Word: sac
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...proposal, which is supported by Haddock, would downsize the UC into two committees, from its current three. Another suggests dividing the Student Affairs Committee (SAC) into two separate committees for academic and House-life student advocacy...
Maxwell spends eight hours a day in P Tunnel, a shaft resembling a semifinished subway excavation 1,300 feet below Rainier Mesa. A narrow-gauge electric locomotive takes workers into the tunnel, which ends in a rocky cul- de-sac 1 1/2 miles away. Bare light bulbs dangle overhead, and the brilliant flare of a welder's torch flickers on the rock walls. Labyrinthine cables coil along the floor, and the tunnel reverberates with a sometimes deafening din, punctuated by shouts and horn blasts. In an eerily normal scene near ground zero, a surveyor chats on a Touch-Tone wall...
...appropriate to dissolve CLC. “If we flip something like CLC, we lose our daily contact with the student body,” said Zaidi. One council member said it was crucial “to preserve three members per house.” Student Affairs Committee (SAC) Vice Chair Matthew R. Greenfield ’08 presented a “working paper” to the Rules Committee last week. Monday night, Greenfield suggested that another option could be the creation of a “services” committee that could continue to plan things...
...Undergraduate Council (UC) erupted into what one member called “chaos” last night over a controversial piece of legislation that would relax the council’s anti-discrimination rules that determine its guidelines in allocating grants to student groups. Student Affairs Committee (SAC) Vice Chair Matthew R. Greenfield ’08 introduced legislation calling for the UC to approve funding for student groups that are either recognized by the College or adhere to the council’s own anti-discrimination policy. Despite two attempts to consider the legislation, Greenfield failed to bring...
...President John S. Haddock ’07 and Vice-President Annie R. Riley ’07. Last week, the UC began discussing possibilities for organizational restructuring of its three main committees—the Campus Life Committee (CLC), the Finance Committee (FiCom), and the Students Affairs Committee (SAC). It is important that the much needed restructuring of the UC begin as soon as possible. With the pending formation of an independent social programming board, the CLC will have no clear mission. The UC should dissolve the CLC and move to a two-committee system with two representatives from...