The Pitt News T h e in de p e n d e n t st ude nt ne w spap e r of t he University of Pittsburgh
Men’s basketball See online for updated crime map and report on wins at home Saturday shooting Page 8 February 1, 2016 | Issue 96 | Volume 106
Pitt police report three assaults Dale Shoemaker News Editor
Pitt police are investigating three assaults that occurred over the weekend in Oakland . According to a crime alert, an unidentified man told police that an unknown person assaulted him around 1 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 31. The victim told police he was assaulted and injured on the 3400 block of Saint James Place . The victim went to UPMC Presbyterian Hospital and reported the assault to police at about 1:51 a.m. The police report does not specify the man’s injury. The man described his assailant as a 6-foot white man with a slender build, brown hair and brown eyes. At the time of the assault, the assailant was wearing khaki pants, a white shirt and a navy blue blazer. Police ask anyone with information about the assault to call them at 412624-2121 and reference report # 1600372. Later that morning, police reported that three men indecently assaulted an unidentified woman Saturday while she was walking on Oakland Avenue near the intersection of Oakland Avenue and Sennott Street. The woman reported the assault to police Sunday, Jan. 31 at about 2:24 a.m. and told police three unknown black men touched her inappropriately. See Crime Brief on page 4
Heba Mahjoub represents Syria at Pitt Muslim Student Association’s Halal-a-Palooza. Jordan Mondell STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Senate candidates discuss issues Alexa Bakalarski Staff Writer
Five hundred students and community members got a closer look on three U.S. Senate candidates’ views Sunday at Carnegie Mellon University. Instead of participating in a debate, Pennsylvania’s democratic candidates gathered for an annual forum 2 p.m. Sunday in the school’s Jared L. Cohon University Center. The annual Barbara Daly Danko Political Forum gave vot-
ers an opportunity to hear candidates John Fetterman, Katie McGinty and Joe Sestak speak on popular issues before the April 26 primaries. Fetterman, currently the mayor of Braddock, Pennsylvania; McGinty, former chief of staff for Gov. Tom Wolf; and Sestak, formerly a member of the House of Representatives, provided their stances on gun violence, immigration, environmental issues and more at the forum, which was part of the annual 14th Ward Democratic Candidates Forums.
Running against incumbent Republican Sen. Pat Toomey, who did not attend the forum, Fetterman, McGinty and Sestak are competing for a U.S. Senate seat at the primary election on April 26. The general election is Nov. 8. Moderators Paul Klein, an Allegheny County Council member for District 11, and Krysia Kubiak Vila-Roger, the director of state regulatory strategy and government affairs, questioned the candidates for around an hour, See Forum on page 2