Wednesday, August 4, 1976 THE MWCHIGAN DAILY Page I hret Postill, Minick lock up sheriff slots By LANI JORDAN Although the heavily publi- cized Washtenaw County sher- iff's race took several surprising turns last evening, with 76 per cent of the vote tallied lemo- cratic incumbent Fred Postill and Republica Tons Minick have emerged the victors. In the days prior to yester- day's election, Postill received a large arnount of publicity stemming from his involvement in a fight in Chelsea lost month. Because of this it was predicted that Postill would face a stiff challenge from Charles Brode- rick, a deputy under former sheriff Doug Harvey. AS THE RETURNS trickled in, Postill commanded an im- pressive lead over Broderick and his other opponents: Dor- othv ttunawill, Lushin Salyer, and Richard Horn. Later in the evening the margin between Postill and Brolerick slimmed but Postill retained his lead, emerging the victor. Atl 1 a.m. Postill held a 2000 vote lead but Broderick refused to concede the election. Brod- erick campaign manager Ron Pinsoneaild said, "It's very possible Ithat other changes will come. POstill drew his strength from Ann Arhor: we're still nailing f r a m the outlying FartIer is the eveimng, Pos- till, celchrating is suct ry, sad, " We're stay ahead non' with the conservative vote, : lot bet- ter th II'd expected. lt really halpy) with the results" TOIM MOORS, Postill's cans- Pain manager comelned on the Chelsea incident, "A lot of what has b-een said (iabout Pos- till ) in the papers was . false and at times taiuted." ie continued, "We are glad that the wisdtto at the elec- torate prevailed.' Comparing this elction to the one in 1972, Postill suid, "I see a ten per cent dropolif of votes in the liberal precincts A lot of new voters have catered the city." "BY THE FIRST of Septem- her the Chelsea uisse will be See POSTIIL, Page 10 ICM BENTu . rederick Postil receives a warm handshake from campaign manager TOM Moore after winning the Democratic race for sheriff in yesterday's election. Steeh wins prosecutor race; millage defeated Assistant Genessee County Prosecutor George Steeh last night won a close victory from Ronald Keys, his opponent in the race for the Democratic nomination for W a s h t e n a w County Prosecutor. With 76 per cent of the vote in, he was lead- ing 5059 to 4451. "I've carried the city of Ann Arbor pretty handily," Steeh boasted (admitting, however, that "devastation in the out- country' had made the race a close one). BOTH KEYS and Steeh had similar stands on most of the issues. They have concentrated on consumer protection, control of violent crimes, drug control, and police-prosecutor protection. A former assistant prosecutor in Calhoun County, Keys started out as an underdog from the first voting returns yesterday and stayed in second place all evening. Republican William Delhey, the incumbent Prosecutor, ran unopposed for the GOP nomina- tion. A county millage proposal to levy taxes for parks and recrea- tion waged a desperate struggle all night for survival, but ulti- mately was beaten down by the voters, 15,742 to 15,350 IN THE RACE for a County Commission seat in the student- heavy Fifteenth District, incum- bent Democrat Catherine Mc- Clary had the vote wrapped up on her side of the ticket from the very beginning. She collect- ed 229 ballots, while her oppo- nent, Charles Franklin, pulled a meager 37. Neither candidate could be reached for comment, but a Franklin supporter attributed his man's loss to a lack of cam- paigning. Franklin, a Univer- sity student, had boasted of spending "zero money on my campaign.' Lute election returns for coUnty races These are the final tallies for all local races in yester- day's primary: Sheriff (Democrats): Postill, 8,246; Broderick, 6,358; Hunawill, 2,310; Salyer, 1,306; Horn, 1,271 Sheriff (Republicans): Minick, 10,415; Johnson, 6,358; Tayolr, 1,000; Craft, 616- Prosecutor (Democrats): Steeh, 6,668; Keys, 6,002 5th Circuit Court of 22nd District: Conlin, 17,911; Bur- goyne, 10,073; Carpenter, 4,732 Parks and Recreation Millage: No, 15,735; Yes, 15, 211 County Clerk (Democrats): Klaver, 5,672; Gagnon, 4,913; Melton, 4,043 Drain Commissioner (Democrats): Allen, 4,887; Blessing, 4,835; Bletcher, 3,681 Drain Commissioner (Republicans): Taft, 7,595; Dechert, 4,492 On the Republican side of the Commissioner's race, Robert Brandenburg, a University law student, more than doubled the votes of his rival, Elliot Chikof- sky-a former Student Govern- ment Council treasurer. HENRY CONLIN and Shirley Burgoyne, both local lawyers, appear to be headed for a face- off in the November election for the judgeship of the 22nd Cir- cuit's 5th Court, as the top two contestants in that nonpartisan race. At 76 per cent of the re- turns, Conlin had 13,320 and Burgoyne had 7,645. Arthur Carpenter, the third candidate-noted for his cases defending the student right to vote and other educational is- sues-was eliminated from the running by a poor showing at the polls. Carpenter was unavailable for comment, but Conlin said he was "pleased for her (Bur- goyne) and for myself." Burgoyne's vote was appar- ently unaffected by the fact that she had been twice rated "not qualified" for judge by a secret unofficial poll of the county bar association. She proclaimed her- self pleased as well, and said she had mode no plans yet for her fall campaign against Con- lin. In the County Clerk's Demo- cratic primary, Janet Klaver was leading in a race against the next contender William Gagnon. Klaver had 3784 votes to Gagnon's 3034, with 127 out of 188 precincts reporting. Thb third candidate, Rose Melton, had 2423. In the Republican race, incumbent Clerk Robert Harrison was running unop- posed. At the same time, in the race for Drain Commissioner, Thom- as Blessing was running way in front of the other Democratic candidates with 3131. Ronald Al- len was second with 2779, and Thomas Bletcher was running a close third with 2213 votes. Howard Taft had almost twice as many votes as his sole op- ponent in the Republican pri- mary for the same position, with 4534 votes compared to Roy Dechert's 2770. FAY JOHNSON gets a congratuiatory buss trom hs wise Bernie early yesterday evening, when everyone thought he had the Republican spot for sheriff wrapped up. Johnson was later defeated by Tom Minick. Deadly Ph ila. pligue still not identifed HARRISBURG, Pa. (A' - Teams of medical detectives work- ed with microscopes and needles yesterday as they hunted for the tiny disease-causing organism that has killed 20 persons since an American Legion convention in Philadelphia 10 days ago. More than 100 persons have been hospitalized. AT LABORATORIES in Philadelphia and Atlanta, the scien- tists tested and checked samples taken from the dead and sick throughout Pennsylvania. "This is the freakiest thing I've ever seen," said Karen Shectman, a state microbiologist working at the laboratory in Philadelphia. The researchers said they are confident of finding the cause of the disease. State officials readied plans for a mass inocula- tion program should it be needed. STATE HEALTh Secretary Leonard Bachman suggested at a news conference that the disease is similar to viral pneumonia and also said the much-publicized swine flu is a possibility, but See STRANGE, Page 7