Word: polling
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...poll also revealed that the median income of the business graduate was $10,600, while the lawyers' median income...
...every side were signs of a rising Republican tide. New York Times surveyors, still making their way across the country, found Dwight Eisenhower leading in California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and Colorado, gaining in a "close" Texas race, apparently out of the running only in Oklahoma. The Gallup poll reported Ike ahead with a 60% lead in a region embracing twelve northeastern states with 153 electoral votes; in 1952 he won 55.2% of the popular vote in those states...
Tabulations of the University election poll revealed yesterday that College students in the Natural Sciences voted heavily for President Eisenhower while concentrators in Social Studies and Humanities favored Governor Stevenson...
...many people, one of the most interesting findings of the CRIMSON poll will be the fact that Ike carries the freshmen while Adlai carries the upper-classmen in the College. Precisely the same thing happened in 1952. Does this reflect the influence of pro-Stevenson sentiment in the Harvard Faculty? If no, what...
...CRIMSON has, I know, he continued, "tried hard to conduct a fair poll. It tried to build in good safeguards, for example, against duplicate voting. I do feel, however, that its over-all figure purporting to represent the University as a whole may properly be questioned. For example, the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences is very much under-represented. If the non-voters in the GSAS had been in the same proportion as those who voted, the total Stevenson vote for Harvard would be much higher...