Word: springã
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...sluggish ticket sales compelled the HCC to cancel the show less than a week before it was scheduled. By backing out, the UC lost $30,000 in fees, but it would likely have lost three times that had it not cancelled.After this year’s debacle and last spring??s failed spring concert, the UC finally realized it was time for it to escape the social programming business. In April, the Council unanimously voted to spin off its campus-wide programming duties to the newly formed College Events Board (CEB), and a week later, the College announced...
...death, Ben-Shahar dedicated his two spring courses, “Positive Psychology,” and Psychology 1508, “The Psychology of Leadership,” to his late colleague and mentor. The two courses were, respectively, the first and third largest courses offered this spring??with a combined enrollment of over 1400 students.“In many ways these classes are his classes as well,” Ben-Shahar said at the time. “Many of the ideas here come from our hundreds and thousands of hours of discussion...
...adds co-writer and producer Patrick D. Swieskowski ’06. “Perhaps on skates?” suggests Andrei Nechita ’06. “The original plan was to have it on ice skates, but apparently ice melts in the spring??So it’s going to be on roller skates,” Katz explains. Perhaps unsurprisingly, their play might just be the most bizarre show at Arts First—and the funniest. “Maude and Harold” tells of an 80-year-old nursing...
Yesterday marked the spring??s final edition of Government 97b, the second half of the government department’s sophomore tutorial. Few were paying attention during the unceremonious finale, and even fewer will miss the course that has left captive students begging for mercy—or a bit if intellectual stimulation—all semester long. Attendance often dropped to laughable levels as some TFs resigned themselves to making wink-wink agreements, telling their students that they did not need to attend the lectures, while others encouraged “multitasking.” With this...
...instance, that requires a two-thirds vote to overturn FiCom recommendations—the UC should seek to revise its bylaws in addition to changing the institution of FiCom itself. In looking at ways to restructure, the UC must not repeat the mistakes of last spring??s direct election vote. Despite the clear interests of its constituents at stake, UC members voted down a proposal to hold direct elections to committees. Instead, they kept the antiquated and foolish election protocol in which House winners with the most votes get first choice in selecting which committee to serve...