Word: ticketeer
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...race for Undergraduate Council (UC) president and vice president heats up, a final third ticket has emerged while complaints about unfair campaigning have already surfaced...
...shortage of Undergraduate Council (UC) shuttles left several students scrambling to catch last-minute transportation to the festivities in New Haven this weekend. But the UC attributed the shortage of shuttle tickets to and from Yale to the success of the Campus Life Committee (CLC) in generating excitement about “The Game,” not to a failure by the committee to plan ahead. “The shortage of shuttles is an indirect effect of how well we hyped up Harvard-Yale this year,” said CLC Services Chair John F. Voith...
...Reilly.On the show, O’Reilly argued that it was “inappropriate” for Brown University to endorse “direct university funding” for such an event.But according to Margolick, funding for the party came from the Queer Alliance’s ticket sales, not from the $800 that the UFB gave to the group at the start of the semester.Brown’s Vice President for Public Affairs and University Relations, Michael Chapman, also told the Brown Daily Herald that a Fox News Producer had called the university about the party...
...days before the filing deadline for Undergraduate Council presidential candidates, two unofficial tickets have already emerged—including two hopefuls who have already faced off at lower levels of council politics. Neither pair of presidential and vice-presidential running mates have submitted the 150 student signatures that would make their candidacies official. But they have signalled their intentions to run by submitting letters of intent to run, and circulating emails asking for support. One of the tickets includes John S. Haddock ’07, vice-chair of the Student Affairs Committee (SAC), as a candidate for president...
...this sort of issue, it is irresponsible for it to do so, in its current form. We elect UC representatives without the foggiest notion of where they stand on important issues like Harvard employees’ wages, expecting them to rubber stamp our party grant applications and sell us tickets to successfully-organized events. What advocacy we expect them to do is wholly within the realm of undergraduate life at Harvard—on questions like the Harvard College Curricular Review, the development of a new campus in Allston, and the extension of library and dining hall hours. Unlike...