1-28-20

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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 | January 28, 2020 ­| Volume 110 | Issue 208

RINGING IN THE YEAR OF THE RAT

THE SECOND COMING

Charlie Taylor Staff Writer

Lines form in the Petersen Events Center as students await the return of Chick-fil-A to Pitt’s campus on Monday morning. Caela Go staff photographer

Nationality Rooms director retires after 54-year career Mary Rose O’Donnell Assistant News Editor

Maxine Bruhns’ day used to start at 4:30 a.m. She watched the international news on BBC and Al Jazeera America, looking for developments to fill her staff in on. Each morning, according to her assistant Maryann Sivak, she greeted those working in her office with a salutation in a different language, and then she taught them the correct response. Her life before becoming the director of Pitt’s Nationality Rooms shaped the legacy that she will leave behind.

Maxine Bruhns, Pitt’s former director of the Nationality Rooms, officially retired on Jan. 1 after a 54-year career at the University. Bruhns, 96, is the second person to ever hold this position. According to Cristina Lagnese, Nationality Rooms scholarship administrator and head of nationality room committee relations, a job posting will be available soon and then the vetting of candidates will begin. Bruhns did not respond to interview requests for this piece, though many of her colleagues and friends described her impact at Pitt. E. Maxine Bruhns, originally E. Maxine Moose — of Grafton, West Virginia — attend-

ed West Virginia Wesleyan College for one year before leaving to work in an aircraft factory after the Pearl Harbor attacks. She received a philosophy and psychology degree from the Ohio State University in 1946. After college, she met and married Fred C. Bruhns. Together, they traveled around the world while Fred worked for the International Refugee Organization to resettle refugees. While traveling — living in places like Lebanon, Jerusalem, Vietnam, Cambodia, Iran, Greece and Gabon — Maxine taught English, learned the native languages and acted in loSee Bruhns on page 2

Pitt students and faculty stepped away from their dreary, beige cafeteria and breakroom lunches to usher in the New Year among false cherry blossoms and pops of red. The festivities were part of the annual Lunar New Year celebration hosted by the Institute for International Studies in Education from their temporary location on McKee Place. The event was one of many gatherings held throughout Pittsburgh to mark the start of the Year of the Rat on the lunar calendar, which officially began Jan. 25. Unlike the Gregorian calendar, with which most Americans are most familiar, the lunar calendar tracks time based on the cycles of the moon rather than the movement of the earth around the sun. Yiting Chen, a Chinese instructor at Pitt, said this system has its roots in ancient agrarian practices. “Ancient Chinese people used [the lunar calendar] to track what to plant in their fields, so this is the way they functioned [with the cycles of the moon] back in the old days,” she said. Although the Lunar New Year is often referred to as “Chinese New Year,” the holiday is celebrated in countries all across Asia, including Vietnam, Korea and Indonesia. Featuring food from a range of cultures — like Banh Tet, a staple food of the Vietnamese celebrations — Thursday’s event was a panAsian celebration aimed at celebrating diversity, according to IISE director Maureen McClure. She said the festivities were planned almost entirely by students, who come from a broad range of backgrounds. “The organization, the planning, the inSee New Year on page 6


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