Oct. 27, 2014

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Vol. 105 Issue 57

@thepittnews PULL!

Pittnews.com

Monday, October 26, 2014

The Talbert Report

Against satirists and their ilk

page 6

MCT Campus

Jeff Ahearn | Assistant Visual Editor

Give it away

Pitt fumbles, never recovers, loses to GT

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Dorothy Hayes, chemistry and finance, and Maddie Loewenguth, political science, participated in “Oxford in October,” which raised more than $1,100 for Children’s Miracle Network. Zach Schaffer | Senior Staff Photographer

Pitt gives up lead over FSU

App created for assault victims Kathleen Fennell Staff Writer Connecting to a domestic violence hotline is the single greatest factor in reducing domestic violence injuries, reassaults and homicides.

The Women’s Center and Shelter (WC&S) of Greater Pittsburgh, founded in 1974, had these facts in mind when it created RUSafe, a smartphone app that helps users identify potentially dangerous situations and contact a domestic violence hotline in their area.

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The Pittsburgh app debuted in the Apple and Android app stores in local areas in November 2013 and will be available nationwide Nov. 1. Users in immediate peril can

App

Volleyball

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Heather Tennant | Staff Photographer


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October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com

NEWS

Tears, crowns and campaigns: Homecoming king & queen named Gilmore, a senior finance major, said winning the crown was the “icing on the cake” for his homecoming season. “I didn’t really expect to win at all. The goal was just to make the court,” Gilmore said. Voting for candidates, held on my.pitt. edu, began and ended Friday. Zammerilla and Gilmore were crowned during Saturday’s homecoming game against Georgia Tech. Gilmore said he ran so he could meet new people on campus and to stay involved during his senior year. While running for homecoming king, Gilmore said the process was a lot of fun and wasn’t too serious. “I also want to say it was stressful, too, because it was a really big time commitment, if someone was thinking of making a run at

Danielle Fox Assistant News Editor Pitt senior Megan Zammerilla attended her first Pitt football game before she could even crawl. This weekend, more than 20 years later, Zammerilla and fellow senior Feargal Gilmore stepped onto the grass at Heinz Field to claim their titles of Homecoming king and queen. Zammerilla, a senior exercise science major, Pitt cheerleader and member of the Pathfinders, said she looked to the sideline at her team after her crowning and immediately began crying with them. “I cried because they cried, and my family came, and it was just a great feeling that there were so many people there supporting me. I’m so thankful and just glad,” Zammerilla said.

Zammerilla and Gilmore were named king and queen. Zheru Liu | Multimedia Editor

Homecoming

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October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com

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4 FROM PAGE 1

APP

call 911 through the app to receive emergency assistance. To receive help, users answer a series of questions. The app uses the answers to calculate a response and then enables them to reach out to their local domestic violence hotline for assistance if they are at risk. The app asks users questions including “Does your partner ever put his hands around your neck in anger to scare you?” and “Does your partner abuse alcohol or drugs?” to assess danger. WC&S President and CEO Shirl Regan said the shelter has used the questionnaire, developed by Jacquelyn Campbell of Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, for more than 10 years. RUSafe’s questions are targeted toward victims of domestic violence or sexual abuse and aim to provide them with ways to best handle their possible situations. “When the Pittsburgh police started to use this modified questionnaire as part of the national lethality assessment program,

October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com Women’s Center saw the greater potential to reach individuals that never come in contact with a domestic violence program or the police,” Regan said in an email. The shelter partnered with Newton Consulting, a technology firm in Claysville, Pa., to create RUSafe. To develop the app, WC&S conducted focus groups with domestic violence survivors and used its findings to create a pilot application in Pittsburgh. Now, the app is going national. Regan said she hopes that RUSafe will be a tool for the community at large along with hospitals, schools and other organizations. “The app is meant to reach victims and individuals who are concerned about someone they know and is also meant to help raise awareness around the issue of domestic violence,” Regan said in an email. William Gay, a cornerback for the Pittsburgh Steelers, is the national spokesperson for RUSafe. He often appears in RUSafe public service announcements and educational flyers to promote the app. Gay’s promotion of the app, in which he shares his mother’s experience with domestic abuse, helps to reveal the perva-

