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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 | November 21, 2019 | Volume 110 | Issue 89
PITT OFFERS BOXES AND WALLS SEE STORY ONLINE AT PITNEWS.COM NEW PRACTICE SPACES AFTER POSVAR BAN Rebecca Johnson Staff Writer
Pitt offered several student dance groups new practice spaces this week following outcry over a letter sent out last Friday banning them from practicing in Posvar Hall. Nithya Kasibhatla, president of Pitt Nrityamala, said she received the surprising letter from Pitt last Friday, which was sent to all student organizations. The letter explained that dance groups like hers would no longer be able to practice in Posvar or risk losing access to EMS, the University’s online platform to book on-campus spaces. “It was so last minute and a shock because we had never got any indication that we would get banned. I had the impression that Posvar was an open space to be used by anyone,” Kasibhatla, a sophomore chemistry and English double major, said. “We did feel that it had an impact on cultural groups specifically. The attitude toward people practicing in Posvar tends to be more aggressive toward the cultural teams.” The list of dance teams primarily affected by the letter includes Pitt Nrityamala, Pitt PantheRaas, First Class Bhangra, Pitt Mastana, Ya’baso and FRESA. The first four are
Students at Boxes and Walls, an event hosted by hosted by the Division of Student Affairs Diversity and Inclusion Committee, participated in a mock military enlistment and learned about the difficulties veterans face after service. Hannah Heisler senior staff photographer
SWANSON STUDENTS CREATE ASL-TO-TEXT TRANSLATOR Madison Brewer Staff Writer
When Christopher Pasquinelli, a fifth-year computer engineering major, spent a summer interning at PNC, he worked alongside students who were either deaf or hard of hearing. He started thinking about the challenges faced by his fellow interns and how common they must See Posvar on page 2 be for people who are deaf across America.
“The problem was they needed an interpreter with them constantly,” Pasquinelli said. “I thought ‘there has to be an easier way for that.’” Now, Pasquinelli and Haihui Zhu, a thirdyear computer engineering major, are prototyping an American Sign Language-to-text translator, after an early version won third place in the regional finals of the InnovateFPGA 2019 Global Design Contest — a worldwide artificial intel-
ligence competition open to anyone 13 or older. Another student, Roman Hamilton, was on the competition team but is no longer involved with the project. The competition required teams to use fieldprogrammable gate arrays — a circuit that can be reprogrammed to behave like a different circuit. From there, Pasquinelli, Zhu and Hamilton See ASL on page 3