Word: kohs
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...should have kept closer tabs on our campaign staff, and it is now apparent that we should have been more clear with where we stood on various issues, as was evident in our answers to the BGLTSA and the HRC.”But Daniel A. Koh ’07, Voith and Gadgil’s campaign manager, said that spirits were high on the campaign.“Right now, John, Tara, and I feel great,” said Koh. “We feel confident. It has been such a great experience, no matter the outcome...
...Undergraduate Council (UC) elections this week.Blogs such as Cambridge Common and Team Zebra have risen to prominence in the last week, when the UC election race began, with their constant stream of coverage and ability to provide a more interactive forum for discussion than the traditional campus media.Daniel A. Koh ’07, the campaign manager for the John F. Voith ’07-Tara Gadgil ’07 ticket, said that the blogs helped to supply a medium that was lacking before.“Conversation goes on as a result of Crimson articles...
...Patashnik ’07, who is the campaign manager of the Haddock-Riley ticket. “There are a lot of people whose vote has been invalidated because of the deception of the Voith-Gadgil campaign,” he said. Voith-Gadgil Campaign Manager Daniel A. Koh ’07 could not be reached for comment last night. —ALEXANDER D. BLANKFEIN
...intense and as soon as the interview starts she is all business, choosing her words carefully as she answers questions.“When [Voith] comes into a room, everyone wants to be with him,” says Voith and Gadgil’s campaign manager Daniel A. Koh ’07. “Everyone wants to be around him, but he acts like you’re the only other person in the world.”Koh is one of Voith’s blockmates and he went to high school with Gadgil at Phillips...
...left the profession to pursue writing, and late the next year, he started to work on his first book. Not surprisingly, “Storming the Court” is immersed in law, focusing on the protracted legal battles that now-Yale Law Dean Harold H. Koh ’75 and a shifting band of students fought against the elder Bush and Clinton administrations on behalf of Haitian refugees detained at Guantánamo Bay. The book began as a tale about America’s occasional betrayal of its age-old reputation as a haven for refugees...