Word: electioneerings
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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In the biggest and closest Senior election for more than a decade, C. Russell Allen, of Greenfield, was elected First Marshal, Vernon H. Struck, of Centralia, Illinois, Second Marshal, and John L. Dampeer of Cleveland, Ohio, Third Marshal. A margin of only 14 votes separated the three leaders. Exactly 582...
Closest election of all was the 14-man Junior Album competition. Those elected were Robert M. Bunker, of Council Bluffs, Iowa, with 223 votes, Richard H. Sullivan, of Marietta, Ohio, with 215, James Tobin, of Champaign, Illinois, with 179, Robert E. L. Strider, 2d, of Wheeling, West Virginia, with 165...
Referring to yesterday's election, Stefani went on, "We know exactly who votes and how they vote." Refusing to dwell on his espionage system, he would say only that "expense means nothing when we are protecting the rights of our people."
In the Junior Tibum election, the class of 1939 will pick five from a list which includes Bean, Bunker, Calkins, Curtiss, Davidson, Dyer, Gannett, Johnson, Long, Nussbaum, Stillman, Strider, Sullivan, and Tobin.
If the election of Senior officers is the most important in Harvard, it is also the most democratic. No more righteous way of honoring Seniors seems possible. The Student Council selects the obvious candidates, and petitions signed by only twenty-five names round out their list. Unlike the Freshman farces...