The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 7, 1984 - Page 9 Voters defeat controversial ballot proposals PState Prop. A loses; wins From staff and wire reports State ballot Proposal A, which would have amended the state Constitution to allow legislative review of all state policies, was defeated yesterday by a respectable margin while Proposal B's approval by a 2-1 margin will restore the state's natural resources trust fund which has been depleted by state of- ficials to ward off a financial crisis. -Nationwide, West Virginia and Missouri voters were approving state lottery measures and while District of Columbia voters passed a measure guaranteeing shelter for the homeless as voters in 44 states considered a wide variety of ballot measures yestterday. In California, 82-year-old Howard Jarvis, author six years ago of *proposition 13 which kicked off tax revolts in several states, offered voters a chance to slash taxes again and make it tougher to pass future increases. Other statewide proposals in Califor- nia would sharply reduce welfare and health benefits, reapportion the state legislature in a way likely to tilt power to the Republicans, and urge the federal government to mandate ballots :in English only. A state Equal Rights Amendment in Maine was trailing in early returns. With 7 percent of precincts reporting, the measure was losing by a 71 percent 'to 29 percent margin. If approved, Maine would become the 17th state to adopt a state ERA. Voter 's Choice proposal fails by wide margin Associated Press Editors of Dixoi (Illinois's) Evening Telegraph scan what is probably the first newspaper to hit the streets proclaiming President Reagan's landslide victory over Walter Mondale. Free zone (Continued from Page 1) bor Coordinator and University em- ployee. "I think the Ann Arbor voters are confused. They've been inundated with a lot of scary, slick material," she said. Michael said she didn't know if free zone supporters would attempt to place the proposal on the ballot again. "We may well bring it up again," she said. "Winning against the kind of resources CARB has takes time," she said. Campaign finance reports which were filed with the county clerk's office state that CARB had spent $37,073 by Oct. 21 to defeat the proposal. By that date, the Campaign for a Nuclear Free Ann Arbor spent $3,834. LAST NIGHT, Bob Bensen, Ann Ar- proposal 1 bor Area Chamber of Commerce president said about $150,000 had been spent to insure a CARB victory. The Chamber had voiced opposition to the free zone. A spokesperson for free zone suppor- ters said they had spent about $7,500 in their campaign. "It's hard to run against so much money and the establishment," said Jonathan Ellis, an Ann Arbor resident and free zone supporter. ALTHOUGH THE free zone lost, campaign worker Justin Schwartz, a University history and philosophy of science graduate student said he felt his group's campaign was victory. "We lost the election but we won a lot more," he said, explaining that free )ses in city zone supporters were able to establish a grass roots organization to fight for the peace movement. "I'm delighted," said Benson. "Primarily because what the people of Ann Arbor said today is they want to keep us a leading technology and research (center) in the U.S.," he ad- ded. The proposal was put on the ballot in August after petitions bearing 8,000 signatures from free zone supporters were submitted to the city clerk's of- fice. If: the proposal had passed, Ann Ar- bor would have become the first city in the nation in which nuclear weapons reserach is actually conducted, to be a free zone. By GREG HUTTON and KEVIN KELLY Proposal C, which University of- ficials said would seriously cut state support to schools, was losing at presstime last night by a 2-1 margin. "Proposal C was bad for Michigan - Michigan was spared a significant trauma," said James Briney, director of Promote Michigan, an organization which campaigned extensively against the measure. PROPOSAL C, called Voters' Choice by proponents, would roll back state and local taxes to their Dec. 31, 1981 levels, and require voters to approve any future tax increase. The widely respected Citizens Research Council said the measure would cut state revenues by $927 million in fiscal year 1986, local property tax revenues by $345 million and local in- come tax revenues by about $40 million. Fee hikes for licenses and permits would also require approval by popular vote unless first approved by four-fifths of the state legislature. Income tax for non-residents would be limited to one half of one percent. OPPONENTS of Proposal C said the loss in revenue would cause serious damage to universities, schools, and local and state governments. University officials have said that if the measure passes, a tuition increase of as much as 21 percent could be necessary to offset losses in state fun- ding. Jim DeMar, a leading backer of the proposal, said the group will not give up but try again in 1986. "WE WERE right. We had the issue of the day and they were scared to death," DeMar said. He added that the group focused on the wrong areas and should have spoken to more of a grass roots population. "I think we did a poor job of selling it," he said, adding that Promote Michigan outspent them by 20-1. Jim O'Toole, media relations director for Promote Michigan, said it was good the proposal was defeated because it showed people were not simply voting a partisan ticket. "Michigan voters knew what they were doing," O'Toole said. "People were not willing to vote for Proposal C because it changed our basic form of government and that's never been done before." Ken Benjamin, a volunteer for the Voter's Choice campaign said last night, "I don't know if the State of Michigan deserves our money to be spent on promoting Proposal C (in 1986)." Since the proposal didn't pass now, he added, let the state pay high taxes. Reagan sweeps the (Continued from Page 1) The president insisted all day he was superstituously avoiding predictions, but felt confident enough to outline his goals for a second term in an interview With the Washington Post. He said he would push again for congressional ap- proval of a balanced budget amen- dment to the Constitution and the right to veto individual sections of spending bills, two measures he wants to help reduce federal spending. He also renewed his call for