News

HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.

News

Cambridge Police Respond to Three Armed Robberies Over Holiday Weekend

News

What’s Next for Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery Initiative?

News

MassDOT Adds Unpopular Train Layover to Allston I-90 Project in Sudden Reversal

News

Denied Winter Campus Housing, International Students Scramble to Find Alternative Options

Rules Governing the Election of Class Day Officers from Ninety.

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

1. The meeting shall be held Wednesday, October 16th at 7p. m. in Lower Massachusetts.

3. The committee have chosen Mr. D. C. Torrey as chairman, and Mr. J. W. Lund, as clerk of the meeting.

3. All members of the class, past and present. who are candidates for the degree of A. B., S. B., or C. E. in 1890 shall be allowed to vote and shall be eligible to office.

4. Every office shall be voted for separately. All nomination shall be made viva voce, and shall be recorded on the black board by the clerk, but votes cast for persons not so nominated shall be counted. Speeches for or against candidates is unconditionally prohibited.

5. All voting shall be secret, check lists being used. The class shall vote in ten sections, two tellers receiving and counting the votes from each section. Voting by proxy shall not be allowed. Whenever a candidate receives a majority of votes cast on a formal ballot, he shall be declared elected.

6. The first ballot for each office shall be informal. After the first formal ballot, all but the four candidates receiving the largest number of votes shall be dropped, and the candidate receiving the smallest number of votes at each successive ballot shall be dropped after that ballot.

7. The class officers shall be elected in the following order: Secretary, first marshal, second marshal, third marshal orator, poet, odist, ivy orator, chorister, class-day committee, class committee, photo, committee.

9. No rule shall be suspended if twenty men object.

The committee have divided the class into the following sections, and have appointed the following men to serve as bellrs:

The sections are-

1. Abbot to Blunt, inclusive.

2. Bolton to Clark,

3. Clifford to Dodge,

4. Dow to Gorham.

5. Graham to Job.

6. E. S. Jones to McLeod.

7. F. P. Magoun to Pingree.

8. Piper to Sloss.

9. C. W. Smith to Villard.

10. B. A. Walker to Woolsey.

The tellers are:

1. A. Amory, Jr. T. S. Beecher.

2. E. Burrage, T. S. Bradlee.

3. B. B. Crowninshield, E. A. Darling.

4. T. S. Duncan, R. M. Fullerton.

5. H. H. Haskell, H. H. Hunnewell Jr.

6. R. Jones, P. Littell.

7. G. Norman, W. Myer.

8. L. W. Pulsifer, G. Rublee.

9. H. F, Strout, K. M. Taylor.

10. R. T. Walker, T. S. Woods.

Tellers are requested to meet at Massachusetts hall at 6.30 promptly.

A row of seats has been assigned to each section and it is of the greatest importance that every man should sit with his section.

A list of the men entitled to vote will be posted on the bulletin board of University. Any man entitled to vote, whose name is not on the list, should consult the committee before the election.

G. BLAGDEN, Jr.R. E. FAULKNER.W. K. POST. Committee.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags