Preferential Voting - - What it Means " TT WAS back in the spring of ’37 that Oregon’s A ASUO executive committee became reform-con scious in the matter of the election setup. Emer ald Editor Fred Colvig was a member of the coun cil, then headed by ASUO Prexy Gib Schultz, and in the election day issue of the Emerald wrote an article explaining the complicated preferential balloting system. Sunday night, Oregon’s 1942 exec committee called together the candidates for this y'ear’s elec tion and Dr. Fred Cahill of the political science department outlined the voting method in order to avoid post-election grumbling. For the benefit of those who do not understand the distribution of votes under the preferential or proportional balloting system, excerpts from Ed itor Colvig’s article of 1937 are printed here today. It is only fair to add that Fred Colvig, visit ing on the campus Sunday, admitted that if asked now how it worked he’d never be able to tell any body. Proportional Representation Bv FRED COLVIG rJAfIE assortment of the four successful candi dates to their respective offices on the execu tive committee will be taken care of in (the ASTTO) election by the procedure of preferential ballot ing, which is a feature of the . . . electoral setup. The successful candidate with the greatest num ber of first choices will at that time be pronounced .president; the one one with the second highest number of first choices will be first vice- presi dent, etc. The preferential balloting method is described in the ASUO by-laws substantially as follows. Each voted will be given a ballot containing the names of the candidates, with a blank space beside each one. In these squares the voter will put number indicating the order of his preference for the dif ferent candidates, puting down as many choices in “1-2-3 order” as he wishes. The voting itself will be simple; it is in the subsequent tabulation of the ballots that the procedure becomes relatively complicated, but even that is not so difficult to grasp. Figuring the Quota THIRST of all, when the polls have been closed" and the ballots are all in, the tabulators will figure out what in the lingo of proportional repre sentation is known as the ‘'quota,” which is the least number of votes through which a candidate can be elected. This is ascertained by dividing the total number of votes cast by a number one greater than the number of offices to be filled and adding one to the resulting quotient. Thus, if there are 1500 votes cast and there are four offices to fill, the “quota” will be obtained by dividing 1500 by five and adding one, giving 301. Then the tabulators will sort all the ballots in piles according to the first choices indicated. The ballots on which Joe Blow is given first choice will be put in one stack; the ballots on which Joe Doakes is given first choice will be put in an other stack, etc. Following this, the ballots will be counted and each candidate will be credited with the number of first choices he has gained. If the number of first choices received by any can didate is equal to, or exceeds the “quota,” which is, let us say, 301, he will at once be declared elected. Still using the “quota” of 301 as an example, suppose a candidate receives more than that num ber. As stated in the preceding paragraph, he will be considered elected. But, tinder the system of proportional representations, these surplus bal lots will not be tvasted. From such a successful can didate \s pile of votes a number of ballots equiva lent to the surplus will be drawn, and the second choices indicated on these ballots will be credited to the candidates who are still in the running but not yet elected. If the addition of these second choice ballots to any candidate's pile raises his total to 301 votes, he will be declared elected. ‘Breaking Down’ the Vote rJ~'IIEN, after all of the first-choice ballots have been distributed, the candidate with the least number of votes will be declared defeated; and his ballots will be distributed, each one going to the “continuing candidate ’ indicated as next choice. A “continuing candidate” is one not yet elected or defeated. If this transfer of the “defeated candidate’s” ballots raises the total of another candidate’s votes over the “quota,” lie will be pronounced elected. After this has been done, if there have not been four candidates elected, again the one with the lowest number of votes will be considered defeat ed, and his ballots will be transferred to the “continuing candidates.” This procedure of delat ing the lowest candidate and giving his votes to the others who are still in the running will be continued until the election is ended. The election will be ended when four candidates have reached the “quota,” or when the total num ber of “continuing candidates” has been re duced by the process of defeating to four, the num ber of offices to be filled. Take Office in Order ^^ND. as explained at the first of this article, tin1 successful