9-23-19

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The Pitt News

T h e i n d e p e n d e n t s t ude nt ne w spap e r of t he U niversity of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | September 23, 2019 ­| Volume 110 | Issue 28

HUNDREDS OF PITTSBURGHERS JOIN GLOBAL CLIMATE STRIKE STUDENTS PARK

THEIR CREATIVITY OUTSIDE HILLMAN Rebecca Johnson For The Pitt News

On Friday afternoon, students gathered at the City-County Building downtown to participate in the global Youth Climate Strike. Following speeches encouraging a sustainable future, the crowd marched to Market Square and back with various chants. Bader Abdulmajeed | senior staff photographer

Benjamin Nigrosh Staff Writer

No one knows exactly how many people participated in Friday’s worldwide climate strike, but it’s clear the number is in the millions. In Pittsburgh, the youth-led protest brought hundreds Downtown to protest what they see as insufficient world action on climate change. Pitt senior Sarah Hart, an environmental studies major, helped organize the strike. “Silence is being complicit. I feel like this is the

tipping point,” Hart said. “I’m hoping that this is the one that’s going to make history.” Grant Street was blocked off between Forbes and Fourth avenues for the afternoon to make room for the crowds of people chanting, shouting and playing bongos. The crowd gathered at the Pittsburgh City-County Building on Friday from noon to 4 p.m., holding signs with phrases like “There is no planet B” and “Learn to change or learn to swim.” The global climate strike was inspired by

16-year-old Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, who sparked a worldwide movement when she started striking each Friday in Stockholm last year. Hart was joined by Leandra Mira, an 18-yearold Upper St. Clair native who has been striking for climate change on the steps of the City-County Building for the last 17 weeks. Unlike the first few weeks she spent striking this summer, Mira was far from alone on Friday. The group of roughly 300 could be heard singing through the streets before See Climate on page 2

The cars were cleared out of Hillman Library’s parking spaces last Friday. in their place were students painting neurotransmitters on Christmas cards, presenting research opportunities in chalk drawings, scavenging for rare artifacts and forming melodic lines of prose on cardboard boxes. Pitt’s Center for Creativity and Department of Parking, Transportation and Services cosponsored PARK(ing) Day last Friday, an event where 19 student groups and University offices transformed the parking spaces outside Hillman Library into temporary exhibits. The event was the kickoff for the so-called “Year of Creativity,” the sixth incarnation of Pitt’s “Year of” series of themed academic years. Each parking space was empty when the groups arrived, meaning the limits of the displays were up to the imagination of their creators. One of these displays, constructed by Pitt’s Makerspace, an engineering club, featured multiple weight-bearing chairs, tables and even a prototype television, all made completely of recycled cardboard. Audrey Chester, a senior mechanical engineering major, said the Makerspace’s display was a combination of creativity and sustainability. “Creativity and the Makerspace mission is where the theoretical class content meets the realSee Park on page 2


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