Word: andrews
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...mate Tara Gadgil ’07 would be the ticket to beat.“On paper, just looking at the candidates themselves, I think you can say that they came into it as favorites, but it wasn’t theirs to lose,” said Andrew H. Golis ’06, who has followed the election on his blog, Cambridge Common.Both Voith and Gadgil are the respective chairs of their UC committees. Voith is the chair of the Campus Life Committee, and Gadgil is the chair of the Student Affairs Committee.But that momentum seemed...
...night, slamming Voith and Gadgil for making contradictory statements to their groups on the role of the military on campus.The recent events have left some council watchers wondering if Voith and Gadgil can recover their momentum.“I personally think they are toast,” said Andrew H. Golis ’06, whose blog, Cambridge Common, has provided constant commentary on the election. “I think that the HRC-BGLTSA [joint statement] was devastating. Their response didn’t make it any better.”Aaron D. Chadbourne...
...maybe he won’t make it as the next David Copperfield. But the next Andrew Lloyd Webber? That could happen...
...said, “but [the blogs] are a great way to engage in the larger public forum. People like to express their opinion in a real-time environment, keep in touch with what’s going on, and make their opinions heard quickly.”Andrew H. Golis ’06, the editor of Cambridge Common, said that part of the motivation for the blogs’ UC election focus was to broaden and clarify the discussion.“There are a group of people who find The Crimson’s coverage fairly superficial...
...issue.Both the Daily Pennsylvanian and the website collegehumor.com have published one of the photos, which clearly shows the nude backside of one individual and the leg of another against a large, open window (please see photo, page 1).The university offered the student a settlement in October, said Andrew B. Geier, the third-year psychology graduate student who advised the student during the disciplinary process.The proposed deal included three punishments: disciplinary probation until graduation, writing an essay “discussing what was wrong with the conduct you were involved in,” and a letter of apology...