Word: chaired
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...them fight, although one year, coming back, I had one wrapped in a towel and stuffed in the overhead compartment. And so we get up and everyone was kind of groggy and I open the overhead compartment and the thing just fell down, hit the person sitting in the chair, and got all mangled. The little globe thing got all squished in. I almost killed someone...
...religious and cultural groups to promote an interfaith dialogue, according to Rizvi. “Fasting is so integral to the religion, so we encouraged people to fast, but it wasn’t mandatory,” said Tariq N. Ali ’09, the chair of the Fast-a-thon. Having deprived themselves of HUDS various grilled chicken delicacies, hungry fasters were invited to catered dinners that evening, where they gorged themselves on pizza and Middle-Eastern delicacies. The event certainly fulfilled half of its twofold agenda: HUDS donated $3,400.50 to Save the Children...
...comparison to the free-speech movements of the 1960s. However not everyone in our generation relies on VoteGopher for political advice. Instead, some avid political junkies have ventured straight into the jaws of the national campaign. Take, for example, Steve E. Johnston ’09, Northeast Co-Chair of Students for McCain. Eager to talk politics, Johnston reflected on McCain’s extensive military service and his “straight talk” style: “There are lots of politicians out there and few leaders. Even among Republicans, McCain is only presidential candidate that...
...PIECEThough he is sitting as he speaks in Lowell Dining Hall, Clayton W. Brooks III ’10 seems as if he’s on his feet, preaching from a pulpit in a low-pitched lightly-southern drawl that drifts toward the rafters. Brooks is the Administrative Chair of the Harvard College Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender (LGBT) Political Coalition, which he helped found last year. Called simply “The Coalition” within the gay community, the focus of Brooks’ organization, unlike BGLTSA, is strictly political.Yet unlike many members...
...reduced the frequency of organic and free-range food products, despite the fact that food vendors have raised the prices for the university. One student told The Crimson that Yale had actually expanded sustainable options in all its dining halls. Aaron D. Chadbourne ’06, former chair of HUDS student advisory committee, told The Crimson that HUDS can request what they’d like to change in the board rate, but the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) must approve the figure. He added that HUDS may be constrained by what FAS thinks HUDS needs. Perhaps...