Word: lacks
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...support to Voith and Gadgil. Because of this e-mail, the Voith and Gadgil campaign was fined $80 by the UC Election Commission (EC) for violating election rules. While Voith and Gadgil claim they had no knowledge of the e-mail, and the EC agrees, it nevertheless demonstrates a lack of control of their campaign. And this is not the only occasion on which Voith and Gadgil have lost control of their staff—before Thanksgiving break, their campaign registered www.HaddockRiley.com, irritating John S. Haddock ’07, Annie R. Riley ’07, and their supporters...
...Sullivan says with an Irish brogue. In the next month, he plans to hold a “Grand Opening,” complete with a mayoral visit to cut the ribbon. He explains that financial strain due to building renovations was behind the initial lack of fanfare (literal fanfares aside, since he did commission a bagpiper to play at Head of the Charles to herald the pub’s arrival). Word of mouth advertising has only gone so far, although this weekend implies that O’ Sullivan knows what he’s talking about...
...Park, a Penn senior, wrote in an e-mail. But “it’s not prosecutable because the couple was in plain sight.”Senior Albert J. Lee agreed, noting that “the student is guilty of poor taste and perhaps lack of judgment.”“But I certainly don’t believe and don’t understand how they could have classified that as sexual harassment,” he wrote in an e-mail. The Daily Pennsylvanian noted that this is not the first free...
...things that the administration ought to be doing anyway, but doesn’t really need to do, because this is Harvard. The yield will always be high and the admissions rate will always be low, regardless of lousy sections, lousy social life, and a perceived lack of amenities. Why? Because of the iconic crimson H, enough U.S. presidents to field a baseball team, and a small swimming pool filled with Nobel prizes. The University feels very little immediate pressure to change, perhaps least of all from existing customers, for whom the Harvard pedigree has already trumped the desire...
...Moreover, those existing customers don’t seem to be convulsing at the lack of successful booze-cruises meant to unite the student body. At the end of the day, the social life is a direct product of the people studying here, many of whom (maybe most) are content to exist without campus-wide binges, Big Ten style pep rallies, and other trappings of the more stereotypically collegiate social scene. The Harvard social life is comprised of little spheres of insularity—final clubs, singing groups, sports teams, and yes, newspapers—revolving around one another, devouring...