Dietrich See New Deans on page 3
“Kids can’t vote, but you can,” read the signs and literature passed out at the door to parents and community members filing in the seats in the Elsie H. Hillman Auditorium in the Hill District Monday night. The 50 attendees prepared to listen as candidates for Pittsburgh’s School Board made their pitches to voters in advance of the elections Tuesday, May 16. The forum, organized by community advocacy groups including the League of Women Voters and A+ Schools, drew candidates from districts around the city and touched on a variety of issues facing Pittsburgh’s public school system. In District Five, which covers most of South and Central Oakland as well as several other neighborhoods to the south, candidates Terry Kennedy and Ghadah Makoshi presented conflicting viewpoints on the future of public education in the area. Kennedy, the district’s incumbent representative, defended the work the Board had done during her tenure on controversial issues like student disciplining, charter schools and armed police in schools. “As far as facilitating better communication, I already do that,” Kennedy said in response to a question about how she planned to improve communications between school bureaucracy and the families of students at charter schools if re-elected. Makoshi, Kennedy’s challenger, proposed changes to school funding and smaller class sizes. She described herself as “absolutely against” the prospect of allowing public school police to carry guns in school buildings — a change the Pittsburgh Federation of Teachers has recently endorsed. “There is a lot of misinformation out there,” Kennedy said of the proposal. “I’m not See School Board on page 3