Word: council
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...guests. Some of the groups even taught attendees some dance moves from their routines. Over the course of the evening, the marathon attracted over 150 students. Operating costs for the marathon were covered by a Drug and Alcohol Peer Advisor grant and a grant from the Undergraduate Council. Including ticket sales and donations from corporate sponsors, the marathon raised approximately $3,000, according to Verma. Compared to dance marathons held at other colleges throughout the nation, the HCDM’s fundraising efforts fell short. The Children’s Miracle Network Dance Marathon Program has aided different colleges throughout...
...Judicial Board will hear a case. In fact, it will decide whether to hear a case. The story also misstated the name of the committee examining the Administrative Board. It is the Ad Board Review Committee, not the Ad Board Reform Committee. Further, the story reported that the Undergraduate Council will "conduct" a search for undergraduates to serve on the Student Faculty Judicial Board. The UC does not conduct the search, but "oversees" the process and works with the secretary of the board to find the students...
According to Shi, Red Cross waived almost all the administrative and supply fees, and the Boston University Fitness and Recreation Center lent 31 mannequins. In the end, total costs amounted to $700, which was covered by a grant from the Undergraduate Council...
...that any of the 18 provinces, except Baghdad, can combine to form regions similar to the northern Kurdish-run zone, which has been semi-autonomous since 1991. While the Kurds insist upon the principle, the Sunnis have traditionally been strongly opposed. Among the Shi'ites, the Supreme Islamic Iraqi Council (SIIC) has favored the idea a super region in the south, but the movement of the radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr has insisted on a strong central state. But the proposal to turn Basra into an autonomous region is comes not from the Supreme Council, but rather from a coalition...
...While the Supreme Council - whose idea of a super-region is far more expansive than just Basra, and whose concern would obviously be to create a political entity in which it could rule - is sitting on the fence in response to the Basra autonomy proposal, the Sadrists are furious. "It's playing with fire that could engulf all of Iraq," says Sheikh Salah al-Obeidi, a spokesman for Sadr's movement in the southern Shi'ite holy city of Najaf. "The result might be the division of Iraq if it's forced now, during this period...