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 | October 11, 2018 | Volume 109 | Issue 39
WEBSTER SHARES POETRY
SENATE COUNCIL TALKS GRAD UNIONS
Madeline Gavatorta Staff Writer
Jonah Mixon Webster, Sawtooth Poetry Prize winner, sheds an emotional tear after discussing his personal hardships at the Center for African American Poetry and Poetics’ “Reading and Q&A with Jonah Mixon-Webster” Wednesday evening. Maria Heines | staff photographer
‘ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW’ TO RETURN Christian Snyder Editor-in-Chief
After a confusing last few days, those involved are confident “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” will see the stage this year despite a surprise cancellation announced on Monday. The show, hosted annually by the Engineering Student Council, encountered funding dilemmas — which some interpreted as a malicious attempt by Pitt’s Student Government Board to deny the group support. But at what participants called a productive meeting on Tuesday night, SGB presented the
production staff and the executive board of the Engineering Student Council with options to keep one of Pitt’s traditions alive. Here’s how the confusion arose, how it was resolved and what the next steps are for “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” this year. Drew Maks, the director of the annual production of “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” for the past nine years, was optimistic when he emailed the director of activities for the Engineering Student Council on Monday to give an update on the show’s progress. “Yesterday’s rehearsal went really well,” Maks wrote in an email. “The show is really starting to
come together.” Just a few hours later, activities director Zachary Dissen replied. “It is with great sadness that I announce the cancellation of RHPS this year. We encountered several budget problems, along with getting shortchanged by SGB,” Dissen wrote. “I am so sorry it had to end like this.” Maks couldn’t believe it. Tasked with the “horrible job” of informing the cast, he sent an email that evening and CC’d members of SGB, the Engineering Student Council and the editorin-chief of The Pitt News. See Rocky Horror on page 2
Graduate students testified for their right to unionize last week during public hearings in front of the Pennsylvania Labor Relations Board from Oct. 1 to Oct. 5, arguing against the University over one central question — whether graduate students are students or employees. Representatives from the Graduate Student Organizing Committee brought their questions to Wednesday’s University Senate Council meeting to ask administrators themselves. Rachel Coombs, president of the Graduate and Professional Student Government, asked the Senate Council about shared governance, a principle in higher education in which graduate students make decisions and the university is held administratively accountable. “[GPSG] wants to ask the Senate Council how the graduate and faculty unionization will alter or impact the shared governance system,” Coombs said. This question has been central to the hearings — whether student-administration conversations will be negatively affected if a union is formed. According to Chancellor Gallagher, graduate students are just students. If they were considered employees, Pitt might not be able to offer them as much as it can when they are students, according to Gallagher. “We think it’s best to look at them as students See Senate Council on page 2