University of Pittsburgh

American Idol Star Elliot Yamin Emcees Pittsburgh’s Campus Idol

Ten finalists from five local universities competed to be Pittsburgh’s Campus Superstar, an American Idol-style event with a prize of a $5000 scholarship. The event, held Thursday March 29 at 7pm at the Carnegie Music Hall in Oakland, featured Elliot Yamin — a runner-up in last year’s American Idol as the emcee. Yamin opened the event with a performance of “Take My Breath Away,” off his debut album.
After the screening of a video provided by the Hillel JUC titled “I like Hillel because…”, the lights dimmed and the crowd cheered as the student sang their hearts out.
Freshman Nick Cosgrove from Carnegie Mellon University won the grand prize, and runners up Rob Kurth (Duquesne University) and Alyssa Thatcher (University of Pittsburgh) left with $1000 scholarships. The judges, Eta Cox, Lynn Cullen, Ken Rice, and Richard Rauh, gawked over Cosgrove alongside screaming fans applauding his talent and poise.
“You said ‘I’ll be better when I’m older,’” Cox exclaimed, “and honey, that’s scary.”
More than 100 students auditioned for this scholarship opportunity in November, twenty-four of whom were chosen as semi-finalists. A panel of judges chose the final ten, and they competed Thursday night in front of hundreds of students and community members.
The event raised over $270,000 for the Hillel Jewish University Center, exceeding the goals of staff and interns who had been planning the event since early September. The event was part of the annual Not Quite Kosher affair underwritten by the Sanford N. Robinson, Sr. Memorial Lecture Endowment Fund.

Palestinian Journalist Comes to Pittsburgh

Khaled Abu-Toameh, a Palestinian, Israeli-Arab, Muslim journalist is traveling around North American campuses at the expense of Hillels, pro-Israel student groups, and Aish Hatorah. He stopped by the University of Pittsburgh at 8:30pm and Carnegie Mellon University at 4pm on Wednesday, where he shared his experiences as a Senior Editor on Palestinian Affairs for The Jerusalem Post, BBC News, NBC News, US News and World Report, as well as other international news sources.
After working for the Palestine Liberation Organization newspaper in East Jerusalem and the West Bank, Toameh decided to stay in Israel after college and become what he called a “real journalist.” He explained that he sees his role as a government watchdog, and called on the international media to challenge Western leaders and pressure the Palestinian authority to invest in social welfare for their people.
Toameh answered tough questions from a mixed audience and threw in accusations toward both Israel and the PLO, ranging from human rights violations to corruption to hypocrisy. “All that matters to these governments is how the world sees them,” Toameh said, “The real battle is in the media. “

Meredith Mishkin

a sophomore studying philosophy and international area studies at the University of Pittsburgh. I’ve wanted to be a writer since I wrote my first book of poems at age 6. However, since then I’ve struggled to write a piece as moving and insightful.




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