Word: balloters
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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With Unionist William Lemke barred from California's ballot, Dr. Francis E. ("The Plan") Townsend decided last week to vote for Alf Landon, summoned his California disciples to do likewise. "I cannot and will not," declared the old pensioneer, "support for the Presidency the man who is our sworn enemy. I advise that we choose the lesser of the two evils. . . ." Subsequently he gave the same advice to Townsendites in eight other States where Lemke will not be on the ballot: Florida, Oklahoma, Nevada, Kansas, New Jersey, North Carolina, West Virginia, Maryland...
...hoped that the students will make the effort to record their vote in the Crimson poll, just as they will, or would, next November third. It is an experiment of great interest to see how a large community, better informed than most, and certainly less bossed, will cast its ballot for President of the United States...
...elected member rather than an appointed member of the Council, his successor should represent, as nearly as possible, the choice of the College as expressed in the last vote. White just missed election by a margin of 10 votes last year. He was the seventh man on the ballot in the number of votes received, the first six receiving places on the Council. After this most pressing of all the business before the meeting had been decided it was announced by Walter H. Page, III '37, treasurer that the collection of cash and student pledges was still short...
...under Churchman McNicholas' archiepiscopal nose, Father Coughlin turned up to address a mass meeting of his National Union for Social Justice. In fine oratorical fettle he intemperately roared: "When any upstart dictator in the U. S. succeeds in making this a one party form of government, when the ballot is useless, I shall have the courage to stand up and advocate the use of bullets. . . . Mr. Roosevelt is a radical. The Bible commands 'increase and multiply,' but Mr. Roosevelt says to destroy and devastate. Therefore I call him anti-God and radical...
...last week when Michigan counted its primary ballots the New Deal suffered two defeats. The first, utterly inglorious, involved Emil Hurja, Democratic Boss Farley's No. 1 assistant, who was disfranchised when the election board at Crystal Falls discovered that his absentee ballot was improperly witnessed. The second New Deal defeat was that one of the scant 23 Republicans now in the U. S. Senate definitely lost his chance of returning there. He was James Couzens, who made his millions as a onetime Ford partner and his reputation for independence as a longtime (since 1922) Senator...