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Saturday, May 26, 2012

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Posted on February 20 at 12:14 p.m.Suggest removal

If you don't allow them to go to bars, people will just drink in private, where there's nobody around who can cut them off.

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Posted on October 26 at 11:34 a.m.Suggest removal

The Fall Carnival aspect of Tuesday's Halloween with HCSA event was hosted by both the Walker and Couch Center Resident Student Associations.

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Posted on March 9 at 8:05 p.m.Suggest removal

Puppies with UOSA is a positive event which shows not only that the University cares about community service, but also provides an opportunity for students to meet with their UOSA representatives. Unfortunately, many students don't respond well to Meet & Greets without specific incentive. In this case, people got excited about the puppies (which didn't cost UOSA anything), and it brought them out to interact with UOSA.
If you want UOSA to do things, it's up to you to go to their events, meet the representatives, and tell them what you actually want them to do about it. That's why they make themselves available on campus through events like these.

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Posted on April 2 at 12:28 a.m.Suggest removal

Just to be clear here, gender blind and co-ed are not the same thing. The floor will be co-ed (the description here is right: separate suites for men and women on the same floor).

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Posted on December 10 at 4:13 p.m.Suggest removal

I'd like to point out to the other people commenting that the author specifically said "aside from Fox News." Meaning that yes, Fox News criticizes Obama, but few others do.
During the election season, I was completely in favor of Obama. I still stand behind him, I believe he's making some good steps in the right direction, and was, overall, a good decision for our country. Nonetheless, I agree wholeheartedly that he needs to focus on more than one subject at a time.
One of my best friends is a die-hard Obama fan and will not let any criticism of him pass without getting upset. Yes, there's still an "Obama lovefest" going on. But there are also the haters. In fact, I think we actually have three groups emerging: those who have hated him from the beginning, those who supported him and are still die-hard fans, and those who supported him originally but are now somewhat neutral, or have completely lost their interest in politics now that the election has passed. The trick is to get that third group to vocalize themselves again. Political apathy was an issue during the Bush presidency, too, though; it's not unique to Obama's presidency. It's become a somewhat permanent state for Americans and is definitely something that needs to be fixed.

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