THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Page Three Report hits cit By DAVID WHITING oral prefi New election procedures resulting from the use of suits by£ paper ballots, and not the city's preferential voting THE D system, caused the major errors committed in last of prefer April's local election, according to a City Hall report. itself. A But none of the errors, the report emphasizes, could Stephen have made the election open to ballot box tampering uncertain or fraud. carrying in office, THE STUDY points to confused election workers, who exactly w faced unfamiliar precinct closing procedures and a City Cour grueling 18-hour work day, as responsible for most of the mistakes made during the election. Wheeler study. "I The report was prepared by Robert Hunt, an admin- 'If I was istrative aide, under the guidance of City Adminis- trator Sylvester Murray after recently-elected Demo- HOWE cratic Mayor Albert Wheeler, wanting to clear the aira surrounding the controversial election, made the any erro request. have com Wheeler, after defeating former Republican Mayor of securi James Stephenson by 121 votes in a hotly-contested fraud." race which required a second round of counting may- A sourc Apollo crew to end flighttoday SPACE CENTER, Houston (P) served as a passageway and air- - The three Apollo astronauts lock to the Soviets' Soyuz craft. return to earth this afternoon, ending nine days of orbital ex- "IT'S GONE and it went periments and the first inter- smoothly," Brand said. "It was national rendezvous in space. really a pretty sight watching Astronauts Thomas Stafford, it tumble off over the ocean." Vance Brand and D o n a d .The astronauts return after "Deke" Slayton will guide their nine days in space that ended Apollo craft through a blazing one era and began another. re-entry toward a 5:18 p.m. Theirs is the last voyage for (E)DT) splashdown in the Pa- spaceship Apollo, the system cific Ocean. which first carried man to the moon, and the last American THE USS New Orleans, a heli- manned spaceflight for at least copter carrier and the prime re- four years. And, because Soviet covery ship, is already on sta- spacecraft are designed for tion near the splashdown target land, not water, returns and the about 200 miles west of Hawaii. next breed of U.S. spacecraft In one of the final acts of will come home like an airplane preparation for the splashdown, on a runway, today's return to the astronauts jettisoned the earth may very well be the last black docking module which See APOLLO, Page 7 Egypt agrees to keep U.N. forces in Sinai By The Associated Press Egypt accepted yesterday an appeal from the U.N. Security Council to keep the U.N. buffer force in the Sinai for three more months. The mandate was to expire today, and Egypt last week had opposed an extension on grounds Israel was using the force to perpetuate its occupation. Egyptian Foreign Minister tsmail Fahmy said President Anwar Sadat's original decision not to extend the mandate "awoke the world to the dangerous possibilities in the area and forced all the directly concerned parties, such as Israel, and the indirectly con- cerned parties, such as the United States, to confront their re- sponsibilities." WASHINGTON, meanwhile, announced that Israel received an Egyptian counterproposal for a Sinai settlement, but President Ford said U.S. efforts to ease tensions in the region "might not work." In Jerusalem, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin announced a new condition for an interim Sinai accord, demanding that the pact be finalized "in direct negotiations" between Israel and Egypt. Rabin spoke after Cairo announced it would agree to an extension of the U.N. mandate. Fahmy said the unanimous decision by the Egyptian national security council gives Sadat "another asset" in the Middle East peace process. "BUT WE will make a basic reassessment of our position con- cerning further steps in the crisis," Fahmy told a committee of the national Congress of the Arab Socialist Union, Egypt's only political party. . In New York, U.N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim told re- porters, "In my opinion it is a satisfactory solution which opens the door for further negotiating process." The extension of the life of the 3,919-man force was sought by the U.N. Security Council in an appeal sent to Sadat on Mon- day night. The Egyptian reply, signed by Fahmy, was handed to the president of the Security Council for July, Eugenio Plaja of Italy, and the Council was expected to vote on the extension. election erential ballots, was hit with a series of law- Stephenson. EFEATED incumbent challenged the validity ential voting and the conduct of the election Circuit Court ruling is pending. son's court actions served to put a shroud of ty over the diection and hindered Wheeler in out official duties. Wheeler, after only a week then decided it was necessary to determine hat went on during the election. At the May 1 cil meeting he asked Murray to find out. r yesterday explained why he requested the 'd like to have the issue settled," he stated. fraudulently elected then I ought to resign." VER, the report concludes, "At no time do rs (committed during the election), appear to tbined in a way which produced a total lack ty precautions vulnerable to tampering or e of major controversy in the dispute over the procedures validity of the election was whether the paper ballots were sufficiently secure to prevent ballot stuffing. While the report emphasizes the ballots were secure enough to prevent fraud, it points out a number of blunders in their handling. THE BALLOTS were placed in sealed canvas bags which were then supposed to be placed in locked ballot boxes. However, ten of the boxes were never locked. The report lists a total of 28 security errors pertain- ing to the bags and boxes, most of which involved fail- ures in recording seal numbers on the ballot containers, "Experience proved to be a disadvantage," the study notes while reasoning what factors might have con- tributed to the poor security. SINCE THE city converted to machine voting, the ballot boxes have been used only to store election sup- plies. However, because of the newly-instituted prefer- ential voting, paper ballots were used last April. Prior to last April it was not necessary to seal the "supply" boxes, but only the voting machines. See REPORT, Page 5 Clowning around Leslie Brouer, 20, of Simi, California - who wants to be a circus clown - gets face makeup from a professional clown, George Koury of New York, as she and other would-be performers showed up for a tryout before the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Baily officials in Los Angeles yesterday. Local Motion co-op seeks community service unds By LOIS JOSIMOVICH Last fall it was just a gleam in the eyes of its creators, but Local Motion (LM), the com- munity - based fund - raising cooperative, has survived the first trying stages of infancy and has ambitious plans for the future. LM, which began operating in February, collects money from sponsors - mainly on the campus community - and dis- burses the funds twice a year to non-profit organizations with- in the city. "UP TO this point, we've been collecting over $1,000 a month," boasts Diane Hall, one of the group's original founders and currently one of its managers. Many of the cooperating businesses collect the money from Local Motion canisters on their sales counters with a bro- chure explaining the organiza- tion's purpose. Some, like Piz- za Bob's, donate a certain amount each month from their profits. "We would like them all eventually to ask each custom- er if he wants to donate a 2 per cent surcharge on what he buys," says Michael McCor- mick, a co-manager. "Of course, the tax is strictly vol- untary." SO FAR, most sponsors seem to prefer the canister ap- proach. One restaurant owner said the voluntary surcharge "can be misleading, especially in a store where the service has to be pretty fast." Once the money is collected, LM's Board of Directors, com- posed of human service lead- ers and local businessmen, de- cides where the funds will go. "Basic services" like food, health care, housing, child care and legal aid get top priority. Second priority is given to edu- cation, information and advi- cacy services, and finally grants for cultural and transporta- tional services are considered. The next disbursement will come at a public meeting Octo- ber 18, when Hall and McCor- mick expect to have about $4,000 to distribute among the groups applying for aid. "IT'S REALLY taking off," said McCormick, "and we ex- pect a lot of growth." He anticipates that by the following disbursement date next March, LM will have twice the October figure to disburse. The co-op's only problem in- volves the summer vacation ill in volunteers to staff the organization, cutting it from its usual pool of 30 or more to a skeleton crew of half a dozen persons. There is certainly no lack of sponsors. There are over 30 al- ready and the number is stead- ily increasing. "LM GAVE us a single source See CO-OP, Page 7