Monday, October 22, 2012

Warde Students Voted for Kennedy to Win 1960 Election Against Nixon

The presidential election is just two weeks away, and the latest poll shows President Barack Obama and challenger Mitt Romney in a virtual dead-heat. Fifty-two years ago, the students at Andrew Warde High School narrowly voted for John F. Kennedy over Richard M. Nixon in October of 1960, just weeks before the election.

The vote was 668 (48 percent) for Kennedy to 638 (45 percent) for Nixon with 102 students (seven percent) undecided. It was the first of two presidential straw ballots conducted at the high school.

The faculty, however, favored Nixon with 33 teachers (45 percent) voting for him compared to 25 teachers (34 percent) favoring Kennedy. Sixteen teachers (21 percent) were undecided.


The voting by paper ballot was conducted by about 175 students, members of seven Problems of Democracy classes in the school. The balloting was conducted in homerooms so that all the students could participate.

Students representatives conducting the voting included Charlene Mitchell, Cahrlotte Cerutti, Lynn Carter, Rita Schweitz, Pat Musone, Paul Hiller, Carole Glantz, Larry Gill, Barbara Bachrach, Ann Dickey, and Rosemary Vasas. Faculty advisers were Edward Bateson, Gordon Ingerson, Fred Klee, and Virginia Mussler.

The voting in each of the four houses in the high school was as follows:
  • Barlow House: Kennedy (175), Nixon (153), Undecided (23);
  • Mason House: Kennedy (167), Nixon (166), Undecided (24);
  • Wolcott House: Kennedy (164), Nixon (155), Undecided (36);
  • Smedley House: Kennedy (162), Nixon (164), Undecided (13)
Paul

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