siveness of the issue, according to Frayda Cohen, a women’s studies senior lecturer. “I think in some way it helps to open people’s eyes that this could be an everyday experience. It doesn’t have to be something so extreme or dramatic or something that happens to someone else. I think they’ve worked to personalize it a little bit,” Cohen said. Eleanora Kaloyeropoulou, president of Pitt’s Campus Women’s Organization (CWO), said creating awareness about domestic violence helps reassure victims that reaching out for help is the right thing to do. One of CWO’s primary causes is to be a resource for victims of sexual violence and to prevent it in the future. “There’s a lot of stigma associated with domestic violence,” Kaloyeropoulou, a junior studying Africana studies and history, said. “A lot of the time, people think it’s their fault, but if you have [support] coming from all avenues — from the app, from the hotline, from your favorite Steelers player — telling you that it’s not your fault and that you’re not alone, that is really motivating and reassuring for a person.”


October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com FROM PAGE 2

HOMECOMING it,” Gilmore said. “It’s kind of crazy that it’s over. It was like the longest three weeks of my life.” However, Gilmore said the hard work is worth it as long as you make it on the court. “You get to go to the alumni tailgate and meet the chancellor. It was all just really fun,” Gilmore said. Zammerilla credited her campaign suc-

THE PITT NEWS Natalie Daher Editor-in-Chief editor@pittnews.com

Cristina Holtzer, News Editor news@pittnews.com

Nick Voutsinos, Opinions Editor letters@pittnews.com

Shawn Cooke, A&E Editor

aande@pittnews.com Chris Puzia, Sports Editor sports@pittnews.com

Theo Schwarz, Visual Editor photos@pittnews.com

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Stephen Caruso, Layout Editor tpnlayout@gmail.com

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cess to her friends and her teammates. allowed me to have a little more fun with it, “They were flysince I wasn’t worering the day of the rying about what I voting. They were should be tweeting speaking out to their or posting all the friends and clubs time,” Zammerilla they are in,” Zamsaid. merilla said. Zammerilla and Zammerilla said Gilmore will repremembers of her Megan Zammerilla sent the University cheer team also ran at events such as the her homecoming social media pages. Cathedral Ball, and Zammerilla, who said “That really took pressure off of me and she already volunteers on campus, plans to

“I was a Pitt fan since I was born.”

E S T A B L I S HE D 1 9 1 0

Mahita Gajanan, Managing Editor manager@pittnews.com

Danielle Fox, Assistant News Editor Harrison Kaminsky, Assistant News Editor Matt Barnes, Assistant Opinions Editor Dan Sostek, Assistant Sports Editor Jeff Ahearn, Assistant Visual Editor Zheru Liu, Multimedia Editor Joelle Smith, Social Media Editor Becca Nagy, Assistant Copy Chief Emily Hower, Assistant Layout Editor

Copy Staff

Sarah Choflet Anjuli Das Kinley Gillette Johanna Helba Emily Maccia Sam McGinley

Bridget Montgomery Sarah Mejia Shivani Pandit Michelle Reagle Michael Wilson Megan Zagorski

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,- car toons 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 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.

increase her volunteer outreach on campus. “I absolutely love Pitt and people probably say that all the time, but even what I’m involved with on campus — I’m a Pathfinder and a cheerleader — show I love Pitt,” Zammerilla said. “I was a Pitt fan since I was born.” Gilmore said his life at Pitt will be the same, crown or no crown. “It’s a great a tradition, and that’s why I wanted to do it, but now it’s back to square one. Maybe I’ll say hi to a few more people,” Gilmore said. advertising@pittnews.com

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October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com

EDITORIAL

OPINIONS

The youth have more to bring to a city than gentrification A report published by the think tank “City Observatory,” on Oct. 19 illustrated the migration patterns of nature’s strangest animal — the young college graduate. According to the report, more and more college students are choosing to live in urban centers. What is compelling about the report is how it shows that, yes, college graduates are moving to cities at a high rate, but not to the predictable locations, like New York City or Washington, D.C. In fact, cities such as Denver, Cleveland, Buffalo, Nashville, Pittsburgh and other traditionally smaller cities, have seen a surge in their population of residents who are between 25 to 34 years old in recent years. In Pittsburgh, there’s been a 29 percent increase of college graduates aged 25 to 34 from 2000 to 2012. But, before you start listing all the negative effects — such as gentrification, which gets a bad rap — of this trend, don’t

