Word: all-day
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...White, O. D. Filley, A. C. Blagden, C. V. Greenough, T. D. Sloan, B. Stephenson, T. T. Whiteney, W. F. Emerson. The committee will post within a week two nominations for each office. Further nominations may be made by petitions signed by fifty members of the class. An all-day election, by Australian ballot, will be held a week after the nominations are posted...
...committee so elected shall nominate within one week at least two candidates for each office, announcing their nominations publicly. One week later the class shall vote by Australian ballot in an all-day election...
...committee so elected shall nominate within one week at least two candidates for each office, announcing their nominations publicly. One week later the class shall vote by Australian ballot in an all-day election...
...posted in the Society's store and printed in the CRIMSON a month before the election is to be held. It may be added to this that a large vote may be obtained by having the election made by an all-day ballot at the Society's store. The election of the Class Day officers by an all-day ballot has already proven the advantages of that system. In view of the fact, however, that the constitution is so framed that a majority of the Board hold over from one year to another, the danger of a sudden upheaval...
...were divided into the two groups into which they logically fall; if, as was proposed in the alternative to Clause III, the secretary, marshals, literary officers, and chorister, were to be elected on one day, and the committee men on a later day, then a man who had failed for an office proper (for example, a marshalship) could still come up for a committee place. If all-day voting by the Australian ballot be adopted, this balloting on two different days, while a little more inconvenient perhaps to the tellers, would be no great hardship on the individual elector...