Vol. 105 Issue 21
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Pittnews.com
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
Musical backgrounds pay off for students Anjana Muriali Staff Writer
Interested students swarmed the WPU last night to meet the ladies of Pitt’s sororities. Theo Schwarz | Staff Photographer
STUDENT GOVERNMENT
Board test-drives travel grant program Abbey Reighard Senior Staff Writer
After a false start, the wheels are now in motion for the Student Travel Grant program. The program is the brainchild of Student Government Board President, Mike Nites, and will create a fund for individual students conducting research to receive up to $250 to travel to conferences to present their work. At the beginning of
each fiscal year, the Board will set aside $20,000 from the sum it allocates from the Student Activities Fund. Undergraduate, full-time and nonCollege of General Studies students contribute $160 in student activities fees to the fund annually. For this semester, the Board will only put aside $10,000, so Board members can evaluate the project. If the trial run goes well, Nites said, the Board will reserve the additional $10,000 for the remainder of
the fiscal year. Nites pitched the program in February with an expected launch last semester. The launch took longer than expected, according to Nites, so the Board decided to move the trial run to this semester. Although Nites has previously said he wants to limit spending, specifically among club sports, he said the grant will allow students who aren’t involved in club
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For Matt Aelmore, making money as a musician is a “tricky situation.” Aelmore is one of many Pitt students who work as musicians and hope to make a little money on the side while doing it. According to the Department of Music’s website, there are about 40 graduate students and 50 undergraduate music majors, and Pittsburgh offers a host of venues for student artists. The competition is tough, but Aelmore and other students learn how to network with employers, manage time and update their skill sets in a way that beats sitting in a cubicle. When he plays at bars with his band, the AM Faces, they usually get a cut of what the bar makes at the door. The band has played at bars such as Gooskie’s in Polish Hill and Howlers in Downtown. Aelmore said he didn’t feel comfortable giving an exact figure of his earnings, but said it’s “not much.” “To really make money, it’s kind of a lottery thing,” Aelmore said. Aelmore plays the french horn, guitar and electric bass, but he actually gets more jobs as a composer than as a performer. As a commissioned composer, Aelmore, a doctoral student studying music theory and
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