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 | February 20, 2020 | Volume 110 | Issue x
ARE WE HUMAN OR ARE WE DANCERS? TWO BOMB THREATS MADE AT FIVE GUYS IN
THREE DAYS Jon Moss
News Editor City and Pitt police responded to two similar phoned-in bomb threats at the Five Guys location on the 100 block of Bouquet Street. One occurred late Monday evening and another late Wednesday afternoon. City police spokesperson Maurice Matthews II said the Monday incident occurred around 8:20 p.m. The building was already empty of customers and employees when City and Pitt police arrived. Matthews said a Pitt police explosive detection dog searched the area with negative results. “Zone 4 officers were told the caller may have been a member of recently fired employees or a friend of one,” Matthews said. A similar threat occurred Wednesday afternoon around 4:50 p.m. City police spokesperson Chris Togneri said in a statement that after officers cleared the building, a K-9 officer searched the premises with negative results. Police are still investigating both incidents.
Members of Attack Theatre, a Pittsburgh-based dance company, began an open rehearsal in the Frick Fine Arts University Gallery. The event is sponsored by Pitt’s Year of Creativity and is meant to showcase the process of dancemaking. Attack Theatre and the University of Pittsburgh Art Gallery will continue to cohost open rehearsals from 10am-4pm on Thursday and Friday. Hannah Heisler senior staff photographer
Catalog of visitng black poets’ work on display in Hillman Library Brenden Rearick
for African American Poetry and Poetics. Colorful chapbooks — small colHillman Library doesn’t typically allections of poetry centered on a theme low visitors to write in its books — un— currently line the featured shelves in less you’re a poet visiting with the Center Hillman’s new African American poetry For The Pitt News
exhibit. Though the content of each of these books may vary, all were written and signed by black poets who have visited Pitt’s campus. The special collection exhibit was See Poetry on page 6