Word: horan
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Harvard-Radcliffe Gilbert & Sullivan players enact their namesakes’ most famous comic operetta. This tale of dewey-eyed maidens, bungling policemen and soft-hearted pirates is a known crowd-pleaser. Directed by Ashley A.P. Horan ’05 and Mark P. Musico ’07. Reserved Seating. Tickets available at the Harvard Box Office, evenings: regular $12/$10, students & seniors $8/$6, matinees: regular $10/$8, students & seniors $6/$4, Thursday $4 with a Harvard Student I.D. Friday, Saturday and Thursday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m. Agassiz Theater...
...It’s a cutthroat world with postering,” explains Ashley P. Horan ’05, ex-president and current member of On Thin Ice (OTI), the improv group. She deems the current state of affairs “a very serious situation.” Her group has been subject to potential fines and possible foul play over the issue. Once, says Horan, OTI postered “on a sandwich board that we had not reserved…someone, like in the Krokodiloes perhaps, reported us” (when questioned, David A. Eisenberg...
...always feel more productive after postering”. As more and more student groups join the fray each Monday and Thursday, the postering debate will continue to rage. Meanwhile, some marketing renegades are bypassing orthodox methods to spread their messages of tickets, free pizza and comps. Horan admits that her favorite unauthorized place to poster is an oft-overlooked one: “bathroom stalls, even though it’s totally illegal.” After all, the ladies’ room is one marketing arena in which those Kroks just can’t compete...
Ashley A.P. Horan ’05, who attended a program in Cameroon, Central Africa and held leadership positions in On Thin Ice and Harvard Students for Choice after her return, agrees that students who study abroad would choose their extracurriculars more wisely and would better avoid burning out from overcommitting themselves...
...majority of students FM spoke with, rejection has been useful in steering them down other productive avenues. Horan is now considering smaller firms in addition to the larger ones Harvard students gravitate toward. Carrie’s rejection from ASB allowed her to participate in another service trip. And Jennifer—who was rejected from the Undergraduate Council and The Crimson Key Society—now runs a student group concerned with diversity. “All that rejection helped streamline my attitudes and goals,” she says...