Vol. 105 Issue 3
73°|61°
@thepittnews
Wednesday, May 21, 2014
Pittnews.com
Tom Wolf wins democratic nomination
Aileen Ryan and Cristina Holtzer The Pitt News Staff
Tom Wolf will run against Governor Tom Corbett in November after winning the democratic nomination for Pennsylvania governor on Tuesday. Wolf, Pennsylvania businessman and former Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue, ran against three other candidates: former Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection Katie McGinty, Pennsylvania Treasurer Rob McCord and the U. S. Representative for Pennsylvania’s 13th Congressional District Allyson Schwartz. Wolf, 65, is chairman of the Wolf Organization, his family-owned exterior building and kitchen cabinet business. According to his website, he stepped down as CEO of the company to focus on his gubernatorial campaign.
Voter surveys predicted Wolf as the winner of the democratic primary election. Corbett, originally from Shaler Township, announced that he would run for re-election in November. A survey by Quinnipiac University in February projected that Wolf beat Corbett by 19 percentage points in the gubernatorial race. . Corbett’s low approval ratings as governor could give Wolf a chance to unseat the incumbent governor, a rare occurrence in the commonwealth’s recent history. Several Oakland residents who voted at the No. 14 fire station on McKee Place said they felt strongly about this election. Franco Pasquarelli, 29, said the governor should focus on improving Pennsylvanian roads, public safety and the education system. “I feel like every time I drive through the city, I see another public school closed down,”
Pasquarelli said. “Where are these kids going to school?” Michael J. Stack III also won the democratic nomination for lieutenant governor and will run against Republican incumbent Jim Cawley in November. Oakland resident Bill Halferty, 60, said he was disappointed with the voter turnout on Tuesday. “If you don’t vote, you can’t complain,” Halferty said. “It’s your right, and you should take advantage of it.” Halferty described this year’s election day as “poor.” At 7 p.m. when Halferty voted, he said he was the 36th person to vote at the McKee Place polling station. The polls closed at 8 p.m. “I used to be number 36 when I showed up at 7 a.m.,” Halferty said. “It’s just not the Businessman Tom Wolf won the democratic nomination for governor of Pa. same anymore.”
Faster than a Ferrari: student-built car gears up for last race Brad Hanlon For The Pitt News
Panther Racing Club’s 2014 competition car. Photo courtesy of Panther Racing Club
In three seconds, Jonathan Powers accelerated from zero to 50 mph. “It’s like a rocketship,” Powers said of the car’s takeoff. Powers, a junior mechanical engineering major, is a driver for the Panther Racing Club, otherwise known as Formula SAE (Society of Automotive Engineers). Every year since 1990, the club has designed, built and raced small formula-style cars, and this year, Powers is one of the club’s 42 members. Tom DuPree, outgoing FSAE president and 2014 graduate with a degree in mechanical engineering, said Formula SAE experi-
ence provides students with a diversified skill set, and is a major asset to a student’s resumé, especially for an engineering major. DuPree compared Formula SAE to a small business because of all the work that goes into the planning and development of the car. “Pitt’s Formula SAE program is one of the best hands-on experiences available at the University,” DuPree said. This year’s car races at speeds of around 50 mph, accelerating in about three seconds, according to business manager Ezekial Braun. An online database of sports car accelerations reports the zero to 60 mph acceleration time of a 2012 Ferrari FF as 3.4 seconds.
Racing
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