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[singing]
CAS has a completely different life to it at night.
It's kind of fun to walk down the halls during the day and, you know, it's very academic.
And then you walk down at night and it's like a completely different building.
You can get everything on every level. It's a crazy slice of cake.
Dance clubs, a cappella groups and discussion based groups and community service oriented
groups and sororities and I guess theater clubs. Someone was talking about going to
a rehearsal down the hallway.
Yeah, we normally rehearse in CAS. Our show is in SED this year, but CAS is sort of our
practice home-court.
It might go unnoticed to a lot of people but I think this is a very unique place to go
to just to do stuff or see other people practicing and doing stuff because of how easy it is
to get here.
We're always waiting to see where somebody might not be and try to sneak into a hall
under a stairs or something like that.
[music]
You can sometimes hear the music through the walls so it's kind of interesting that you're
getting a preview of some of the student shows that are going on around campus.
We were practicing for a dance performance that we're having in our spring festival show
called Omatsuri.
[music]
So we're Sina. We're a South Asian a cappella group on campus. So we were just having one
of our weekly practices here.
It's a good location and there's usually a lot of empty rooms here. It's just like you
can just go into one room and kind of just practice and things like that.
It's great that they keep it open and not locked and whenever, even on weekends if you
want to practice, CAS is always open which is really convenient.
It's been going on for years and everybody seems to get along fine. But it's not something
that you find during normal daytime operations of most places.