Page Eig#it THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 22, 1974 1 Page Egtit THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Tuesday, October 22. 1974 d .-f Charges fly in SGC voting (Continued from Page 1) election security loophole dis- closed last week by The Daily in validates the results. Reith's other suit charges hisl opponent, Bob Matthews, with passing out "false and mislead- ing" leaflets in the capaign. Matthews admitted yesterday that his leaflet suggests guilt by association in tying Reith to former SGC President Lee Gill, who has since been the target of a civil lawsuit and a criminal investigation. Matthews. insisted the rest of his leaflet was "open to interpretation." A fourth suit is being brought by the Student Action Coalition (SAC), which announced Friday it would challenge the election on the basis of the security loophole reported last week. THE LOOPHOLE lies in the ease with which students could remove marks made on their ID cards by poll workers to in- dicate a student had already voted. Conceivably, many stu- dents could have voted more than once.- The SAC suit also charges that Council Elections Director Alan Bercovitz' Wednesday an- nouncement of a delayed voting period must have discouraged some students from voting. Ber- covitz has since denied, ever making the announcement. With all votes counted yester- day, Campus Coalition (CC) and re-elected President CarlSand- berg's Reform Party took the biggest numbers of SGC seats; Reform took 10 seats and CC won seven. That left eight posi- tions on Council to smaller par- ties and independent candidates. IF THE two major parties form a coalition, it would be impossible to prevent them from controlling council. Pres- ently Reform and CC appear relatively close to each other on the issues. arated them, that of conetaoin The major question which separted them, that of continu- ing the SGC legal advocate pro- gram, has been retained by the j The council seat winners are: voters who decided to retain it. The first major test of the new SGC will be deciding who to seat in constituencies where the voting ended in a tie. Ac- cording to the constitution, when voting ends in a tie, the Coun- cil picks the winner. THE SEATS for which there are ties are Business Adminis- tration, Education, M a r r i e d Housing, Social Work, Public H e a I t h, 'Pharmacy, (Nursing, Medicine, Law, Library Science. These seats are all a quarter vote and were all tied by write- in candidates. Regardless of who won, it ap- pears that they may not hold their seats too long. Faye an- nounced that dune to the pass- age of the ballot proposal which changes the number of council members from 41 to 15, a new election will have to be held in December. Literary College (LSA)-R3bin Barclay, Elliot Chikofsky, and James Stern; Undergraduates- Susan Andrews, Darnell Jack- son, Donald Daniels, Randy Schafer, Todd Katz, and Gary Baker; Professional Grod-Bob Black, and H e t t y Waskin; School of Natural Resources- Karl Oz Chen; Dorms-Candice Massey, and Robert Matthews; Co-ops-John Petz; Frats-Jim Dortwegt; Independent Housing JSteve Thiry, Jim Glickman; Music-write-in Lisbeth McCon- nell; Sororities-write-in Cindy Beaumont; Engineering - B o b Matthews. T~~RU THE Mexico balks on oil sales to U.S. (Continued from Page 1) no change in the attitude of Cuba, we certainly have to maintain our attitude ..." " The UnitedtStates is drop- ping its opposition to a pro- posed United Nations charter provision initiated by Eche- verria on the economic rights and duties of nations. THE TWO presidents met first in the border city of No- gales, then helicoptered to the mountain town of Magdalena de Kino in Mexico before flying to this desert resort south of Tuc- son to conclude their talks and hold the joint news conference. The first, question was on the recently discovered oil deposits in southern Mexico and whe- ther the two president had dis- cussed American access to the deposits. "Si," Echeverria responded in Spanish, adding through a trans- lator that "Mexico sells to who- ever wants to buy oil at the market price in the wgrld mar- ket." HE DISCLOSED for the first time that Mexican oil already is flowing to the Latin Ameri- can nations, Uruguay and Bra- zil, as well as the United States and Israel. "We hope to continue to sell without making any difference among buyers in order to satis- fy the demand," Echeverria said as Ford sat silently at his side. F, d Images arew hat It-'s all about. \ i\sc 11 *v Photographic equipment can be a trap. 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