Word: electoral
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...election, in which the members of the class of 1918 who are still in College will take part, will be held on Tuesday, March 12. Every elector will vote for only one man for Secretary, for two men on the Class Committee, and for seven men on the Class Day Committee. Any ballot not filled out in accordance with these regulations shall be declared invalid. The complete list of nominations is as follows...
...conditions than is possible to their stay-at-home neighbors. But the solution does not lie in permitting them to vote wherever they may happen to be, even for President. The voters of Cambridge will on next Tuesday cast a ballot not for the Presidential nominee, but for an elector pledged to vote for a certain Presidential nominee, and for electors at large from the state. The elector chosen for the district in which the University is situated will cast one ballot next February for the Presidential choice of the majority in this district. That is, the object...
...Massachusetts in 1912, and who is the author of the "Luce" laws for primary elections and direct nominations, passed during his long term of service, from 1899 to 1908, in the state legislature, will speak as will Edward a. Thurston '96L, who is one of the nominees for presidential elector at large and who has been chairman of the State Republican Committee for the past three years after having served in a similar capacity on the committee of his native city, Fall river, Mr. Thurston believes in political preparedness and the duty of his party to teach all aliens...
Such persons assume that since the number of men approximates the number of women and since practically every women is the wife, daughter or sister of some man, the interests of every women are identical with those of her male proxy-elector...
...voting for president, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer was done in accordance with Section 7 of Article III of the Constitution for the three lower classes, which describes preferential voting as follows: "The system of preferential voting described below shall be used in all class elections. Each elector shall indicate his order of preference for all the candidates for each office. A first choice shall count one, a second two, and so on. The candidate receiving the lowest numerical total shall be declared elected. Any ballot on which all the candidates for any office have not been voted upon shall...