Vol. 105 Issue 143
@thepittnews
Homelessness simulation provides insight
Friday, April 3, 2015
Pittnews.com
THESE BOOTS WERE MADE FOR STOMPIN’
Mark Pesto For The Pitt News Carson Derrow gets enough to eat and has a place to sleep at night, but, yesterday, he learned how to survive on the streets with just $15 and a backpack. Derrow, a sophomore neuroscience major, is one of more than 150 students who participated in a homelessness simulation in the William Pitt Union on Thursday. The event was held by Panthers Educating and Advocating for Children in Homeless Situations (PEACHS), a student group dedicated to providing for the needs of homeless children. As of 2011, the National Alliance to End Homelessness estimated that 2,225 people were homeless in Pittsburgh. “Homelessness is a prevalent issue nationwide, but why not start the spark for change here in Pittsburgh?” Michelle Rojas, a junior social work major and PEACHS president and event coordinator, said. PEACHS members accepted cans of food on behalf of the Homeless Children’s Education Fund (HCEF), an organization that advocates for homeless children’s right to receive a free public education. Read the rest online at Pittnews.com.
ROTC members took students on a walking tour of campus for “Stomp Out Sexual Assault,” providing information on sexual assault on campus. Emily Klank | Staff Photographer
Pitt tightens Greek Life eligibility requirements Harrison Kaminsky & Dale Shoemaker The Pitt News Staff Under new requirements, Pitt will now bar many first-semester freshmen from joining Greek life. With a focus on “academic excellence,” Pitt’s Office of Fraternity and Sorority Life said in a release Thursday that new course credit standards will tighten eligibility for new members. The office, the Interfraternity Council and the Collegiate Panhellenic Association made the
changes after working together and meeting with members of Greek life for several months. Fraternity and sorority pledges must be full-time students “in good standing” at Pitt, have earned at least 12 credits and have a 2.5 minimum cumulative GPA, according to new rules. Because first-semester freshmen may not meet all of these requirements, as they have not yet taken college classes, many “will no longer be eligible to receive a bid for membership,” the release said. The office hopes the policy will ease students’ adjustment to college life before they
join a fraternity or sorority, its coordinator Matthew Richardson said in an email. The new requirements of at least 12 credits at an accredited college or university already applied to transfer students and prospective members of the National Pan-Hellenic Council, a third governing body for Greek life. The requirement excludes credits from Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate and College in High School, Richardson said. The policy does not change Greek life GPA
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