Poge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesdoy, November 8, 197 Poge Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesdoy, November 8, 1972 Coleman, Levin leading in Supreme Court race Victory imminent for Lansing, Roach in U' Reoents election A today.. if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Those behind the scenes The Daily would like to thank those who helped us put out, this election night edition. For the loan of a copying machine, we'd like to thank Nick DePaolo of Pitney-Bowes, the folks that invented the mailing machine. Dunkin' Donuts provided our staff with seven dozen donuts, and the people in the office of Dave Folsom, business manager for University relations and development, loaned us their coffee-maker. It helped us stay awake u(fl 5 a.m. Thanks! Wither goest my polling place? Students weren't the only ones confused by changes made in polling places over the summer. President Robben Fleming reportedly arrived at the League at 9 a.m. to vote, but was told he was at the wrong place. So Fleming had to truck on back to the Union to vote - right across from his Administration Bldg. office. The koll ege vote? TAMPA - The Kiddie Kollege Kindergarten cast their ballots yesterday and among the presidential picks were President Nixon, George Washington and Tim Cloversettle, a five-year-old who voted for himself. The total vote was Nixon 64, George Mc- Govern, 17, Washington, 6, Cloversettle, 1, and two ministers at the school, 8. the dropped vote LITTLE DIOMEDE ISLAND, Alaska - It took a special airplane drop to get the ballots to remote Little Diomede Island but the results will not be officially reported until after the President is inaugurated. The island's 37 residents received their ballots Oct. 22 and radioed unofficial reports of the voting to Nome last night. However, official reports will not be in until the Bering Sea freezes later this winter when a trip to the remote island can be made. Colorado cans Olympics Deciding the fate of the 1976 Winter Olympic Games sched- uled for Denver, Colorado voters were on the verge of cutting off all state funds. With 515 of 2,045 precincts reporting, 128,661 ballots had been cast to cut off funds and .108,062 had voted to continue funding. The weather picture They'll be clouds for your post-election melancholia, with highs in the low 50s. At night it "will drop to the mid- 30s, but there's only 20 per cent chance of rain. Senatoral raees Judge Mary Coleman and Judge Charles Levin defeated seven oth- er candidates this morning for two vacant seats on the State Su- preme Court. With 30 per cent of the vote counted, Levin led the race with 274,225 votes. Coleman ran second with 271,051, according to NBC. Earlier totals put Judge James Thorburn and Human Rights party candidate Zolton Ferency in third and fourth places. Thorburn polled 50,732, Ferency received 40,398 votes. The earlier. tallies of the other candidates, with eight per cent totaled, were: Judge Horace Gil- more, 32,815 votes; Judge Robert4 Evans, 31,689 votes; Judge Vincent Brennan, 31,618 votes; William Ort- man, 16,921 votes; and Judge Wil- liam Beer, 16,913 votes. No later tallies were reported this morning. Coleman is the first woman to; seek election to the State Supreme Court. She has served as Calhoun \~ County Probate and Juvenile Court 4 judge since 1961. Coleman is considered a judicialr conservative and ran with the back- ing of the Republican Party. Coleman holds a bachelor's de- gree in English education from the . University of Maryland and a law degree from Georgetown Univer- sity. She says she believes firmly in , under the supremacy of the rule of law. John Schmitz, lame-duck congres Levin has beena judgeon the Party candidate for President, w State Court of Appeals since 1966. nm taplig lc nTsi He ran under the Non-Partisan name at a polling place inTust Judicial Party banner, a party (CIR( CUIT COURT: created for his candidacy.11Vl J 1 1 He favors the legalization of marijuana and decriminalization of " victimless crimes. , Levin was chairman of the Mich- IItgn en unCovi igan Penal Reform Commission and has consistently supported pol- lution and consumer cases in his I-r T O court decisions. LP t He holds a bachelor's and law degrees from the University. i Thorburn, a circuit judge for Judge Patrick Conin was headed nine years, believes that the Su- toward a landslide victory last4 preme Court should interpret the night in the race for two vacant law and not legislate. He has also seats on the Washtenaw CountyI called for more efficient judicial Circuit Court. Conlin outpolled the administration. field of candidates with a vote Ferency is a co-founder of the total of 14,824, with 26 per cent of Human Rights Party. the precincts reporting. An unsuccessful Democratic gu- District Court Judge Edward