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 | December 5, 2019 | Volume110 | Issue 93
SERVICE POEMS FROM PRISON: PUP CLUB Students share incarcerated voices GETS THREE NEW PUPILS Ashton Crawley Staff Writer
Caroline Cox is graduating in the spring, but she’s about to get a new roommate — an 8-month-old puppy. Cox will spend her last months on campus raising a service dog through the Panthers’ Service Pups club. The club — where Pitt students raise and train service dogs — was originally founded in 2017 but reregistered with a new parent organization this past semester. They will receive three puppies to raise on Friday. The dogs will go everywhere with the trainers for a year and a half. The new puppies, Iverson III, Koji II and Kaptain II, come from Canine Companions for Independence, a nonprofit based in Santa Rosa, California. The student trainers will head to the Pittsburgh International Airport on Friday morning to pick them up after their long trip. According to Cox, a senior studying social work, the club has been steadily growing since it was founded, and members hope it will continue to grow throughout the upcoming semesters. “I think it’s about to get a lot bigger. There’s so much interest for it,” Cox said. CCI, founded in 1975, places dogs with people free of charge — one of the main reasons the Panthers’ Service Pups club wanted to affiliate See Pups on page 2
Student performs “A Father’s Love Changes the Past,” written by inside student Jay. Courtesy of Brian Gentry
Brian Gentry
the Pitt students — they talked back and forth, shouting opinions about Antwon Rose’s Editor’s note: The last names of both inside shooting in 2018. But the words that came out and outside students in this piece have been of their mouths weren’t their own. Instead, withheld at the request of the instructors to they were the words from pieces of creative protect their anonymity, as one of the program’s writing by incarcerated students in class with rules prevents contact with students after the them. “Shot three times, back, aorta, lung, heart class is over. / Antwon, no danger whatsoever / Grassy lot, It seemed almost like a debate between Senior Staff Writer
The Pitt News Best Of Edition Must Complete 50% of the questions Deadline to Vote is Dec. 6TH
Antwon appeared lifeless, facedown.” — “Antwon on the Ground: June 19, 2019,” David The performative sparring was part of an event called Clear & Present Stranger: Words from Incarcerated Writers, which packed City of Asylum on Wednesday night, with more than 100 people in attendance. At the event, Pitt students performed the poetry of incarSee Voices on page 5
Head to Pittnews.com to vote in our Best Of 2019 Ballot
2 Random WInners each win 2 lumberjaxes axe throwing passes!