Word: glazer
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Last spring, serving on the Allston Committee together, Undergraduate Council presidential candidate Matthew J. Glazer ’06 and I were able to get a full section of the planning report devoted to a student center and a strong recommendation that under no circumstances should the campus be divided between the River, Allston and the Quad. This year, there will be many more specific recommendations and decisions coming from the seven curricular review committees and the Allston planning process. No other ticket can impact these processes to the extent that Matt and vice presidential candidate Clay T. Capp...
...four years on the council, I have encountered no one as hard-working and thoughtful as Matt Glazer. I cannot tell you how many times I have talked to him at four a.m. while he was prepping for student-faculty committees or writing legislation for the council. He has the unending support of a great majority of council members, because, having watched him in action, they trust his leadership. He has convinced deans, mayors and House masters of the need for blue-light phones in Cambridge Common, improved sections and pushed through universal keycard access. Importantly, he has wisely chosen...
Many students are justifiably unhappy with life at Harvard. But voting for the ticket that complains the loudest or claims to have found that silver bullet is not the best way to ensure change. Matt Glazer and Clay Capp have an incredible record of going to bat for students with the administration and producing real results for their effort. They are the ticket that balances advocacy expertise with the financial competency we lacked last semester. They have wisely prioritized opening up the council, engaging students through innovative new approaches and uniting the undergraduate community. Based on my experience as president...
Undergraduate Council presidential hopefuls Matthew J. Glazer ’06 and Tracy “Ty” Moore II ’06 were campaigning outside the Science Center on a misty, cold Tuesday, the seventh of December. Their supporters bore competing signs—yellow for Moore and orange for Glazer—and a cacophony of shouted slogans filled the air. On the walk back from the Science Center, students were greeted by these same signs pasted on kiosks, stapled to House billboards, stuffed into mailboxes and slipped under room doors...
...unable to cast a vote on the latter while declining to participate in the former. It isn’t hard to imagine, for instance, that a given student might feel that the distinction between renewable and exhaustible energy is more significant than the differences between Matthew J. Glazer ’06, Teo P. Nicolais ’06 and Tracy “Ty” Moore II ’06. The present council electoral system, however, does not allow for that sentiment. There are two possible outcomes: either voters choose their council presidential picks arbitrarily...