bernatorial nominee in 1966, Fer- Deake and Shirley Burgoyne, a ency was formerly active in Dem- local attorney, were engaged in a ocratic politics, close contest for the other seat. Having practiced law since 1953, IDeake capturedo11,121 votes com- Ferency says he is concerned about pared to Burgoyne's 10,052. District opening up the legal system to Court Judge Sanford Elden, the everybody, and changing repres- fourth candidate, trailed the pack sive and outmoded laws.gwith 6,681 votes. Ferency supports the legalization of .marijuana and the decriminali- The validity of the early returns! zation of victimless crimes. were in doubt, however, as the re- Although early returns showed Republicans sweeping open seats on state education boards, returns from down-state put several Demo- cratic contenders in the lead. Both Democratic candidates for two vacant seats on the University Board of Regents pulled ahead early this morning. With 28 per cent of the vote counted,Marjorie Lansing received 410,758 and Thomas Roach 393,866, beating Republican incumbent Lawrence Lindemer and Republi- can Deane Baker. In the race for two seats on the State Board of Education, Repu- blican William Sederburg and Democrat Charles Morton held the lead. Two Democrats, Tom Downs and Donna O'Donnohue appeared head- ed for victory in the race for Michigan State University trustee- ships with 28 per cent of the vote in. In the Wayne State University race, Brucker had 9,225 votes and Keydel had 8,491. Lansing, an associate professor of political science at Eastern Michigan University; is a city resi- dent. She favors organizing a grocery co-op, student input in decision making and publication of salary lists with professors names. Roach is a practicing attorney in a Detroit law firm. In 1969, Lindemer was again ap- pointed to serve out an unfulfilled. term. He is a practicing attorney and a resident of Stockbridge. Baker is a city resident and president of the Deane Baker Cor- poration. He has previously served on Grand Valley State College Board of Control. Voting straight party tickets seemed to play a large role in the Republican leads. i Lansing Roach Deihey holds strong margin over Sallade dog votes sman and American Independent watches his wife, Mary, sign her n, Cal., prior to voting yesterday. Early results from the county prosecutor's race showed incum- bent Republican William Delhey leading Democrat George Sallade, 25,999 votes to 23,422 votes, with most of the 67 reporting precincts in heavily Republican areas of the county. Except for Delhey's strong lead, there were few surprises in the contest, with voting blocs breaking down along predictable lines. Sallade, confident of backing from Democratic party regulars, tried to attract the student vote by making victimless crime, espe- cially prosecution of marijuana cases, a major campaign issue. Delhey sought support from the more conservative elements of the county, stressing his 12 years of ns; Deake, still close turns were mostly from city pre- cincts. Deake has run extremely strong in out-county districts in past elections, while Burgoyne is making her first bid for office. The 21 per cent vote tabulated represents totals from non-student areas of Ann Arbor. No vote totals were available from campus poll- ing locations. A large student vote could bene- fit Burgoyne who has been cam- paigning on women's liberation issues. Elden, notorious among stu- dents for a ruling that struck down the city's five dollar marijuana ordinance, is expected to fair poor- ly in campus returns. Deake is unlikely to pick up mnn strident votes- His 14th Dis- Four more years: Nixon, Agnew win with police and county officials. With little of the student vote in, Sallade said that "the race is still nip and tuck" and he would make no predictions "until I hear from large city precincts." His hope for a strong student turnout may be too optimistic, as delays ataovercrowded campus polling places and early returns showing Nixon's strong lead caused many discouraged students to leave without voting. In the three-way race for county clerk, incumbent Robert Harrison held a large lead over Democrat Duke Armstrong with reports from 67 precincts out of 166. The voting, 10,000 for Harrison, and 7,334 for Armstrong gave the Democrat little hope for victory. Stuart Norman, running on the Independent party ticket, polled only 235 votes. Outcome of the County Drain Commissioner contest is still in doubt, with Republican Richard Wanty leading Jerome Fulton by 8,666 to 8,442. Democrat Fulton is also expecting strong support from the student precincts. The three county-wide referenda on the ballot asked that the county be given permission to borrow funds for construction of a new jail, county offices and court fa- cilities, and improvements for the present county medical care