Word: voted
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Simultaneously, William J. Richard, Jr. '49, who piloted the organization through its test at the College, declared that the vote is really "a formalization of the part Harvard has played all along...
Robert Smith 1G, NSA vice-president in charge of international student affairs, expressed gratification on the part of the national officers at the outcome of the College's vote. He conducts the NSA's total foreign program from 5 Bryant...
...several articles on the news pages of the Crimson, a large number of students would come face to face with the ballot unenlightened as to the nature and objectives of NSA. This supposition was undoubtedly correct, and some sort of explanation was undoubtedly necessary if the results of the vote were to mean anything. But the method utilized by the Council to clarify NSA was--let us say the word--stupid...
...unofficial CRIMSON tabulation, Lowell House men stood 152 for, and 52 against College affiliation, while Kirkland registered an affirmative vote of 170 and a negative tally of 53. Winthrop affirmed affiliation, 426 to 134, and Dudley followed suit, 113 to 22. Returns of other Houses were not available last night...
Question number two: Why vote for a theoretical set-up--political or non-political--that will effect nobody but its delegates! Answer: Vote for NSA because is may well become the first student organization in the history of the, United States that will touch the majority of individual students. A list of its projected activities include work on student employment, student exchange with foreign countries, and racial discrimination in education...