Vol. 105 Issue 35
@thepittnews HEALTH
Tuesday,September 23, 2014
Keep the pizza coming: freshman 15 is a myth Hunter Bergman For The Pitt News
What do unicorns, Sasquatch and the “freshman 15” have in common? Studies show all three are myths. A 2010 University of Michigan study found that first-year students typically gain between 2.5 and six pounds — much less than the storied 15. Meg Mayer-Costa, a registered dietician for the University, said the freshman 15 has been around for two decades. The first article that mentioned the “freshman 15” was published in Seventeen magazine in 1989. The story didn’t refer to scientific evidence, but the phrase still survives today. Taylor Salamone, a freshman marketing major, said she feels worried to look at a scale. “I am a little scared of the freshman 15 and really hope I don’t gain it,” Salamone said. “I’d much rather lose the freshman 15.” A 2010 Carleton University research study said several factors contribute to the weight gain that
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ACTIVISM
freshmen often see. The “majority of students’ diets do not meet nutritional guidelines, particularly in terms of recommended fruit and vegetable intake” the study said, and 70 percent of students studied did not meet physical exercise requirements. With on-site dining facilities in both Litchfield Towers and Sutherland, staying away from the easy access all-you-can-eat food can be a challenge for Pitt students. Furthermore, when dining halls offer a significantly wider array of foods, University of Michigan researchers found that students will eat more because they’re usually trying to get a taste of everything. “Freshmen assigned to dormitories with on-site dining halls gained more weight than those who had to venture outside of their dorms for food,” the Michigan study said. Dale Shoemaker But with Pitt being the 12th Staff Writer healthiest college campus according to Greatist.com, the likelihood of putting on the 15 is very low, “I don’t know but I’ve been told!” the crowd called. and the possibility of losing or “We don’t need no gas and coal!” A crowd of nearly 400,000 people, including Freshman 15 3 55 Pitt students, shouted and held signs in New
Dale Shoemaker | Staff Writer
Pitt students march to free the planet York City Sunday for the People’s Climate March, the largest environmental rally in history, according to its website. “Fund Solutions, not Pollution,” one sign read. Nick Goodfellow, one of the student leaders from
People’s March
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