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Word: polled (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Nichols, A. B., in German. J. C. Wait, C. E., S. M., in surveying and drawing. A. A. Carey, A. B., in English. R. W. Nicolson, A. M., in Latin. W. F. Ganong. A. M., in botany. T. W. Harris, Ph. D., in geology, Max Poll, Ph. D., in German. W. F. Osgood. Ph. D. in mathematics. W. C. Sabine, A. M., in physics. Geo. Santayana, Ph. D., in philosophy. J. B. Fletcher, A. M., in English. L. J. Johnson, A. B., S. B., in engineering. H. B. Lathrop, A. B., in English. W. M. Cole, A. B., in political...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Meeting of the Board of Overseers. | 5/29/1891 | See Source »

...Healey '91 opened the debate on the affirmative. He said that the question could not be considered on political grounds but only on grounds of expediency. He declared the poll tax as a requisite for voting to be a refic of the old feudal system and said that it had been abolished in almost all the European countries and by 37 out of the 44 states of the Union. He cited the opinions of the leading men in both the great political parties in favor of the affirmative and closed by showing that the poll tax as a requirement...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Union. | 3/6/1891 | See Source »

...said that it is not merely voters that are wanted but men who can think and vote on sound principles. He gave statistics to show the great falling off of the vote in Massachusetts in the years immediately following presidential elections, and concluded that the abolition of the poll tax as a requisite for voting would greatly increase this lack of interest. The poll tax should be retained until the people of Massachusetts have attained a higher degree of economic knowledge...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Union. | 3/6/1891 | See Source »

...Brackett continued the debate on the affirmative. He opposed this requisite for voting for the reason that all government should rest on the consent of the governed and not on the payment of a poll tax. This tax tends to keep the rich man in office and the poor man out. He said that the men kept from voting are not the scum of our population, but are honest and intelligent citizens. He cited the case of John T. Andrew to show that the present system by inducing the politicians to pay the poll taxes of the rabble, tends...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Union. | 3/6/1891 | See Source »

...Costigan '92 continued the debate on the negative. He said that simply paying a man's poll tax was not sufficient to induce him to vote for any particular candidate. He ridiculed the idea that the poll tax was necessarily bad because it came down from feudal time. This qualification adds to the dignity of American citizenship. Its abolition would not diminish bribery but would tend greatly to increase it by increasing the corruption fund of the professional politicians. He thought that the abolition of the poll taxes as a requisite for voting would take away one of the greatest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Union. | 3/6/1891 | See Source »

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