The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 3, 2004 - 7 F.OJ Iu SMOOTH SAILING State avoids voting problems rampant in 2000 election race unexpectedly short on election day. The long lines during early vot- ing were blamed on a lack of polling sites: Just eight were assigned during early voting, compared to 692 on election day. At one polling place in West Palm Beach, Democratic volunteers who were supervising the election said the only problem at their site all day was eventually righted. Victoria Hutto, a medical student who came to vote as polls opened, was forced to cast a provisional ballot because she had duplicate registrations on file. But poll work- ers were unable to reach LePore's office to get permission to open the provisional ballots box, and Hutto was turned away. After coming back to the polling site twice and receiving sever- al calls from the Democratic volunteers, Hutto was finally allowed to use a provisional ballot later in the afternoon."I'm so happy, because I didn't think I was going to be able to vote," Hutto said. Democratic volunteers at the Chamber of Commerce polling site in downtown West Palm Beach said they saw no problems through- out the day. Volunteers and poll workers at other polling places in West Palm Beach and Lake Worth reported similar results. Touch-screen electronic voting machines, a major source of worry owing to reports that they are error-prone and subject to tampering, received mostly positive reviews. All voters interviewed said they found the machines easy to use, and many said they were better than the butterfly ballot. Touch-screen machines have multiplied in Florida since the state eliminated its punch-card ballots. Palm Beach County was among the areas in Florida with irregularities caused by punch- card problems in 2000. The machines exhibited some technical problems, but none of the major crashes that some had predicted. Nine machines in a Boynton Beach polling place were reportedly not plugged in properly and lost battery power as a result. Officials said no votes were lost. Carol Ann Loehndorf, chair of the Palm Beach County Demo- cratic Party, said some voters reported that their machines displayed votes for Bush after they had attempted to vote for Kerry. But LePore dismissed that claim, saying the machines display a pre- view screen before the voter submits his or her vote. Voters who make mistakes, she said, can easily fix them before finalizing their votes. Despite the lack of major voting problems, some residents of Palm Beach County remained pessimistic about the state's chances of selecting a winner without incident. Rob Rush, a police captain who was collecting absentee ballots near the county supervisor of elections office, said he expected recounts similar to those in 2000. "I'll make a prediction: They'll call it at the inauguration," Rush said. By Donn M. Fresard Daily Staff Reporter The proposal to ban gay marriage in Ohio passed decisively yesterday. Sixty-two percent voted to ban gay marriage compared to 38 percent who voted against the ban. Of the 11 states that voted yesterday onj proposals to ban gay marriage, Ohio's measure is considered the most sweeping. In addition to stating that "only a union between one man and one woman" will be considered a marriage, the Ohio proposal also includes a provision to deny legal status to a relationship "that intends to approximate" a marriage. WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. - Fears of a chaotic election day in Palm Beach County, fueled by reports of thousands of missing absentee ballots and long lines at sites designated for early voting, were calmed yesterday by a largely unproblematic election. As television broadcasters struggled to avoid being the first to call Florida for President Bush, vote returns pointed more and more con- vincingly to a Bush win in Florida. Kerry took Palm Beach County, however, with more than 60 percent of the popular vote. With turnout projected to be higher than usual and most voters not used to the county's new electronic voting machines, many ana- lysts predicted widespread problems on election day. But with a few minor exceptions, voting in West Palm Beach and throughout Flori- da went far more smoothly than expected, most observers said. "My own view is that it's going to be like Y2K: Everyone thought terrible things were going to happen, and it was a smooth transition," Stan West, a retired vice president of the New York Stock Exchange, predicted yesterday morning. Palm Beach County was the site of the 2000 elec- tion's butterfly-ballot controversy, in which a confus- ing ballot led many Democratic voters to mistakenly select Reform Party candidate Pat Buchanan. Many of the reported problems in yesterday's election involved tricks played on registered vot- ers before election day. Theresa LePore, super- visor of elections for Palm Beach County, said yesterday her office received reports of "bogus telephone calls" instructing some voters to use the wrong polling place or wrongly informing them that they were not registered to vote. But at the polls themselves, voting went largely without incident. Visits to several sites in Palm TOP: The chai Beach County yesterday revealed few problems. Judge Barry C Although the county experienced long lines paring them w lican and Denm for early voting held in the few days before the support from election - forcing some voters to wait up to four self-proclaime hours - poll workers and voters said lines were Man," stops ti r of the Palm Beach County Commission, Karen Marcus, and ohen examine signatures on absentee ballots yesterday, com- vith file signatures while representatives from both the Repub- ocratic parties look on. CENTER: A Bush supporter curries motorists on Military Road in Palm Beach County. BOTTOM: The *d first vote recounter, who wishes to be known as "Elephant raffic outside Palm Beach's Four Points government complex. STUDENTS Continued from page 1 Highlighting the situation were reports from students and various campus polling locations that some students who registered to vote through the Voice Your Vote commission were missing from their location's voter regis- try. Students not on the registry were allowed to cast a provisional ballot, which will then be counted if the voter submitted a ballot to the correct precinct. Having registered through Voice Your Vote, a said it registered 10,038 students, signaling that the problem was small-scale, said Pete Woiwode, co-chair of Voice Your Vote. Woiwode, an LSA senior, added that his stu- dent group followed Michigan voter guidelines and submitted all applications by hand to the Ann Arbor City Clerk's office before the Oct. 4 deadline. He added that the group would get in touch with the city clerk today to offer copies of regis- tration to get those votes counted. For now, the clerk's office can only speculate that either the voters' names were misspelled or But Michael McShea, a Republican chal- lenger, argued that these officials were essen- tially stripped of their right to oversee the vote. "A poll challenger should be able to look at the whole process. We were told that we were not able to stand behind the voter registration table and check (voters') IDs. They essentially emas- culated us," he said. Other incidences of voter intimidation boiled over when challengers voting at Jefferson Mid- dle School in Pontiac were so aggressive that police were brought in to control them, said LSA sophomore Justin Bean, who was volun- F 71 I U. WAC ..... :.. YY V f ' v