The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 8, 1984 - Page 5 Final Election Results Following are the final results of Tuesday's voting for major parties with 100 percent of the precincts reporting. They were compiled from staff and wire reports. The totals in the campus column were derived by examining the, results in the voting precincts closest to the University campus and student neighborhoods. Names of the winners are in boldface type. President........Campus City Total Walter Mondale (D) ............... 9,380 29,723 36,930,923 Ronald Reagan (R) ................ 5,043 21,580 53,428,357 Prosecuting Attorney George Sallade (D) ............................ William Delhey (R) ........................... County sheriff James Douglas (D) ............................ Ronald Schebil (R) ............................ 22,984 21,468 22,561 22,306 U.S. Senator Carl Levin (D) ..................... County Clerk/Register of Deeds Susan Greenburg (D) .......................... 23,971 Robert Harrison (R) ........................... 19,003 10,151 Carl Levin (D) ..................... 10,151 Jack Lousma (R) .................. 3,662 U.S. House - Second District Mike McCauley (D) ................ 6,958 Carl Pursell (R) ................... 5,613 33,165 33,165 17,286 20,960 25,483 State House - 53rd District Perry Bullard (D) ................. 8,698 Paul Jensen (R)................... 3,113 University of Michigan Regents Marjorie Lansing (D) .............. 7,837 25,471 Robert Nederlander (D)........... 8,281 27,017 Neal Nielsen (R) .................. 3,460 15,979 Veronica Latta Smith (R) .......... 4,031 17,420 State Board of Education City Gumecindo Sala (D) ......................22,372 John Watanen (D) ........................22,727 Dorothy Beardmore (R) ....................... 18,608 Cherry Jacobus (R) ........................... 17,407 Michigan State University Trustees June Kretzschmer (D) ......................... 22,431 Charles Vincent (D)..... ................... 22,093 Dean Pridgeon (R) ............................ 16,695 Kathy Wilbur (R).............................. 17,535 Wayne State University Governors Winifred Fraser (D) ........................... 22,456 Denise Lewis (D) ......................... 22,625 Gary Artinian (R) ............................. 15,698 George Bashara (R) ........................... 17,007 1,926,426- 1,926,426 1,733,648 61,992 139,680 25,022 11,718 1,458,255 1,512,221 1,617,083 1,601,386 Total 1,343,557 1,439,465 1,762,849 1,616,422 1,412,171 1,451,774 1,631,260 1,675,246 1,431,693 1,459,171 1,556,601 1,620,546 County Treasurer Kenneth Latta (D) ............................. Michael Stimpson (R) ..................... 22,349 19,681 43,631 57,939 44,431 59,098 47,815 50,176 44,415 51,617 51,879 45,042 7,416 5,852 5,175 Circuit Court - 22nd District Patrick Conlin ................................. Edward Deake ................................ District Court -15th District Pieter Thomassen ............................. Probate Court Richard Conlin ................................ Judith Wood ................................... Supreme Court Justice - 4 year term James Brickley ................................ 24,509 1,751,731 James Hathaway ...............................10,378 840,501 Court of Appeals -1st District Harold Hood.......... ..... 18,696 -- Richard Maher ............................... 20,558 -- 25,572 18,867 24,789 12,472 24,494 Drain Commissioner James Murray (D)............................ 24,866 Dan Bicknell (R) .............................. 17,495 County Commissioner - District 6 Meri Lou Murray (D)......................... 7,265 County Commissioner - District 7 Ray Shoultz (D)............................ 4,416 Collene Conrad (R)....................... 3,847 58,096 44,132 24,789 33,860 47,957 Washtenaw Community College Trustee James'Anderson .............................. 18,389 40,370 Richard Bailey ............................. 18,437 40,933 John Corey...............................14,961 33,454 James Lang ................................... 11,952 28,448 Marcia Harrison (vacancy).................... 22,033 52,001 Proposal A - Administrative rules Yes...................................... 15,752 36,319 No....................................... 26,126 56,897 Proposal B - Natural Resources Fund Yes ........................................... 33,427 70,278 No ............................................ 11,183 27,919 Proposal C - Voter's Choice Yes .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9,669 31,098 County Commissioner - District 8 Donald Duquette (D) .......................... 7,482 7,726 Richard Chesbrough (R) ....................... 5,077 5,532 County Commissioner - District 9 Catherine McClary (D) ........................ 6,731 6,731 Supreme Court Justice - 8 year term Thomas Kavanagh ........:................... 14,376 1,083,781 Dorothy Riley ................................. 22,643 1,593,449 Supreme Court Justice -6 year term No.................36,936 City Proposal 1 - Nuclear Free Zone Y es ........................................... 16,298 N o ............................................ 30,100 County Proposal 1- Parks Millage Yes .... ..... ............................ 29,736 No .......-.-.............................. 12,546 72,521 16,298 30,100 57,475 35,840 Patricia Boyle ................................. Robert Griffin ................................. 