a defense system in space designed to shoot down missiles. GERALDINE Ferraro told her staff last night to be proud of their effort and that "no one should shed any tears" as her hopes of becoming the first woman vice president were crushed by the Republican landslide. Ferraro apparently hurt the Democratic presidential ticket more than she helped it, according to network television exit polling in yesterday's election. "It appears Ferarro was not a ,positive factor and could have been a negative factor," said Sheldon Gawiser, an NBC News poll spokesman. Election officials across the country reported a heavy voter turnout in the first hours after polls opened yesterday morning, with long lines at many b balloting sites attributed to the presidential race, close local contests and fair weather throughout much of the nation. Mondale, the Democratic challenger, hoped for a storybook upset. He cast his ballot in North Oaks, Minn., then retur- nred home to await the results that pollsters - even his own - suggested r would bring an early and lopsided defeat. A few hours later, the president and his wife Nancy flew more than 100 miles by helicopter from Los Angeles to cast their absentee ballots in Solvang, Calif., a small town of 2,125 people, near their mountaintop ranch. For more than a year, voters had been bombarded by speeches, brochur- es, television commericials and radio advertisements extolling the virtues of the conservative Republican president or his Democratic opposition. Registration - estimated at about 125 million - reached record levels, with both parties and hundreds of organizations - from advocates of a nuclear weapons freeze to real estate brokers - conducting expensive sign- up campaigns. Democrats hoped to enroll the nation's dispossessed, especially blacks and Hispanics. BUT THE Republicans outspent the Democrats and claimed to outdo them in rokaic now. VnP ThA GOiP people and send combat troops to Cen- tral America. THE DEMOCRATIC nominee's five- minute advertisement said he preferred to lose an election cam- paignipg on decency than to win one based on self-interest. If the candidates were different, so, too, did the course of their campaigns vary. The only suspense among Republicans was whether the president would seek election to a second term that would begin when he was 73 years old. He ended that suspense in January, and, without opposition for his party's nomination, launched a campaign proclaiming that "America's back" from economic hard times and diplomatic difficulties of the Carter- Mondale administration. REAGAN TOUTED the economic recovery of the past four years, rarely mentioning record budget deficits but claiming credit for reduced interest rates and lower inflation. By contrast, Mondale, the early front- runner, was nearly denied the Democratic nomination in a series of primary and caucus upsets, and was forced into a long campaign against Sen. Gary Hart and the Rev. Jesse Jackson that wasn't finally settled until the Derr'cratic National Convention in July. Mondale made history in picking Ferraro, a congresswoman from the Queens borough of New York, as the first woman named to a major political party ticket. It was the type of bold stroke that Mondale's critics said he was incapable of. BUT FERRARO quickly became embroiled in a controversy over family finances, and by the time the Reagan- Bush ticket was renominated at the Republican National Convention in August, the president was back atop a healthy lead in the polls. Mondale played one other campaign gamble, declaring that a tax increase country was inevitable no matter who won the election, and promising his tax hike would be fair, while Reagan's would benefit his "wealthy friends." But Reagan retorted he would accept tax increases only as a "last resort" and ridiculed Mondale as "Coach Tax Hike." Mondale soon discovered that Democratic governors and members of Congress were maintaining their distance from him and his tax increase proposal. MIDWAY THROUGH the fall cam- paign, Mondale looked like a losing candidate for certain, unable even to entice some Democratic governors and congressional candidates to share the campaign stage. But a month before the election, in Louisville, Ky., on Oct. 7, came the first of two nationally broadcast debates. Reagan occasionally seemed unsure of himself, groping for words and stumbling through his closing statement. Overnight, Mondale began cutting into Reagan's lead in the polls. Democrats began speculating openly that at 73, the president might be too old to serve another term. And overnight - like "somebody threw a switch," Mondale said - the Democrats' crowds grew larger and in state after state, polls showed he was gaining. Reagan's aides brushed aside his faltering debate performance as the product of poor staff performance. Two weeks later, after a more convincing showing in his second debate against Mondale on foreign policy, Reagan regained his earlier lead in the polls. Mondale was staggered a few days later when it was reported that cam- paign chairman James Johnson had told him privately that the president's lead appeared insurmountable. Reagan's advisers began talking of a 50-state sweep that would swell Republican ranks in Congress and strengthen the president's hand in the new House and Senate. THEREARE TWO SIDESTO BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY And they're both repre- sented by the insignia you wear as a member of the Army Nurse Corps. The caduceus on the left means you're part of a health care system in which educational and career advancement are the rule, not the exception. The gold bar on the right means you command respect as an Army officer. If you're earning a BSN, write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Clifton, NJ 07015. ARMY NURSE CORPS. BE ALLYOU CAN BE. !"\ -,,. ': ;i ." . s . proudly presents CAMPUS MEET THE PRESS :...NO WSHO WING in the Kuenzel Room of the Michigan Union.' Special Guests: BILL SPI NDLE: Editor-in-Chief of The Michiaan Dailv Important Announcement for Students in LSA, Business, Public Policy, Law, Engineering ... You Have an Opportunity to Hear WILLIAM WEISS CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER AMERITECH CORPORATION Discuss and Comment on, The Roles Business, Education and Government Should Play in Creating More Economic Opportunities and lobs. Thursday, November 8