Word: ballots
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...effort to determine the undergraduate attitude on the question of serving beer in the University dining halls, and to aid the authorities in making up their announced "open mind" on the question, the Crimson will conduct a poll in all the Houses and the Union today. Ballot boxed will be placed in the dining halls at all meals. Preliminary returns received during the breakfast and lunch hours will be posted outside the CRIMSON building during the day, with the final results to be announced in tomorrow's paper...
...addition to sounding out student opinion on the serving of beer in the dining halls, the ballot is framed so as to elicit information on the number of men who drink beer, its effects on them and on the food, and their estimated consumption. The last question deals with the proposal to allow men to bring their own beer into the dining and common rooms for consumption there in the event that the city of Cambridge votes for "no license." No further announcement on the beer question was forthcoming front University Hall yesterday...
...Monday morning the CRIMSON will open a poll for the expression of student opinion upon the matter of beer drinking in the University dining halls. Ballots and ballot boxes will be placed in the Union and in each of the House dining halls, and voting will be open during meal times...
...understood that the city of Cambridge, by ordinance, forbids the sale of intoxicating liquors. According to present laws, there must be a special balloting to determine whether the local prohibition shall continue. In consideration of this possibility, the CRIMSON ballot will allow students to express an opinion as to whether the University should allow men to take beer into the dining and common rooms and to consume it there...
...election year one must discount the omniverous shadow of the ballot box; and in a depression year, one must discount the tragic little concluding sermon on materialism. To the man who was too busy or too lazy to follow the newspapers in 1932, "The American Scene" will appear trenchant and indispensable. The well informed man will find in it perhaps three hours of pleasant reminiscence and then recommend it for the attention of the neighborhood high school teacher of current events...