Word: gabay
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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President Carey W. Gabay '94 said Davis'petition had been conducted in a "procedurallyincorrect" manner...
...Gabay judged this passage to mean that 663 (10 percent of the population) signatures were needed for each question to appear on a ballot. But why should the same person sign five different pieces of paper? Does Gabay believe that students can't read all of the words at the top of a petition, only one-fifth of them? It seems reasonable to assume that people would not sign the petition if they disagreed with its demands...
...argument offered in return by Gabay was that putting in five questions would be "packing" the referendum-as though students at Harvard were not biologically advanced enough to deal with five separate issues at once! Gabay went even further, saying that the Council was "being nice enough" by allowing the main question of the term-bill increase to go to a vote. So Davis was never assured of a vote until Gabay and Liston decided to be nice? The U.C. Constitution would have something to say about that, and so should Dean Epps...
...Gabay's final rationale was that he spoke to 10 Quincy House residents who all said that they only signed Davis's petition to reverse the term-bill fee hike. First of all, 10 students is not a very large sample for a population of over 6,600. Secondly, Gabay did not consider equally valid input that all the other Council members from other Houses and the Yard could offer. It is still more distressing that Gabay did not offer any similar House-based justification for his support of the term-bill increase when it was first passed...
...fact is that the conflicts created by the term-bill increase could well be personal. The quotes and reports emerging from U.C. meetings and reporters' interviews indicate that Gabay and Davis are fundamentally at odds. The interests of students at large will surely suffer as these two aspiring politicians resolve their differences on the public stage. At least this kind of controversy insures that students will find out--every day on the front page of the Crimson--just what their Undergraduate Council is doing...