Word: commenters
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Students looking to comment on the crispiness of their popcorn chicken or the availability of cracklin’ oat bran in their dining hall on the recent biannual Harvard University Dining Services survey found themselves disappointed, after HUDS changed the format of the questionnaire from past years. On this semester’s dining satisfaction Survey, HUDS focused primarily on sustainability, with 11 out of 25 survey questions relating directly to this issue. They also eliminated the section for open-ended response,s instead using a multiple choice format. In the past, HUDS’ survey provided a forum...
...firm Ernst and Young to create a strategic plan that would address its financial problems. But progress on that plan was “scrambled” when the state announced the additional cuts, Finucane said. There will be a community meeting on Nov. 6 to allow residents to comment on the strategic plan that CHA is developing. —Staff Writer Sarah J. Howland can be reached at showland@fas.harvard.edu...
...were enthusiastic both about the event itself and its cause. “More College events should have a cause behind them,” MaryKate Driscoll ’11 said. “It does more to motivate students to go.” Bird declined to comment on how much money the event brought in that night. The Harvard Cancer Society and Harvard Premedical Society will be sponsoring the Harvard College Dance Marathon on Nov. 14 to raise money for The Jimmy Fund...
...first choice, but...in U.S. politics, we vote the top of the ticket,” Wisse said in an e-mailed statement. “A vote for Obama seems a foolhardy leap of faith rather than a choice of lesser evils.” Fried declined to comment on the reasons behind his decision to vote for Obama, beyond referring to a blog post by Sunstein on The New Republic’s Web site that announced the news of Fried’s endorsement. Sunstein compared Fried’s defection from the McCain campaign to that...
...also served as advisers to the Republican candidate. Economics professors Martin S. Feldstein and Kenneth S. Rogoff both advise McCain. History professor Niall Ferguson also served as an informal foreign policy adviser to McCain during the primaries. These professors could not be reached for an interview or declined to comment on their role in the campaign. Three of the seven professors who donated to McCain, all of whom identify themselves as conservative or Republican, touted their candidate in interviews over the past few weeks. A fourth revealed that he recently donated to the Obama campaign after McCain picked Alaska...