Word: elections
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...taking final exams under the new guidelines. Representatives of the Undergraduate Council (UC) attended the meeting, and some were said they were disappointed at having to wait to hear debate on the issue. “I think it’s unfortunate,” said UC President-elect Matthew L. Sundquist ’09. “It’s really hard when there are six things to go through in an hour and half.” Michael R. Ragalie ’09, a member of the Committee on Undergraduate Education, said...
...mate Randall S. Sarafa ‘09 would lead the council next year. “We’re really excited,” said Sundquist, standing before friends and campaign staff members. “It’s going to be awesome.” Election Commission Chair Michael L. Taylor ’08 delivered the news to Sundquist’s Mather suite and brought along members of the Harvard Glee Club, who immersed the winners in song while others doused them with champagne. Sarafa said the first thing he would do as vice...
Matthew L. Sundquist ’09 and Randall S. Sarafa ’09 will be taking the reins of the Undergraduate Council in the coming year, winning a race that featured the lowest voter turnout since the council began popularly electing its top officials in 1996.The total number of ballots cast dipped nearly 40 percent from last year to 2,181, with the winning ticket garnering 66 percent of the first-place votes. The low voter turnout may have been due in part to the established reputations of Sundquist, currently the council’s vice president...
Sarafa said the first thing he would do as the vice president-elect was to keep the promise he made to the Alaska Klub and swim in the Polar Bear Plunge Saturday morning...
...that the Rotarians who turned up for Romney seem to mind. They're the types who listen when E.F. Hutton talks. They appreciate Romney's businesslike approach, even his deft way with a slide. "I thought he did a good job with the PowerPoint," Sue Pease, president-elect of the Manchester Rotary Club, said afterwards. Ken Perks, a prosecutor in Hillsborough, reviewed the performance with a sentence that could be cut from a Romney endorsement: "I think we need the kind of analysis that is used in business more than in politics...