ignore the macro benefits this migration of youth can bring to some of these former industrial cities. After a tough recession and the outsourcing of industrial jobs, these smaller cities actually have a lot to gain from the influx of young people. Pittsburgh, for example, was experiencing “reverse gentrification” for decades before the recent influx of college grads, according to a study by Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland economist Daniel Hartley. According to Hartley’s study, Pittsburgh experienced “the inward contraction of higher-income neighborhoods, as the areas bordering those neighborhoods become low-income.” Consequently, Pittsburgh experienced “large population losses, declines in income in mid-tier neighborhoods, and little change in median home prices,” from the ‘70s until the early 2000s.

Now Pittsburgh is experiencing the opposite phenomenon, and we can see it in neighborhoods such as Lawrenceville and East Liberty. But is the gentrification happening now really as bad as the reverse gentrification that was happening before? Not on a macro scale, it seems. As the number of younger people in Pittsburgh has increased, so too has the age of the former workforce. Baby boomers, of whom used to be the bulk of America’s working population, are reaching the age of retirement. Consequently, they are moving out of the city along with the jobs and skills they brought to the table. Cities like Pittsburgh can use young talent to fill this void, and increase the amount of skilled workers available to companies that want business within the city, thus, attracting more investment. Furthermore, according to Enrico Moretti, an economist at the University

of California, Berkeley, and author of “The New Geography of Jobs,” young college graduates bring more than just jobs pertaining to their field. In fact, for every college graduate who moves into the city, additional workers follow as demand grows for waiters and waitresses, carpenters, doctors and teachers. All these workers are necessary to fulfill the needs of the growing youth population — double that if they settle down there. “It’s a type of growth that feeds on itself — the more young workers you have, the more companies are interested in locating their operations in that area, and the more young people are going to move there,” Moretti said. Of course, we cannot ignore the other economic realities that come with a higher number of college graduates moving to the city — but maybe they’re just not as bad as one may originally think.

THE TALBERT REPORT

Against satire: Just get to the point already, dude Eli Talbert Columnist

The recent controversy over my last column titled “Why Condemning ISIS is Offensive,” which you can read on The Pitt News website, has caused a massive paradigm shift for me. The article, which was satirical, prompted substantial outrage by those who believed I thought that asking Muslims to condemn ISIS was the equivalent of the atrocities ISIS has committed. Before that column ran, I thought that satire was a useful tool for promoting discussion in an entertaining way. But I now realize that satire is actually a horrible invention used to deceive the masses — particularly Reddit users. Satire is clearly a dangerous tool of darkness and should be banned or, at the very

least, clearly marked. Why, you ask? For one, it’s dishonest. Reflecting on my time as a satirist, I realize that it was absolutely essential for my readers to clearly know my actual thoughts on ISIS, Penn State football, climate change and a host of other important topics. What if I hypothetically run for public office? How could people take me seriously? It would be a great shame if they believed I thought condemning ISIS was the height of injustice, that football should be a priority over everything and that climate change is simply a myth.

I realize now that Eli Talbert’s words and opinions are not those of a random college student, but those of a possible future politician, and I should be more responsible. The evil of running an ad that falsely accuses your opponent of unjustly freeing a murderer — as Mark Begich, a sitting U.S. senator, recently did about his challenger, Dan Sullivan — is nothing compared to the blatant deceptiveness of satire. In addition, I have also come to consider the emotional damage I may have caused my readers. I am sure some of them spent whole hours foaming at the mouth at my

“...now I realize that satire is actually a horrible invention used to deceive the masses particularly Reddit users.”

stupidity and lack of logic. I am truly sorry for the countless hours they lost being outraged at my column, when they could have been outraged at something else. But mostly, I apologize for the embarrassment some experienced when they realized that my piece was indeed satirical. I understand the deep, lasting emotional trauma not getting a joke can cause. Therefore, I will dedicate myself to stopping such shaming in the future. After all, even if no physical harm was done, as some on Reddit would say, “there are no reals, just feels.” I now know that my type of satire has the insidious effect of causing people to question the author’s motive. It is because of villains like me that people will actually have to critically think about a piece, rather than to just read the headline. They