fa- cilities. The first proposal, for a new county correctional facility, was winning 7,922 votes to 7,688 votes, with about one-third of the pre- cincts reporting. Proposal II, for construction of new county court and office facili- ties, was losing by a narrow mar- gin, 7,672 votes to 7,507. The proposal for improvements of county health facilities was go- ing down to defeat, 10,765 votes to 4,505. STATE (Party in office) Alabama (D) .Alaska (R) Arkansas (D) Colorado (R) Delaware (R) Georgia (D) Idaho (R) Illinois (R) Iowa (R) Kansas (R) Kentucky (R) Louisiana (D) Maine (R) Mass. (R) Michigan (R) Minnesota (D) Mississippi (D) Montana (D) Nebraska (R) New Hamp. (D) N. Jersey (R) N. Mexico (D) N. Caro. (D) Oklahoma Oregon (R) R. Island (D) S. Caro. (R) S. Dak. (R) Tennessee (R) Results Pct. Units Reporting as of midnight DEMO- CRAT Sparkman* (E) Guess REPUBLI- CAN Blount Stevens* McClellan* (E) Babbitt 59 Haskell (E) 293,344 Biden Allott* 279,047 Boggs* IdIy SUUI U . 11 IIIL trict Court is located in the Pitts- field Service Center and is out of the mainstream of city activity. Conlin, son of recently deceased Circuit Judge John Conlin Sr., is se s 'con trTJ ou se the;youngestcandidate.He. has (~_, u soenro broad-based appeal among older voters because of his family name (Continued from Page 1) 12-1 margin. But they re-elected in- and among student voters because E a s t l a n d (D-Miss.), Edward cumbent Democratic Sen. Jennings of his liberal image. Brooke (R-Mass.), Strom Thur- Randolph by an even larger vote- Conlin has vowed to reform bail- mond (R-S.C.) and John Tower (R- almost 70 per cent. bonding, restructure court admin- Texas) rolled to re-election. M a n istration, and make the court easily One of the tightest Senate races istratiokDemocraticcandidates,adke was in Delaware, where Democrat particularly in the South, had dis- accessible. Joseph Biden narrowly led Repub- associated themselves from Demo- CircuitCourt has jurisdiction for lican incumbent Caleb Boggs last cratic candidate George McGovern small civil suit cases. Judges are night. Biden, 29, would be the in an attempt to save themselves elected on a non-partisan basis for youngest senator in history if victory. four-year terms of office. elected. 44 15 14 98 61 65 18 26 26 Nunn (E) 228,410 Thompson 153,005 Davis 17,650 Pucinski Clark (E) 60,902 Tetzlaff Huddleston (E) 515,474 Johnston (E) 316,049 Hathaway (E) 92,971 Droney Kelley 1,033,000 Mondale* (E) McClure 21,547 Percy* (E) Miller* 50,254 Pearson* (E) Nunn 475,180 Toledano 105,653. McKiethen*** 136,877 Smith* 86,561 Brooke* Griffin* 1,087,000 Halpert*** 6467 Hansen t Eastland* 85,082 Carmichael 54,875 Metcalf* Hibbard 61 Carpenter 161,304 Curtis* 172,570 46 31 19 50 55 25 McIntyre* (E) Krebs 450,083 Daniels 86,151 Galifianakis 181,328 Edmondson 226,899 Morse Pell* (E) 21,378 Zeigler 111,878 Abourezk (E) 30,417 Blanton Sanders Spong* 438,900 Powell Case (E) 853,481 Domenici (E) 101,447 Helms 202,164 Bartlett 268,460 Hatfield Chafee 15,709 Thurmond* (E) 190,236 Hirsch 23,863 Baker* (E) Tower* (E) Scott 504,108 Andrew Young was elected con- gressman from Atlanta, to become the first black man from the South in Congress since Reconstruction. Barbara Jordan was elected from Houston as the first southern black woman ever to sit in Congress. Millions of voters split their bal- lots, voting for both Nixon and Democratic S e n a t e candidates. Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, and West Virginia, for example, all apparently e I e c t e d Democratic senators while voting overwhelm- ingly for the President. West Virginia voters, indicative of the split-ticket voting,preferred Nixon to McGovern by an almost HRP loses county race (Continued from Page 1) HRP line." The two districts which corres- pond closely to the city's First and Second Wards are predominantly student areas. They were con- sidered HRP strongholds and the loss in both districts could be view- ed as a slippage of support among student voters. TheWashtenaw County Board of Commissioners is currently divided between nine Republicans and four Democrats. Both the 14th and 15th districts are new ones, as they were created only this past spring. With the election of liberal Dem- ocrats in the two districts, ob- servers feel there is a chance the Gubernatorial results With 10 Democratic and eight Republican governorships up for grabs, returns late last night indicated neither party would increase their total number of seats. Currently, the incumbent party is threat- ened in only two states, one Democratic- and one Republican-control- led. Many races were still undecided. In Missouri, Republican Christopher Bond defeated Edward Dowd. But that potential GOP pick-up will be offset if Illinois Democrat Daniel Walker maintains his thin lead over Illinois incumbent Gov. Richard Ogilvie. With 61 per cent of the precincts tabulated, Walker led by 110,000 votes. Republicans Otis Bowen and Robert Ray were elected in Indiana and Iowa, respectively. Democratic winners were Dale Bumpers in Arkansas, Robert Docking in Kansas, and Utah's Calvin Rampton, all incumbents. Democrats were leading in Arkansas, North Carolina, South Da- kota, Texas, and Utah, Republicans were leading in Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, New Hampshire, and West Virginia. Democrats won in Arkansas, South Dakota, Vermont, North Dakota and Utah. Republicans were victorious in Indiana, Iowa, Mis- souri, New Hampshire and West Virginie. 