One freshman-class-board candidate supposedly tore down a competitors' signs and put up hers instead.
Another was 30 minutes late in turning in documentation of his campaign finances.
And both may be disqualified from the election.
These candidates face a hearing tomorrow to decide whether or not they will make the cut.
Late last night, the Nominations and Elections Committee announced that it would not name the winners of this year's freshman student-government elections until after a Fair Practices Code hearing, which will determine whether candidates violated campaign rules.
The NEC - which runs student elections - was supposed to announce the winners of the freshman Undergraduate Assembly and class-board elections last night.
The first violation - brought by College freshman and vice-presidential candidate Michelle Yang - charges that Wharton freshman and vice-presidential candidate Teresa Baik took down posters of other VP candidates in Kings Court/English House and put up hers instead.
Baik denied the allegations, saying she did not tear down any posters belonging to other candidates and made sure to follow all NEC rules.
"I feel so mortally violated," Baik said. "I have no idea what I'm going to do.
"I will most definitely fight this charge," she added.
The second violation - brought by NEC grievance officer Sirisha Prathipati - charges UA candidate and College freshman Joshua Bennett with "failure to turn his spending form in during the designated hours."
Bennett is not sure if he will appeal his case at the hearing tomorrow.
"I did turn in my spending forms late," Bennett said. "The forms were due at 7 and I turned them in around 7:30."
The NEC seemed relieved that there were only two violations filed.
"I think we are pleased there were no repeat violations in regards to Facebook," Vice Chairman of Elections and College junior Dan Strigenz said.
There were 18 violations filed against freshman candidates last year, all stemming from early campaigning on Facebook.com.
These violations mark the only incident to mar an otherwise smooth election season that witnessed a record 65-percent voter turnout from freshmen.
"I hope the NEC runs an efficient hearing," UA member and College sophomore Wilson Tong said. "It seems like it should be short since there are only two violations."
Meanwhile, the freshman class is without a board and the UA is without its freshman representatives for another two days. The hearing will decide who wins and who loses in one of the most contested elections in recent history - the number of candidates was up 32 percent from last year.
The hearing will take place tomorrow at 7 in Logan Hall room 17. Winners will be announced at the conclusion of deliberations.