25,273 1,464,705 12,151 1,246,711 Lousma blames lack of funds for election loss By THOMAS HRACH with wire leports Exit polls declared Democrat Carl Levin the clear winner in Michigan's senate race when voting ended Tuesday. But Republican challenger Jack Lousma waited through the night for returns from the city of Detroit before he conceded the contest yester- day morning. The band of Lousma supporters who gathered at the Ann Arbor Sheraton Inn on election night saw their candidate briefly. He made only two appearances before the crowd. Lousma insisted that he "will not concede anything on guesswork" which is what he considers the exit polling. INSTEAD, Lousma decided to travel to Dearborn to thank his supporters and promised he would return to give the Ann Arbor loyalists the final word on his campaign. But early yesterday morning Lousma decided to wait on the hunch that his slim lead at the time would hold up after the ballots from Detroit had been counted. Lousma called it quits yesterday at a 9 a.m. news conference in the hotel near Briarwood. "Me and the space shuttle had trouble getting off the ground this mor- ning," said Lousma, referring to the space shuttle Discovery's aborted lift- off yesterday. "But there will be another day for the both of us," he said. LEVIN, A freshman senator from Detroit, had 1,924,484 or 53 percent, to 1,731,424 or 47 percent for Lousma, a former astronaut. Levin told a morning-after news con- ference in Detroit that he was not sur- prised by his performance due to Reagan's strong showing in the state. "I knew it would be a hard-fought race if the President did well," he said. "I always knew the polls were way off - the exit polls were way off." "HUNDREDS of thousands of people had to split their ticket for me. That shows people want Michigan to be represented - they don't want a senator that's in the President's pocket," Levin said. Lousma thanked his supporters and family, and had few harsh words for his opponent. The native Ann Arbor resident refused to cite any errors on the part of his campaign staff, instead blaming the lack of funds for the failure to get his message out to the voters of Michigan. "This was a .close race, and with enough financial resources we would have won it," Lousma said. "I DIDN'T COME into this campaign with an unlimited bankroll," Lousma said. "The (Reagan) coattail effect would have worked if we had had more money." According to the candidate his cam- paign finished with a $10,000 to $20,000 debt. Lousma's financial difficulties began when Levin raised $2.1 million this year, compared with $1.3 million for Lousma. DURING THE campaign, Lousma was stung by a Levin commercial that included a film clip of him telling a Japanese audience that he had a Toyota. Lousma yesterday commented one last time on that television commercial. "Certainly voters were mislead by the false advertisement. It was a cheap shot because it was my son's car," said Lousma. "I was in the race the whole way, but in the end finances were the problem." Lousma refused to speculate on what his future plans would entail. He neither confirmed nor denied he would seek another office, most specifically the governor's seat in 1986. Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Boisterous Democratic supporters cheer for their heroes at Cottage Inn on Washtenaw while awaiting election results. City voters relieved at Proposal C's defeat By GREGORY HUTTON with wire reports University officials are breathing a sigh of relief af- ter state Proposal C was defeated Tuesday by a margin of 60-40 percent. The proposal would have rolled back state taxes to their Dec. 1981 levels and could have forced the University to hike tuition as much as 21 percent. ANN ARBOR voters rejected the proposal by the wide margin of 36,936 to 9,669. Keith Molin, assistant to the vice-president and hirector of capital projects, said that the ad- ministration was delighted with the outcome, and that it was truly an expression of rejection for the proposal. "We are relieved at the defeat of Proposal C.. . had it passed we would have had to do one of two things - either reduce the curriculum of some schools or raise tuition," said Molin. Molin said that the other half of the Proposal which requires four-fifths of the legislative vote for all fur- ther tax increases, would lead to "anarchy". The passage of Proposal C could have slashed as much as $38 million from the $170 million of state support the University receives this year, officials said. "WE THINK (the defeat) is not only good for the people of Michigan, but particularly the students of the University," said Mark Williams, a spokesperson for the Michigan Student Assembly. "We were a little worried at the 17 percent undecided vote, but we ex- pected the Proposal to go down," he said. The University community was praised Tuesday night by Promote Michigan, the coalition against the passage of Proposal C, for helping to contribute funds for the campaign drive. Promote Michigan raised a total of $1 million toward its successful campaign. "The help that the University gave us as far as communicating to the alumni and community about the confusing and chaotic nature of Proposal C was wonderful," said Don Stypula, assistant financial director of Promote Michigan. "We cannot thank the University enough," he added. Projections sway Oregon turnout NEW YORK (AP) - A significant number of registered voters in Oregon were discouraged from voting after hearing television reports of Ronald Reagan's landslide victory, but the network projections did not cause people already at the polls to leave the lines, a researcher said yesterday. Dr. William Adams, professor of administration at George Washington University, called the impact on voter turnout "less than trivial. In our survey, we definitely encountered a number of people who said that projections had a decisive in- fluence on their decision not to vote." Rep. Tim Wirth (D-Colo.), chairman of the House 'telecommunications subcommittee that has been monitoring the networks' election practices, said in his district "news of the network projections spread like wildfire. Countless voters left the lines..." The networks, meanwhile, maintain that there is no con- clusive evidence that projections affect turnout. "We don't agree that there is a depression," said ABC News Vice President David Burke. Even so, ABC said it was sensitive to those concerns and chose not to use its available exit-polling information to make any election characterizations before the network deter- mined that there were enough electoral votes from states where the polls had closed to actually declare Reagan's vic- tory. Coattail _ Wa 3ab dwej Ei Qm £h From United Press International Michigan Republicans enjoyed a "very good night" Tuesday which poin- ts to the potential at least for a major political realignment in the state, GOP state House for next year, with Republicans claiming a big victory and saying their showing indicates a public shifting rightward. "We eanrlv fe1 we've gnne thrnuh g. r H yy y. y