Page Eght THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, August 21, 1974 Township center of controversy (Continued from Page 1i correctly reported, members of the Pierce campaign and many Whiteford residents remain un- convinced. "The county clerk is the on- ly guy who understands what happened," Pierce aide Rob- ert Dwyer said. "We've talked with him and we still don't know what is going on." EVEN if that error was cor- rected, Briskey claims other problems could still render the election illegal. Among the strongest accusa- tions made by Briskey are that absentee voters were sent sam- ple ballots already marked for certain candidates. He also stated absentee voters were afraid to return their ballots. In the letter, Briskey does not further explain the allega- tions or how he learned of them. HE ALSO contends that one voting machine did not work correctly and that the machines were improperly handled after the polls closed during the time when the votes were being tal- lied. Local election officials - par- ticularly Ernest LaPointe who was responsible for setting up the machines - said there were no problems other than the election night mix-up in report- ing results. LaPointe took full blame for that error and attributed it to "just plain carelessness." IF Briskey can substantiate his allegations, he could file a lawsuit asking that the election be overturned in Whiteford and a new one held. Members of the Pierce cam- paign have talked with Briskey and another township candidate who feels the election was not properly handled. Pierce has a staff of Ann Arbor lawyers look- ing into what legal options are available to him in the White- ford incident. At this time the congressional candidate has taken no formal legal action, pending the out- come of an official election can- vass being carried out by state officials. Such a vote check is a standard procedure after all elections. However, Pierce undoubtedly will ask for a recount in the close congressional race. BRISKEY and another defeat- ed township candidate have al- ready requested a recount of the Whiteford Township results. Underlying much of the offic- ial talk in Whiteford is the sus- picion - often not verbalized- that the election itself was rig- ged. DOOLEY4'S POSITIONS AVAILABLE: BARTENDERS WAITRESSES BUS BOYS No Experience Necessary APPLY IN PERSON 7-10 p.m. Wed., Thur., Fri, Aug. 21, 22, 23 310 MAYNARD-Across from Jacobson's FRITZ LANG DOUBLE FEATURE METROPOLIS (at 7:30) 1926 This Expressionist silent portrays the city of the distant future where the elite live in an air city while the workers are enslaved to machines in the underground. One of Hitler's favorite films. SCARLET STREET (at 9:45) 1945 Edward G. Robinson plays a meek bank teller, looking for a new lease on life, who gets taken for a ride by a glamorous "model" and fast-talking "brother." FRI.: Bogart in TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT SAT.: Harlow in DINNER AT EIGHT None of the local candidates or Pierce has actually said the election has been intentionally subverted, but many of citizens grumble about fraud and local "Watergates." THESE rumors have not been confirmed and even those persons recounting them doubt if they could ever be legally proven. "I can't put my finger on any one thing, but the whole election smells," said one town- ship resident active in politics. "We're not completely satis- fied," Dwyer said. "We don't want a tainted election." How- ever he stresses that the Pierce campaign does not suspect any intentional fraud took place. But behind that official word, some of the aides just -shake their heads when they look at the vote totals in the congres- sional primary. Although fairly sure no one tried to directly in- fluence the Reuther-Pierce out- come, they wonder about the township contests. WHAT first raised the eye- brows around the Pierce office was the unusually high num- Deserters sco imin~ted amnel STOCKHOLM, Sweden (A)-A spokesman for the estimated 350 American miiltary deserters in Sweden r e j e c t e d yesterday President Ford's statement sug- gesting conditional amnesty to deserters. "We want universal and un- conditional amnesty for resis- ters, deserters and those veter- ans who have been given dis- honorable discharge," said Mike Powers, 24, of New York. He said 900,000 Americans fall into those categories, not the 50,000 Ford mentioned in a speech Monday. "But of course we are pleased that the amnesty question was brought up at all," said Powers, who fled here in 1968 and now teaches English. He said Ford's statement was "an attempt to make public opinion forget the Watergate scandal and the continuing Viet- nam war," and "we are not in- Abortion Alternative OFFERED BY Problem Pregnancy Help 24 hr. phone: 769-7283 Office: 400 S. Division Main floor, Street entrance (corner of William) Hrs. Mon.-Thurs. 1-4:30 o.m. Thurs. evening 6-9 n.m. FREE PREGNANCY TESTING her of votes polled by Thee Williams in the congressional primary. In Whiteford he gamed some 60 votes - 16 per cent of all' those cast - while across the entire district the retired engi- neer received only three per cent, finishing a distant last in the five-way battle. Williams did not campaign in the Whiteford area and ac- cording to Pierce workers had never heard of the township when asked about it shortly af- ter the election. THE other four congressional candidates, including Pierce, had done some minimal work in the region, although that section of the district is generally con- ceded to be Reuther territory. Consequently, the Pierce aides are at a loss to explain how their candidate trailed Williams in the township by a margin of more than three to one. And as Pierce himself said in a meeting with his workers last week: "I'd hate to lose this thing on an error - where we didn't even know what hap- pened." rn F ord's iosty offer terested in forgetting either one." More than 700 deserters came to Sweden during the seven years since the first four ar- rived here from the U.S. Carrier "Intrepid" in 1967. The Swedish S o c i a 1 Demo- cratic government had been a harsh critic of American in- volvement in Indochina and it is believed that the refuge given to deserters influenced the American decision to down- grade diplomatic relations at one stage. Normal relations were restored earlier this year. The deserters were granted residence permits on the grounds that they risked being sent to a scene of war. Some Americans here have said that if amnesty were grant- ed, not more than 50 percent would leave Sweden. In Canada, where many draft evaders fled, reaction also was cool to the Ford speech. "Many people want to go back very badly, including myself, but we don't want to go back under conditions like this," said Gerry Condon, managing editor of war resister's m a g a z i n e, Amex- Canada. Condon said the President had taken "a very tough stand .. . it's just asking for another pound of flesh from people who resisted a war they felt was illegal and immoral." He esti- mated 25,000 Vietnam exiles are in Canada. cinema id Tongh a 7:30 and 9:30 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM $1.50 for both films Would you buy a used secret y from these men? MON.-SAT.- 7 and 9 P.M, SUN.-5-7.9 P.M. do It tohe C.A. s