Vol. 105 Issue 123
@thepittnews TREE CLIMBING
Pittnews.com
Friday, February 27, 2015
Students, activists discuss climate change Anjana Murali Staff Writer
Reverend Lennox Yearwood lived through Hurricane Katrina and lost loved ones to the storm. Even without the devastation of the area, he says, his home state would still be called Cancer Alley, with water runoffs, smog and pollution causing children to suffer from asthma, bronchitis and emphysema. This is the reality that Yearwood and Michael Leon Guerrero are working hard to change. The Global Studies Center hosted the fourth part of a five-part video dialogue series titled “The Culture Against Climate Change” on Thursday afternoon in Posvar Grady Martin, a sophomore Hall. Yearwood and Guerrero both spoke Geology major, tackles the via video call to more than 50 people, inTrees climbing wall. Heather cluding students, faculty and community Tennant | Staff Photographer members. Yearwood is president of the Hip Hop Caucus, a civil and human rights organization, and Guerrero is interim national coordinator of the Our Power Campaign, a climate justice alliance. The series is sponsored by the Department of Sociology, the urban studies program and supported by the Office of the panel of workers and experts discuss wage Provost and the Year of Sustainability. inequality in Pittsburgh, organizers said. The Through their activism, Yearwood and panel was organized by Pitt, the local 32BJ Guerrero seek to create an environmental
Service workers demand higher wages at panel Dale Shoemaker Assistant News Editor They talked and, later, chanted, but they knew it wasn’t enough.
Roughly 200 service workers — including janitors, security guards, fast food workers, students, professors and community members — gathered in the O’Hara Student Center on Thursday at 5 p.m. to hear a
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