candidates will take positions on the executive committee of the ASUO in the order of the number of first choices they receive in the initial sorting of the ballots. * There is nothing complicated about this new system of proportional representation if one but turns his mind to i.t Experts in governmental science hold it out as the ideal method of electing a body such as a city council, to which, of course, the student executive committee is exactly analo gous. Proportional representation, just as its naine and third choices effective through its preferen tial balloting feature, means the end of machine politics on this campus, just as it has in city gov ernment. No longer will any party machine, through controlling a bare majority of the votes, be able to grab all student offices for its partisans. Proportional representation, just as its nan** implies, means that all groups among A!S1T0 mem bers henceforth shall have a voice in student gov ernment in proportion to their numbers. tyalAe cM-afie . . . This is No Picnic - Despite Paper Headlines ... A J.04Uf MKW By DON TREADGOLD We do not recommend that everyone worry all day and have nightmares all night about the war. But it might help if a lot of people got a little healthier sense of proportion as to what is going on. The fact that many of us have a somewhat distorted perspective of events may be in large part blamed on the newspapers. Says Letter - to - the - Editor Writer J. W. Reeves- in the last Time. For some time it has appeared to me that the newspa pers are unintentionally doing the country ... a disservice in play ing up without warrant and out of all proportions the few suc cesses that we have so far had in this war . . . when the truth comes out, the country will blame the military services and will lose confidence in them and possibly in itself.” The Answer To which Time’s editors rejoin pithily: “One big trouble has been that few editors know as much about war as their sportswriters know about sport.” An example is the front page bearing the black headlines, "Jap Ship Sunk by Yanks” while down in the cor ner we learn of “Ten American Tankers Lost” or “Japs Seize New Island Group.” We may rejoice over the hero ism of the A.V.G. pilots in Bur ma, but we may not read down far enough that the Chinese troops in Burma are bombed at will by the Japs, and must repel mechanized onslaughts on land and by air without planes or ar tillery. The headlines declare “100.000 Germans Trapped,’’ a cock-and-bull story anyway, while it is not mentioned that the So viets have failed to recapture the major Nazi strong points from which Hit'er will start his spring drive. "Malta Holds” may only mean that tomorrow Malta may fall. “Yugoslav Guerillas in Bold Raid” does not disclose that Gen eral Mihailovitch and his men are desperately in need of food and supplies for the want of which they cannot long keep resisting. No Picnic What the Allies really face this spring is no bedtime story. With 40 per cent of her industrial plant in Nazi hands, Russia is not in a comfortable spot. Despite the best Soviet efforts and the Rus sian winter, the main Nazi line is unbreached and German tanks will soon begin to roll again. It is absolutely vital to the Allies that Russia hold, but if Hitler is prevented from reaching Cauca sus oil, it will surely be in defi ance of military mathematics. In dia, which now declares it will de fend itself, is in reality well-nigh defenseless. The Allies won't collapse this (Please turn to page six) Nothing Sacred By J. SPENCER MILLER Being as the baseball season is open and we’re really a sports writer doing a poor job of writ ing a gossip column we are going to pick an all-girls baseball team for beauty—which is about as silly an idea as most of the others being passed about the campus—• Atanyrate . . . Pitcher—Peggy Itlepper, Kap pa. Catcher — BeeLoo Brugman, Theta. First base —- Rozzy Morrill, Dee Gee. Second Base — —Jeanne Hines, DeeGee. Shortstop—Adele Canada, Al pha Fee. Third Base — Neida liohrbaek, Alpha Chi. Left field — Mary Jane Dunn, Tri Delt. Centerfield — Nancy Lewis, Chi O. Right field — Verlie Myers, Pi Phi. And to manage this $$$$ bevy of talent Hen hall's Jean Spearow, wh® could probably out-talk any one we know. Both Independent and ADS dances showed plenty of hustle— There were a lot of guys and gals that like Hal Hardin a lot better than Ole Faithful Art Holman— Plenty of ATOs and Fijis showed up . . . Fijis on the stag line and the ATOs with dates—One Kappa had an Independent sticker right above her Kappa key (Don't wor ry, Les, they're not bolting the (Please turn lo page six) *fl e D y ^:TieraIJ' Published daily during the college year except Sundays, ; bob' ays, and nnal examination periods by the Associated Students, University ^C"P^J«-ra"n; $1-2:i Per terra aud $->.00 per year. Entered as second cla^s matter at the postotfice, tugene, Oregon. HELEN ANGELL. Editor FRED O. 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