Word: hwang
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...square inches. Different dimensional requirements are dictated for other sites, further increasing the complexity of the rules.Still, the Commission does not concern itself with every last nuance, Allen stressing that it is the “spirit of the rules, not the rules themselves” that count. The Hwang-Wong campaign used Christmas lights to spell out their ticket’s name on Thayer Hall late last night. Tim R. Hwang ’08 said there was no “better way to celebrate the revolutionary movement than by having huge lights on a freshman dorm...
...worried.” Brian S. Gillis ’07-’08 and his running mate, Morgan C. Wimberley ’08, have been charged with 35 infractions and have registered $60 worth of expenses. The ticket for Tim R. Hwang ’08 and running mate Alex S. Wong ’08 has not yet been docked for any violations. They have spent $250 on red jumpsuits for the campaign staff and $10 for matching posters...
...worried.” Brian S. Gillis ’07-’08 and his running mate, Morgan C. Wimberley ’08, have been charged with 35 infractions and have registered $60 worth of expenses. The ticket for Tim R. Hwang ’08 and running mate Alex S. Wong ’08 has not yet been docked for any violations. They have spent $250 on red jumpsuits for the campaign staff and $10 for matching posters...
...Free from the obligation to fund social events, the Council has reallocated its budget to increase the amount of money awarded to House Committees (HoCos), student groups, and the undergraduate party fund. Only two of the six presidential candidates, Brian S. Gillis ’08 and Tim R. Hwang ’08 are campaigning on structural reform platforms. Gillis advocates expanding the council’s current structure while Hwang supports dissolving all the committees. Haddock and Riley ran on a platform to remove the social programming responsibilities—at the time delegated to the council?...
Contrary to what their blood-red campaign posters demand, Undergraduate Council presidential candidates Tim R. Hwang ’08 and Alexander S. Wong ’08 do not actually want to “kill the UC.” Rather, they want to wound it severely.The offbeat presidential candidate and his armchair-theorist running mate say that if elected, they would eliminate the UC’s role as middleman between students and the administration and transfer decision-making power to undergraduates.Neither Hwang nor Wong have had any UC experience, but they embrace their outsider status...