The Pitt News
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | october 17, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 48
PITT PROMOTES CROSS-FAITH COMMUNICATION Sarah Frumkin For The Pitt News
Kyle Wyche was peacefully meditating in the prayer and relaxation room on the third floor of the William Pitt Union when a group of Muslim students walked in to pray. The junior ecology major struck up a conversation with one of the Muslim students afterward, who turned out to be as interested in Wyche’s meditation as Wyche was in his prayer rituals. The two exchanged numbers and went to lunch together the next day. “We allowed curiosity to drive our conversations,” Wyche told 50 people gathered in the William Pitt Union Monday. Wyche said he’s still friends with the student he met, and the two meet often for meals and coffee. “That one instance opened us to different experiences and created a friendship,” Wyche said. Wyche shared this story of shared spirituality at the kickoff for Pitt’s newest division — the Interfaith Dialogue and Engagement Office. The creation of the office will serve as an opportunity to exchange ideas about how Pitt students, staff and faculty can engage in more conversations about religion and secular spirituality, explore their beliefs and have an impact on the community, according to Summer Rothrock — director of the Office of Cross-Cultural Leadership and Development and member of the Interfaith Dialogue Planning Committee. “I think ... this is something the University community is going to embrace and welcome. Everyone seemed really positive as we sent information about the event,” Rothrock said. “The fact that people were hanging around and talking makes me think we’ve already sparked some dialogue.” Vice Provost and Dean of Students See Interfaith on page 3
Members of Pittsburgh’s chapter of the Organization of Chinese Americans perform a traditional Chinese lion dance during Pitt’s International Week on Monday. Isabelle Glatts STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
STUDENTS DISCONNECT TO CONNECT
Lauren Forsythe For The Pitt News
Your social media activity can’t ever really be deleted, Kathleen Bracken learned in her computer science classes at Pitt. “Usually whenever you click the delete button it’s not actually taking the thing out of memory, it’s not like you take an eraser and you smear it out and it’s gone,” Bracken said. “It’s still there and around if you know how to find it.” Bracken — a sophomore majoring in electrical engineering and minoring in computer science — never liked the idea of mass communication over social media and prefers the anonymity and mystery that comes from ab-
staining from social media entirely. And she isn’t alone — although social media seems to be an inescapable part of daily life on campus, there are a number of students that are not interested in using it. Richard Xu, a first-year student studying computer science, doesn’t use any social media at all. Abstaining from social media allows him to have time to himself, he finds, giving him the ability to clear his head without getting caught up in what everyone else is doing. “I think that getting to be alone and out of the white space and then truly getting to appreciate nature or not having different drama, it really gives you a clear headspace and it infuses
a sense of calm and peace,” Xu said Xu chose to abstain from using social media back in high school because he felt the judgment and comparison that comes with social media would not be good for him. He continues to not use social media today because he believes it devalues communication. “I think that there is a lot of value that gets taken away when we communicate digitally — you can’t communicate emotions or the intentions behind your words,” Xu said. “I want to be able to express myself to people physically. I get to have real personal contact being with somebody.” See Social Media on page 3