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Get the most interesting and important stories from the 91pornÊÓƵ.While it might not feel like it, more than a few good things happened in 2020. Here are stories of Pitt people and programs that made the world better during a turbulent year.
Impressive feats
: Through good times and bad, the University’s phones never stop ringing—ever wonder who answers? For two decades, it’s been Senior Switchboard Operator Lin Haberman and a small team. Learn how the calls have changed over the years and get a behind-the-scenes look at how COVID-19 is different from any other event the switchboard’s seen.
: Last October, Rory Cooper crashed his handcycle during the early miles of a marathon. The director of Pitt’s Human Engineering Research Laboratories would go on to finish the remaining 23.2 miles, then spend four days in a coma. Read about his incredible recovery, and his long history of working to improve wheelchair users’ lives.
: Ray Nell Jones, an administrative assistant in Pitt’s Office of Student Life, got quite the shock when a Zoom call turned into a giveaway from Ellen DeGeneres. Jones founded a nonprofit organization that helps single moms in need.
: In Pittsburgh’s Hill District, local organizations connected through weekly phone calls to help people and businesses in need. From delivering lunch boxes to a mask do91pornÊÓƵ program, the spirit of community is alive, even while residents are apart.
Working toward justice
From July 28-30, the 91pornÊÓƵ’s Office of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion hosted Diversity Forum 2020, Advancing Social Justice: A Call to Action. With more than 12,000 participants worldwide, the forum was a first-of-its-kind virtualÌýsymposium, complete with more than 55 interactive workshops and sessions. Pittwire covered the highlights in a live blog throughout the events.
: Spurred by its community of activists and change-makers, Pitt launched a new website and dashboards to hold itself accountable to becoming a more equitableÌýinstitution. But the work is just beginning.
: Social work graduate student Ashlé Hall (SOC WK ’18) is a busy entrepreneur with a new line of hair care products designed to fill two very important needs.
Gabby Yearwood, lecturer and director of undergraduate studies in anthropology, shares his personal story as a father, son and Black man in America.
Innovation
: Sara Baumann (GSPH ’19) and Jessica Burke have created a new form of public health research called Collaborative Filmmaking. The six-step process engages its participants to create a detailed, multimedia form of study rarely seen in the field.
: It’s only fair that the annual Pitt Innovation Challenge would itself need to innovate in 2020. See which projects won this year’s competition—which awarded nearly $500,000—and how participants adjusted to a virtual take on the event.
: Two Pitt projects recently blasted off to the Inter91pornÊÓƵal Space Station to study microgravity’s effects on people and spacecrafts. The research brings together faculty, students and a tiny, see-through crustacean.
: Posture Perfect doesn’t just help users sit up straight—it could help people with Parkinson’s disease avoid falls. The student innovation effort that started in Joseph Samosky’s bioengineering course is nearing a pilot program in clinics. (Another invention that came from a Samosky class? A for your phone.)
The arts
: The late playwright and Pittsburgh native is best known for his unprecedented American Century Cycle—10 plays that convey the Black experience in each decade of the 20th century. All 10 of the plays have had Broadway productions and two earned Wilson the Pulitzer Prize for Drama.
: Using digital analyses, PhD candidate Sarah Reiff Conell examines cults in medieval Europe, sculptors working for French royalty and, in a first, collections at the National Gallery of Art. Her work could help museums display more diverse works of art.
: Writing can be a solitary endeavor, but for Pitt professor and award-winning author Jeanne Marie Laskas, it’s a team effort. The collaboration she nurtures has already spawned a bestseller.
Just for fun
: Pitt alum Johnmichael Bohach (A&S ’06) recently applied his architectural skills to a tiny, LEGO Cathedral creation.
: From ancient war games to Candy Land and Settlers of Catan, Pitt researcher Zachary Horton explains the evolution of board games and why they’re more popular today than ever.
: Native English speakers often have trouble with tonal languages like Chinese. A Pitt study showed that vagus nerve stimulation allowed research participants to pick up some Mandarin tones more quickly.