Vol. 105 Issue 43
@thepittnews SAX IN PUBLIC
Pittnews.com
Friday, October 3, 2014 Pitt launches Indonesian arts partnership Danielle Fox Assistant News Editor
Darryl Leeper blows on the saxophone at Market square during the weekly farmers market. Christine Lim | Staff Photographer
Marx is not Dead
The University of Pittsburgh and the Indonesian College of Performing Arts in Bandung, West Java, will launch a partnership next Friday furthering the schools’ study of Indonesian music and culture. The University announced this week that Pitt’s Department of Music will host 20 administrators, scholars, musicians and dancers from West Java to witness the signing of a memorandum officiating the partnership. Indonesian ambassador Budi Bowoleksono, Indonesian College of Performing Arts director Een Herdiani, consul general
of the Republic of Indonesia in New York Ghafur Akbar Dharmaputra as well as a representative from the mayor’s office and eight faculty members will attend the event. “A formal agreement between Pitt and the Indonesian College will facilitate better communication between the two schools,” department of music chair Andrew Weintraub said in a release. The visiting performers will present a free concert, “Music and Dance of West Java: The Past, Present, and Future of Sundanese Performing Arts,”
Indonesia
Pittsburgh students keeps the revolution alive Sabrina Romano Staff Writer
Their flyers are compelling, flashing pictures of socialist icons such as Karl Marx and Malcolm X. Their message is fight capitalism and empower the working class. At a time when many young
people in America are apolitical, according to a 2014 poll from Harvard’s Institute of Politic, these are budding Marxists at Pitt. “Marxism is the idea that workers create all of the worth and the working class should run the economy,” a student at Community College of Allegheny
County (CCAC), who goes by the pseudonym Jose Manuel in fear of being blacklisted, said. “The MSA has two goals in mind. One is to have political discussions about Marxism and one is to mobilize students about local labor struggles.”
Marxist
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Cavaliers Calling
Pitt looks to bounce back against Virginia
page 7
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