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
University Senate renews PittPerks See Online March 3, 2016 | Issue 118 | Volume 106
Women’s basketball tops UNC Dan Sostek Sports Editor
can in a post-9/11 world. Other courses include “Muslim Migration since WWI and Ethnic Tensions,” “Islamophobia: A Threat to All” and “Muslim Cool: Blackness, Hip Hop and Muslim Identity.” According to Veronica Dristas, the assistant director of outreach for the Global Studies Center, the Center started the series of courses as a result of the Arab Spring in 2011 to “better understand Muslims not just in other countries but also here in the U.S.”
Trailing by three, the University of North Carolina Tar Heels had 15.9 seconds to tie the Pitt women’s basketball team to remain alive in the ACC tournament. They used 15.8 of those seconds, and thanks to a clutch make by Jamie Cherry, the No. 12 seeded Panthers had to outplay the No. 13 Tar Heels for five minutes of overtime to finally secure their first ACC Women’s Basketball Tournament victory in their third year in the conference. Under head coach Suzie McConnellSerio, Pitt did just that, corralling itself and dominating the overtime period to advance to the next round of the tournament in a thrilling 82-72 victory Wednesday in Greensboro, North Carolina. To start the game, the Panthers jumped out to a quick 16-11 advantage, thanks to a combined 13 points from sophomores Aysia Bugg and Yacine Diop. Bugg knocked down a couple early threes, while Diop hauled in three rebounds in the first half. A late three by Cherry cut into Pitt’s lead at the end of the first quarter, but Pitt entered intermission with a one-point advantage at 19-18. A quick 3-point play by Stasha Carey grew Pitt’s lead in the second half to 22-18, but UNC went on a 13-2 run to take its first lead since early in the first quarter. Brenna Wise aided in Pitt’s comeback attempt, as she cut the Panthers’ deficit to one
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See Women’s Hoops on page 8
Pitt’s Women’s Club Volleyball held a practice in the Fitzgerald Fieldhouse Wednesday night. Jordan Mondell
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Pitt to host course on Muslims in America Dale Shoemaker News Editor
Pitt’s ninth installment of its series on Muslims is turning its focus to Islam’s role in the United States. Coming the weekend after spring break, “Muslims in a Global Context” — a free, biannual, one-credit course — is the result of a partnership between Pitt’s Global Studies Center and Carnegie Mellon University. This year’s course will run each day beginning the evening of Friday, March 18, to the morning of Sunday, March 20, in Room 2400 of Sennott Square.
Registration for the course — open on the Global Studies Center website — closes March 4. Since 2012, Pitt and CMU have collaborated to host eight mini-courses, each focusing on a different country, like Myanmar, Pakistan and India. Though previous courses have focused on areas with heavily Muslim populations, such as the Middle East, the Gulf States and Sub-Saharan Africa, this year’s course centers on the United States. The courses will zoom in on topics like the history of Islam in America, the African-American Muslim narrative and growing up Muslim-Ameri-