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The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | September 13, 2017 | Volume 108 | Issue 23
POLITICIANS SUPPORT PITT UNIONS
Bands compete for Fall Fest opener
Janine Faust Assistant News Editor As grad students and faculty gathered outside Chancellor Patrick Gallagher’s door in the Cathedral of Learning Tuesday afternoon, a Pitt police officer cut a path to the front and addressed the crowd. “Who’s in charge here? Where’s your leader?” he asked the people clutching signs and cameras outside the chancellor’s office. A man filming the spectacle on his phone outside the door spoke up. “We don’t have one, we’re a democratic union,” he said. Just inside the office door, union organizer Beth Shaaban spoke to Gallagher’s executive assistant, Alison Wateska. “We’re really happy here. We love Pitt, we love working here,” Shaaban said. “But we do want the opportunity to unionize.” This protest is one of many held since both Pitt faculty and grad students officially announced their separate campaigns to unionize with the help of United Steelworkers. Since the January 2016 announcement, the union organizing committees have been marshaling support from their colleagues, collecting interest cards and staging protests. Tuesday’s gathering ended with delivering Gallagher letters from dozens of elected officials, expressing their support of the union and their hope that the Pitt administration would remain neutral.
INFLUENTIALJ, the winner of the Pitt Program Council Battle of the Bands, performs at the contest Tuesday evening. Thomas Yang STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Madison Hook Staff Writer
The crowd hushed as INFLUENTIALJ strode onstage, mic in hand, while his original music video projected onto the wall behind him — featuring eye-catching scenes of the performer throughout Pitt’s campus dressed in an electric blue suit beside the bright red doors of Heinz Chapel. The rapper made his Battle of the Bands debut a memorable experience by engaging See Unions on page 4 the audience and descending from the stage
into the crowd to perform his music. Not long after he left the stage, the judges deliberated briefly before naming INFLUENTIALJ as this year’s Battle of the Bands winner — an announcement met with raucous cheers from INFLUENTIALJ’s posse of friends and fans, and from the rest of the crowd as well. Three musical acts competed tonight at Battle of the Bands in the William Pitt Union Assembly Room for the chance to open for musical artists Amine and Desiigner at Fall Fest Sept. 23.
Sponsored by the Pitt Program Council, the event is held twice a year in anticipation of Fall Fest and Bigelow Bash in the spring. PPC Special Events Director Zach Linn began planning a month ago — getting the word out through posters, social media and campus TV screens in order to find Pitt’s best musicians. “It’s a great opportunity to give the musically inclined students the chance to perform on a big stage with headliners they know See Bands on page 3