Word: votes
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...previous class has had so good a chance to know the candidates. The vote today should reflect the interest the class takes in its own affairs. A large vote today will be one of the first tangible evidences of the success of the new dormitories...
...result of the balloting in the Senior class elections held yesterday, Malcolm Justin Logan, of South Boston, was elected Secretary of the Class of 1915. The total vote for all officers was unusually small, only 215 men out of 730 eligible, casting votes. The names of the men who were elected to the Class Committee, the Class Day Committee, and the Photograph Committee are announced in the complete list of Class Day officers in the adjoining column. The number of votes cast for each candidate follows...
...overlooked. The officers of a body of 700--officers elected by that 700 itself--are automatically made the greatest internal force of the "demos"; not only, I think, for the first year, but, if with a decreasing influence, throughout the College course. With a candidacy of two, electors will vote on reputations. But such standards fluctuate, and are at best a flimsy foundation for an important super-structure...
...addition, every voter will be required to give his name and initials in full to the man in charge of the polls. No Senior will be permitted to vote whose name is not on the voters' list or who has not previously petitioned the Nominating Committee to have his name so added...
These qualifications should be the basis of the elections today, and every Senior should vote in order that the real preferences of the class may be recorded...