3- 21- 2016

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The Pitt News T h e i n de p e n d e n t st ude nt ne w spap e r of t he University of Pittsburgh

IFC works to stop toxic masculinity

Why Pitt basketball fell to the Madness Page 8

See Online for softball gallery

March 21, 2016 | Issue 125 | Volume 106

FESTIVAL BRINGS TASTE OF LATIN AMERICA TO PITT

Emily Brindley Staff Writer

When T. Leon Williams lectured at Pitt, he asked the audience members to stand if they had never talked about masculinity in their households. Nearly everyone in the audience rose. “We don’t have conversations about masculinity, manhood,” Williams, a campus pastor and former multicultural center director at Elon University, said. “We’re here because we have some issues, we have some challenges.” Williams’ lecture was part of the Interfraternity Council’s first-ever Healthy Masculinities Week at Pitt, a six-event series of lectures, discussions and a documentary screening last week designed to chip away at concepts of “toxic masculinity” — the product of societal pressure on men to fit into an aggressive, domineering mold. IFC, the governing body for Pitt’s social fraternities, hosted the series from March 14 to 20, partnering with Campus Women’s Organization, Rainbow Alliance and sororities Sigma Delta Tau and Zeta Beta Tau for several of the week’s events. IFC President Justin Horowitz, who proposed and spearheaded the series, said the series is Pitt’s first formal event on the topic of toxic masculinity. The series, Horowitz said, was the beginning of what he hopes will be a continued conversation about the pressures society places on men and the problems this creates in society and on Pitt’s campus. The week opened discussions about

Pitt’s Center for Latin American Studies hosted the 36th annual Latin American and Caribbean festival Saturday. Jordan Mondell STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER from 18 groups, including Albert Giovanazzi Guatemalan dance perStaff Writer formers Cooperativa de panish words and the scent of Artistas de Guatemala and empanadas drifted through PosPitt’s tango dance team, var Hall this weekend, as the the Panther Tango Club. Latin American and Caribbean Festival Karen Goldman, the replaced lectures with Puerto Rican muassistant director for external relations, sicians and tango dancers. development and assessment for CLAS, Pitt’s Center for Latin American said attracting such a large crowd for Studies hosted the 36th annual Latin this year’s festival was easy because of American and Caribbean Festival on Pittsburgh’s increasing Latin American Saturday from noon to 10 p.m., attractpopulation. ing more than two thousand community “These communities enrich our city members — a slight increase from last and our region enormously, and that ityear, according to Diana Osma, the asself is a reason to celebrate,” Goldman sistant academic affairs and outreach said. coordinator for CLAS. Fifty-nine booths selling traditional A celebration of Latin American culLatin American food, such as Brazilian See Masculinity on page 3 ture, the festival featured performances

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barbecue, Mexican drinks and Cuban sandwiches, small businesses and family vendors — some from as far away as Ohio — added another level of authenticity to the annual event, said Osma. To raise money for Cafe, a foundation that works to support education for children in Honduras, Pitt’s Spanish club sold coffee at the festival, as well. Naiara Freitas, the owner of Naiara’s Cakes and More in Pittsburgh and a vendor at the festival for the past four See Festival on page 4


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3- 21- 2016 by The Pitt News - Issuu