Thursday, November 15, 2012

A Brief History of Debates by Max Watson, ‘14


Have you ever wondered how Presidential, and Vice-Presidential, debates work?  After reading this article, I’m sure that you’ll be election aficionados.  Today, all debates are televised, but they weren’t always like that.  The first televised debate was held in 1960 between Kennedy and Nixon.  The strangest part, however, was the peoples’ reactions.  While most people who listened on the radio, said Nixon had won the debate, people who had watched it televised, said that Kennedy had won.  In debates, its now a wide-known fact that a candidate’s appearance (whether they look relaxed and are smiling, or whether they scowl or appear nervous) can actually affect the ‘outcome’ of the debate.  


Originally, the presidential debates weren’t actually debates.  The first of these, in 1858, was between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas, both running for the senate.  In fact, it began as Lincoln making jokes about Douglas during one of his speeches.  Later, the two came together for three hours to debate about slavery.  The idea of debating never caught on with the American public, until it was televised for the Kennedy-Nixon debate.  


Something I never knew about debates was how much negotiation goes into setting up debate ground rules.  Below are just some bullet points copied from this year’s Memorandum of Understanding (MOU):

  • Each debate shall begin at 9 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time
  • The parties agree that they “will not (1) issue any challenge for additional debates, (2) appear at any other debate or adversarial forums except as agreed to by the parties, or (3) accept any television or radio air time offers that involve a debate format”
  • Candidates aren’t allowed to cite anyone in the audience other than family members during debates.
  • Candidates aren’t allowed to address questions to each other or ask the other candidate to take a pledge.
  • Moderators are not allowed to ask “show of hands” questions.
  • Even the room temperature is agreed upon in advance. 

Pink Day 2012, by Jack Posner ’15


To wear pink is to wear awareness, to wear awareness for cancer. Cancer is one of the leading killers in America today. For Pink Day, we all wore pink proudly. We wore it for those who do not have the strength to do what we did. We wore it for the ones affected by cancer, the ones we pray for.  For Pink Day, we also had a bake sale to try and raise money for cancer research. The research's goal is to one day end cancer and let more people live. We successfully had a full crowd come to the bake sale and a line that cut right through the lobby. We feel proud in helping cancer patients. With the bake sale, we raised close to seven hundred dollars. I felt that doing this was a good deed that shows that Allen Stevenson wants to end cancer. Join the fight!