2:00 a.m. Results (Continued from Page 1) a telegram, McGovern called upon his followers to "play the role of the loyal opposition." The senator said his campaign was successful in that it "pushed this country in the direction of peace." "We will press on with that ef- fort," he said, "but we do not rally to the support of policies that we deplore." The chief McGovern issue in the final days of the campaign-cor- ruption in the administration-did not catch on. McGovern's tenuous ,coalition of' college youth, minorities, blue col- lar workers, and disaffected groups within the country turned out to be insufficient in number to prevent a Nixon avalanche. The South Dakota senator had lashed outhagainstaadministration economic and Vietnam policies in the closing hours of the campaign. While the President relaxed in his oceanside California home over the weekend, McGovern hopped across the country in a frantic search for votes. Vietnam-the issue which had elevated McGovern to national prominence-faded into the back- ground of his own campaign as peace hopes brightened. Only in HRP should retain state ballot spot Late returns in the state's sena- torial race show Human Rights Party candidate Barbara Halpert gaining momentum in her quest for some 14,300 votes - w h i c h would keep the locally-based par- ty on the state-wide ballot in the future. Running as expected far behind her opponents Robert Griffin and Frank Kelly, Halpert has received 10,496 votes, with 62 per cent of the state's precincts reporting, ac- cording to United Press Interna- tional. As the highest candidate on HRP'stslate, Halpert must receive at least 1 per cent of the secre- tary of state's wining vote in the last election. Included in the untallied 40 per cent is the Ann Arbor vote, which r amld r avrl cnffirint rin-,rt Popular Vote Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dist. of Col. Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania 25 68,239-24 , 215,562-75 15 6 4 60 53 62 100 74 24 11 36 12 58 6 15 97 2 8 99 7 19 5 22 30 27 66 74 21 46 10 4 14 3 49 30 36 31 23,029-32 8,213-33 205,275-39 218,090--35 259,856-41 54,197-38 32,006-72 543,740-28 47,559-21 9,693-39 28,419-27 241,054-47 430,489-33 15,187-39 42,042-27 357,701-35' 6,004-28 506-30 480,834-37 63,360--63 276,509-37 45,217-49 26,275-20 198,661-36 40,042-41 110,186-30 51,286-38 7,455-28 411,246-34 13,874-38 153,829-36 49,042-28 2,712-29 736,305-39 82,925-22- 96,963-41 590,948-42 46,707-65 16,240-67 295,923-58 386,682-63 366,051-58 83,600-61 12,849-28 1,385,557-72 172,795-79 14,858-61 70,005-65 264,938-53 854,392-67 22,949-59 110,293-71 649,583-64 14,298-67 853-70 787,524-62 37,949-37 455,697-62 46,243-51 101,924-78 347,391-64 51,964-55 251,517-70 83,310-62 18,490-71 787,703-65 22,025-60 267,366-64 121,284-74 6,284-69 1,149,437-60 277,259-76 127,360-55 802,737-57 9 6 7 8 3 3 6 45 3 14 Electoral Vote Returns by states Results as of 2:00 a.m. y .. an 04 0d) za4 k I I e 7 a I 1 I I C s a O v b as +M Neil M z the last two days had he once! again brought the issue to the fore. Already, some observers have suggested a resurgence within the Democratic Party of Southern "Dixiecrats" and power brokers such as Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley. Alabama Gov. George Wallace predicted last nightthathis sup- porters will gain control of the Democratic Party after the Mc- Govern defeat. He said in a tele- vision interview, "The great Demo- cratic Party of the past will come back." "But with those who expressed the views I expressed in control." experience, and his good relations, 4TATE (Party in offic Arkansas (D) Delaware (R) Illinois (R) Indiana (R) Iowa (R) Kansas (D) Missouri (D) Montana (D) N. Hampshire (R) N. Carolina (D) N. Dakota (D) ce) Pct. Units Reporting DEMO- CRAT Bumpers* (E) Tribbitt 61 Walker1,412,695 59 Welsh 552,340 Franzenburg Docking* (E) 30 Dowd 233,388 Judge Crowley McLane** 58 Bowles 378,364 48 Link (E) 64,265 REPUBLI- CAN Blaylock Peterson* Ogilvie* 1,302,900 Bowen (E) 747,794 Ray* (E) Kay Bond 322,646 Smith Thomson Hosshouser 392,814 Larsen 60,105 17 12 4 4 26 13 7 9 10 10 21 7 12 4 S 3 4 17 4 41 13 3 25 8 6 27 10 4 4 8 4 A Texas (R) Virginia (D) 72 ... ty:._.. .., . - 4