The Pitt News
Pride march mayhem page 6
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | June 7, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 5
UNIVERSITY Photos: Three Rivers ANNOUNCES Arts Festival page 7 NEW UHC DEAN Janine Faust
Senior Staff Writer Pitt announced researcher and medical doctor Brian A. Primack as the new dean of the University Honors College Monday. Primack will succeed Edward Stricker as the third Bernice L. and Morton S. Lerner Chair and dean of the UHC, beginning July 1. Primack’s primary responsibilities as dean will be overseeing the financial and administrative operations of the UHC, which is currently in its 31st year. Pitt provost and senior vice chancellor Patricia E. Beeson said in a press release that she believes Primack will be able to ensure the Honors College persists in being the intellectual core of the Pitt community. “Under Dr. Primack’s leadership, I am confident that the University Honors College will continue to serve as the center of gravity for our most academically engaged and curious undergraduate students and as a hub of intellectual activity for our entire university community,” Beeson said. “His broad and inclusive vision is well-matched to our aspirations for the UHC and the University.” Stricker, who has served as dean since 2011, will be returning to a teaching position in the Department of Neuroscience this fall as he first declared when he announced in June 2016 that he was planning to step down. Students active in the UHC complained in 2012 that he had shifted UHC policies away from the emphasis that the first dean and founder of Pitt’s UHC, G. Alec Stewart, placed on intellectual curiosity. Students wrote a letter to Stricker expressing their concerns. See New Dean on page 3
Several members of 4th River Music Collective, a street folk group, perform in front of the Wyndham Hotel at the Three Rivers Arts Festival. Anna Bongardino VISUAL EDITOR
PITT CONSIDERS CLOSING TITUSVILLE Caroline Bourque Senior Staff Writer
Pitt is considering several options regarding the Titusville campus — including closure — mainly due to a lack of steady enrollment, according to a report released last Thursday. University officials released an analysis listing more problems than possible solutions for Pitt’s Titusville campus, including a fiscal year deficit of $1.7 million in 2016. As stated in the report, the biggest threat to the campus’s success is the spotty enrollment, combined with competition from other higher education providers in the region. Administrators made a push in 2013 to innovate the courses provided at the campus
by offering a petroleum technology course, as well as classes in computer technology, criminal justice, psychology, biological sciences and history. The addition of the degree in petroleum technology, which Titusville offered as an associate’s degree jointly with the Pitt-Bradford campus, made reference to the town’s history with the oil industry. Enrollment numbers for these courses were lower than expected, however, and the petroleum technology course, though successful at Pitt’s Bradford campus, was terminated after just two years. The report mentions that this decline fits into a larger trend occurring throughout Western Pennsylvania. At UPT alone, enroll-
ment has declined 40 percent from the fall semester of 2009 to fall 2016, with its peak in 2007. This decline goes beyond UPT. The analysis cites that enrollment across the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education has decreased by more than 12 percent between the fall semester of 2010 and fall 2016. Republican Kathy Rapp, who represents the district that includes Titusville in the state House of Representatives, noted that the campus plays a central role in the area’s economic well-being. “I would be very concerned if Pitt decided to close the campus,” she told the Pittsburgh See Titusville on page 3