Word: results
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...undergraduate classes, the special and scientific students, the Divinity School, and the Law School will all be canvassed, and each student will be asked his first and second choice for a presidential candidate. A score of canvassers have already been appointed and the work will be completed and the result announced at the meeting of the Union on April 24. The officers of the Union are determined to make this canvass the most thorough ever taken at Harvard and a full and impartial expression of the political sentiment of Harvard students will be highly interesting and instructive...
...will be seen by an item in another column, the Union has undertaken a canvass of the college on the preferences for Presidential candidates. While the result of a canvass of this sort cannot fail to be of interest as showing the relative personal popularity of the different candidates, it will indicate only in a very slight degree the political bias of the students. We think that most Harvard men vote more for principles than for men. Therefore the votes of most students will be determined largely by the actions of the two parties between this time and the time...
...conventions will do much to decide the votes of Harvard men. This being the case, we should advise the Union in its canvass, not only to note the favorite candidates, but also the stand taken by each man on the all important questions of protection and free trade. The result of such a canvass would be of more value than one based merely on the personal popularity of the candidates before the country...
...first things one looks at on taking up Harper's Monthly are the illustrations. In this respect the April number can not fail to satisfy the most exacting. Mr. Closson offers to us the first result of his trip to Europe in his reproduction of part of Murillo's "Immaculate Conception;" all lovers of engraving in wood can not but feel that this picture alone is worth more than the price of the magazing. The other features among the illustrations are the drawings of Mr. Gibson, illustrating Mr. Roe's novel. Mr. Dielman's drawing for the same novel...
...more, while we here at Cambridge have not only been unable to secure any reasonable amount of open-air work as yet, but must, it would seem, be even now in uncertainty as to whether we are to get fairly to work during this week. Of course, the obvious result of this hindrance will be to enforce increased activity in practice when opportunity for it does arrive...