Talbert

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October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com

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Letter to the Editor Dear Editor, While I think the editorial on Gamergate makes some very valuable points, I think the editorial ignores more important and critical issues within the movement. As a girl gamer myself (I play mostly Dota 2), I experience sexism on a nearly daily basis. Thus, I felt the need to comment and hopefully give some more insight on the issue. First, the article states that the Gamergate problem is mainly due to gamers FROM PAGE 6

TALBERT will have to ask themselves bothersome questions, such as if the facts the author uses actually line up with his argument or what the agenda of the author is. I truly regret that I have infringed on my reader’s all-American right to not think. Sadly, the harm satire causes doesn’t stop at the readers. While I have not received any complaints so far, I understand

not accepting criticism, which I have a hard time believing. Criticizing games is a relatively common thing to do – if the story sucks or the characters aren’t believable, that’s usually commented upon, the same way that movies are criticized for those things. Second, the article states that games aren’t accommodating to women – which I think is true, but I think it’s a secondary issue that we can lump with the first criticism. That is to say, I think both of these

are due to something deeper, mainly, that men don’t view women as people when playing these games. When I have issues with guys in the games I play, it’s because they literally don’t know how to talk to women without being demeaning. They’ll call me “honey” or “sweetie” (and much worse things if they feel like it) because I’m not the same as them. Anita Sarkeesian has a very good video on women being consistently treated as objects within games, and I think that’s a reflection of

this. Women aren’t people when it comes to video games – they’re an “other” that just happens to be there, and so, don’t get treated as they should. To solve the Gamergate problem, I think we need to say yes, games should be more accommodating, but also, players to need to see us [women] as other players, not some foreign species. Taryn Hass Senior, Dietrich School of Arts & Sciences

that those who are satirized also often experience emotional trauma. It might be their arguments that are rigorously deconstructed and made fun of, and not them directly, but I know it still hurts. Satire can even damage legitimate journalists. How could anyone take Ann Coulter’s column about why soccer is unAmerican seriously if there were a bunch of satirists running around? The answer is they couldn’t — one simply would not be able to differentiate between what was real and what was fake.

If more people wrote plausible satire, discussion would be seriously devalued as people would assume that radical views — such as the one expressed on the blog “Radical Wind,” claiming that all intercourse is rape — are satirical. Where would we be without such views? All these reasons significantly outweigh any trite explanation that satire serves as an important function as a fun way to address issues. It might be an approach that has been used since the ancient Greeks, but in modern times, satire is

too dangerous. The strain of typing words into Google to get more information and form one’s own opinion is just too much for most — people need to do as little reading as possible when trying to understand a different point of view. Therefore, to prevent the masses from being fooled into believing a false opinion, the scourge of satire must be eliminated. I hope you join me on this journey and read my next column which will not be satirical. Once again, I am deeply sorry. Email Eli at ejt26@pitt.edu

