5-31-17

Page 1

The Pitt News

Pitt basketball recruit breakdown Page 9

The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | May 31, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 4

STARS AND STRIPES

Pitt researchers find HIV detector Janine Faust

Senior Staff Writer

Michael Kraus, a curator at Soldiers and Sailors Museum, engages children of all ages in a Civil War knighting demonstration on Memorial Day. Anna Bongardino VISUAL EDITOR

STUDENTS REACT TO COUNSELING CENTER ARREST and criminal use of a communications facility. According to a police criminal complaint, a Wilkinsburg police sergeant found child pornogThe Pitt News Staff raphy in his home on March 27 after the police Following the counseling center director’s arreceived a tip. The sergeant seized two laptops, rest six days ago, Pitt students responded to the two memory sticks and several hundred loose latest controversy at the center, while the Univerphotos. sity has largely stayed quiet and given little addiCounty detectives reviewed the evidence tional information. April 13 and found sexually explicit photos of Allegheny County police arrested Edward what appeared to be prepubescent girls, accordMichaels, 67, of Wilkinsburg, last Wednesday ing to the complaint. on charges of possessing child pornography A University statement said Michaels has

John Hamilton and Henry Glitz

been placed on leave and that Pitt is cooperating fully with authorities. Pitt spokesperson Joe Miksch said he couldn’t comment on Michaels’ employment status when asked Tuesday why he was placed on leave and not let go. “We want to assure all students that your health and well-being is our top priority, and that the services provided by our staff in the University Counseling Center will continue unabated,” the statement, which is posted on the counseling center’s website, said. See Michaels Arrest on page 2

Pitt researchers have moved the world one step closer to finally fully curing HIV. Scientists in the University’s Graduate School of Public Health announced Monday in the medical journal “Nature Medicine” that they’ve created a more accurate, quicker and less costly test for detecting how much of the virus remains in a patient who has undergone conventional retroviral therapy to slow the spread of the disease — even when the virus is inactive. The new test developed by Pitt researchers — dubbed “TZA” — works by detecting a gene that is active only when HIV that is able to replicate itself is present. Dr. Phalguni Gupta, professor and vice chair of Pitt’s Public Health’s Department of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, is the senior author of the paper published in “Nature Medicine” announcing the new discovery. “Globally, there are substantial efforts to cure people of HIV by finding ways See HIV Research on page 3


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.