Vol. 105 Issue 76
@thepittnews PITT’S GOT TALENT
Friday, November 21, 2014
Pittnews.com
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Pittsburgh ranks second in state for LGBTQ friendliness Meagan Hart Staff Writer Sarita Brady, a genderqueer person, feels restricted in daily life. Brady only feels comfortable at the Rainbow Alliance office and chooses to use gender-neutral bathrooms. “It means that I feel compartmentalized as a queer and genderqueer person,” Brady, a freshman, said. There is at least one single-user, gender-neutral bathroom in 33 out of 74 buildings on the campus map, and most of those 33 buildings contain two or more. Ning Jan, bioengineering, graduate student, performs in front of judges at the Global Ties talent Despite not feeling completely show. Nate Smith | Staff Photographer comfortable in Pittsburgh, Brady, Rainbow Alliance’s communications chair, said the city is slowly
Pitt faculty honored nationwide Lauren Wilson For The Pitt News
Very little of what students learn in the classroom may apply to real-life campaigning, at least according to Pitt political science professor William Dunn. Dunn is one of this year’s National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) fellows and a former policy analyst and speechwriter for Ronald
Reagan’s gubernatorial campaign in 1966. While his time spent on the campaign was a great professional experience, he recognized that he wanted to apply his political science education to other endeavors. “In this case, I discovered how little of political science theory and research could be applied in political campaigns, particularly one driven by an ideology I did not personally support,” Dunn said.
NAPA, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit organization that advises government organizations to improve public management, inducted Dunn and his fellow Pitt professor John T. S. Keeler last Thursday as fellows. Dunn is a professor of public and international affairs, Keeler is the Dean of the Graduate School of Public and International Affairs.
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improving the quality of life for LGBTQ people. The improvements show in a new ranking by the Human Rights Campaign’s 2014 municipal equality index (MEI), which grades cities based on how well they support LGBTQ rights. In the report, which was released Nov. 14, Pittsburgh ranked as the second-best city in the state, behind Philadelphia. The Human Rights Campaign scored Pittsburgh a 90 out of 100, a 25 percent increase from last year’s score of 72 points. The average city score was 59 points, with 25 percent of cities scoring more than 80 points. The MEI bases its ratings on 47 criteria that fall under six main cat-
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Showing up big
Panthers blow out Wolverines for their second win of the year
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Heather Tennant | Staff Photographer