T P N Today’s difficulty level: Very Hard S U D Puzzles by Dailysodoku.com O K U


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FOOTBALL

Sidebar: Conner injury tests RB depth

October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com

SPORTS

VOLLEYBALL

Pitt cannot close out No. 4 FSU in five-set loss Caitlin Hinsey Staff Writer

Two sets into the Spike and Slam Madness on Friday night, momentum was on Pitt’s side. But the Panthers slowly began to lose control of the match and walked away with a 3-2 heartbreaking Jasper Wilson loss to No. 4 Florida State. Senior Staff Writer The Fitzgerald Field House shook with close to 2,000 fans in attendance When James Conner lay on the Heinz for the homecoming double event that Field turf Saturday, grasping at his featured volleyball and a preview of right knee while trainers circled both basketball programs. around him, a hush fell over the crowd. The Panthers (18-3, 6-2 ACC) saw Already stupefied by the baffling four players reach double-digit kills. start to the Pitt football game against Senior opposite Kate Yeazel led the Georgia Tech, fans had to cringe as a team with 15. new nightmare scenario played out in Yeazel said having a large audience front of them with the first quarter was exciting for the team. nowhere close to over, courtesy of a “They start chanting, and it really tackle by GT’s Isaiah Johnson. gets you pumped up,” she said. Coming into Saturday, Conner led The Seminoles defeated the Panthers the ACC in rushing yards and touch- 26-24, 25-18, 17-25, 19-25 and 11-15. downs. If the apparent injury was seFlorida State rious enough to sideline him for an Pitt outplayed FSU in the first two extended period of time, what would sets but lost its rhythm as the match the offense, especially on the ground, progressed. The third set showed Pitt’s do without him for the crucial, final struggles as the Seminoles (20-0, 9-0 stretch of conference play? ACC) extended their lead to win that “For sure, you know. [I] felt some and the following fourth set. pain. You never know what it is,” ConFSU came out aggressively in set five ner said when asked if the experience and took a 6-4 lead before rolling to a scared him. set and match victory. As it turned out, such contingency “I thought we competed well,” head planning was unnecessary. While Con- coach Dan Fisher said. “I didn’t get a ner “was worried for a second” about sense that we were nervous or had any the extent of his injury — everyone fear.” else was for a bit longer — he returned Following the match, Pitt basketball to the game a quarter later seemingly showed the fans what to expect this unhindered by any effects of the ear- upcoming season. lier sequence. His first play a one-yard Men’s basketball coach Jamie Dixon touchdown. He’d pick up 37 yards and and women’s basketball coach Suzie a couple more scores during the rest McConnell-Serio appeared first dressed of the game, which culminated in a as “Back to the Future” characters bebrutal 56-28 loss. fore player introductions. While most players opted to dance their way out, Football 9 Nigerian center Joseph Uchebo carried a woven basket out to “The Circle

Pitt gave up a two-set lead to Florida State Friday. Jeff Ahearn | Assistant Visual Editor

of Life.” Paying homage to “The Lion King,” Uchebo lifted a basketball out and the crowd erupted with cheers and laughs. The first competition was a shooting challenge between guards Brianna Kiesel and Fred Potvin and forward Monica Wignot. Wignot, a former volleyball player and recent addition to the basketball squad, won by one point

over Potvin, as Kiesel finished third. The dunk challenge gave fans to a chance to see Sheldon Jeter, Josh Newkirk and Michael Young show off three trick dunks in front of guest judges. Newkirk was only able to complete two dunks, while the champion Young had a perfect score on one of his three

Volleyball

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October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com

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FROM PAGE 8

FOOTBALL But what Pitt has at the position without Conner remains a point worth pondering should he suffer a worse fate in the future. After the season-opening demolition of Delaware two months ago, head coach Paul Chryst was asked about his plan for the six running backs on the roster not named “Conner.” Were redshirts a possibility for some? A change in position? “There’s a group of guys that we’re gonna play this year, and all of them played,” Chryst said. That wasn’t the case for three of the backs: Qadree Ollison, Dennis Briggs and Jameel Poteat. But two underclassmen, Chris James and Rachid Ibrahim, did. Behind Conner on the probable twodeep depth chart all season has been senior Isaac Bennett, who amassed 105 yards and a touchdown on 17 touches

Football

10 James Conner briefly left Pitt’s game with an injury before returning in the second quarter. Jeff Ahearn | Assistant Visual Editor


FROM PAGE 8

VOLLEYBALL dunks . Louisville Wrapping up homecoming festivities, the Panthers played the visiting Louisville Cardinals Sunday as the program recognized volleyball alumni. Pitt handled the Cardinals (13-8, 5-4 ACC) 25-15, 25-16, 26-28 and 29-27 in front of a smaller home crowd. “After our Friday night game where it was the madness, and we had such a big crowd, it was kind of hard to come and create our own energy,” Delaney Clesen said. Despite Friday’s loss, senior setter Lindsey Zitzke was elated with Sunday’s result. “I’m really proud of how we came out and bounced back from FSU,” she said. In the first two sets, the Panthers’ hitters provided strong play, and as a whole, the team tallied eight aces. Early on, it appeared the Panthers wouldn’t let the loss against FSU affect

October 27, 2014 | The Pitt News | www.pittnews.com them, as the Cardinals were no match until set three. Fisher called this disparity “a tale of two matches.” The third set began to remind the team of Friday night, when Florida State won the final three sets to come from behind and win. Louisville was the stronger team on the floor, as it had more blocks and less errors. Despite its stronger play, the Cardinals struggled to put the Panthers away until a service error, and a bad set gave the Cardinals the win. “We kind of had a flashback to Florida State, and we responded, as we’re not going to let that happen again,” Zitzke said. The fourth set started out strong for Pitt, but Louisville quickly got out to a big lead. It wasn’t until Louisville had a 24-22 lead that the Panthers fought back to tie things up and push for a win, thanks to a kill by Yeazel. “The most positive takeaway was we were down and things weren’t going our but we found a way to win,” Fisher said. The team next plays at Virginia Tech on Friday at 7 p.m.

