Word: kerrye
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But the same poll showed Harvardians to be out of line with the political views of average American college students. Bush enjoyed support from nearly 40 percent of students nationally, with just less than 60 percent supporting Kerry.
Although students flocked to support both major candidates, Harvard remains a blue-state school—73 percent of voting undergraduates supported Kerry, while less than a fifth voiced support for Bush, according to an Institute of Politics (IOP) poll taken four days before the election. Independent candidate Ralph Nader...
Undergraduates headed out to the Kerry rally in Boston’s Copley Square, where drizzling skies and a chilly wind reflected an increasingly cloudy mood in the Democratic camp. Performances by the Black Eyed Peas and others briefly buoyed the crowd, but spirits dwindled as the night wore on...
Kerry-supporter Michael A. Codini ’08 placed politics ahead of academics for the night.
“People started getting more and more depressed. Those who could drink were drinking heavily,” says Andy J. Frank ’05, who gathered with fellow Kerry supporters at the Cambridge Common bar on election night. Frank, the former president of the Harvard College...