FROM PAGE 9

FOOTBALL before this weekend. James, a freshman, has featured more in the secondary back role, running for 151 yards on 33 carries and three touchdowns before this past weekend. Ibrahim had carried the ball 16 times for 106 yards, 91 of which came in that one game in August. “We are deep if we stay healthy. If anything happens, we’re not as deep,” Chryst said of the sophomore then. “We’re gonna need him during the year, I believe.” The latter two have featured in the passing game out of the backfield somewhat, combining for 15 catches for 95 yards. Before his injury, Conner, along with quarterback Chad Voytik, James and Bennett, all shared the responsibility running against the Yellow Jackets with atrocious results. In Conner’s absence, which lasted

The Pitt News Crossword, 10/27/2014

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ACROSS 1 Tibetan holy men 6 Voice above tenor 10 Boy or girl lead-in 14 Traditional saying 15 Sound of pain 16 Scientology creator Hubbard 17 Big Bang, to a physicist 20 Snarky state 21 What comes before beauty? 22 __-weensy 23 Show stopper 27 Greeter and seater 30 Frozen drink brand 31 Started the pot 32 Commercial suffix with Motor 33 Pop’s favorite root beer? 37 Old man’s place, in Hemingway 38 One of two gridiron borders, and what the last words of 17-, 23-, 52- and 62Across can have 42 Sock part 43 Hair line 45 Aegean island 46 Beachcomber’s beat 48 Selma or Patty, to Bart 50 One of the 3Down 52 Like some August sales 56 Cop __: bargain in court 57 Actor McKellen 58 Partners of cons 62 Alabama Slammer liqueur 66 Gen. Robert __ 67 Truck maker with a bulldog logo 68 Mentor’s charge 69 Fizzy drink 70 “Terrible” age 71 Single-master DOWN 1 Some are chocolate 2 Arabian Peninsula port 3 Gift-bearing trio 4 Stir up

from around eight minutes left in the first quarter until approximately 11:45 minutes to go in the following period, James took all five carries for a combined 23 yards. Ibrahim needed just three chances to collect 66 yards rushing, the bulk of that total coming on a 50-yard effort followed by a 15-yard gain the following drive, both in the second quarter. After the game, Chryst said that sort of performance from the sophomore didn’t come as a shock. “I thought he was good, and we’ve thought that. I don’t think ‘Chid’ did anything that surprised us,” he said. “When [players] get their opportunities and take advantage of it, you’re appreciative of it.” Maybe not now, but the time could come when we all do.

11/11/14

By Pam Amick Klawitter

5 Hill VIP: Abbr. 6 Pamplona pals 7 One who eschews company 8 Bag marker 9 Lennon collaborator 10 Let out, say 11 Singer Lopez 12 Siberian industrial center 13 In the blink of __ 18 2014 N.L. East champs 19 Fancy party 24 Formally relinquish 25 Rural skyline feature 26 Diagnostic test 27 Door fastener 28 Most fit to be drafted 29 Guide for the 3Down 32 Parts of lbs. 34 Physics particle 35 Explorer on Nick Jr. 36 Detected 39 Barcelona boy 40 Web address parts 41 Name on some Canadian pumps

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

©2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

44 Break for a meal and a beverage, in Britain 47 Lending a hand 49 Four Corners state 50 Strikes sharply 51 Prefix with sphere 52 Fenway corners 53 Speed skater __ Anton Ohno 54 In the loop, with “in”

11/11/14

55 __ de Mayo 59 Tiller lead-in 60 Black-and-white treat 61 Setup instructions word 63 911 respondent, briefly 64 Rarer than rare 65 Places with peaks and passes: Abbr.


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