I be Battalion Warm and cloudy Vol. 66 No. 117 College Station, Texas Thursday, April 29, 1971 Friday —■ Cloudy to partly cloudy. Winds southerly at 10-15 mph. High 86°, low 69°. 845-2226 Commission delays results of election Results of Wednesday’s gen eral elections have been delayed because the Election Commission did not give the ballots to the Data Processing Center in time to have the results printed out, according to Charles T. Haynes, manager of the DPC. “Two o’clock today would be a very optimistic estimate of when we will have the results,” Haynes said. By two, The Battalion presses had already started so we were unable to print the results. “If they had started bringing them over yesterday as they (the Election Commission) said they would this problem would have never arisen,” Haynes said. “We would have gotten them out by 10 Wednesday night easy,” he added. The reason it takes so long for the results to come in is that each of the ballot cards must be key punched individually and then run through the sorter, he said. The Election Commission was to have taken the ballots to the DPC while the elections were still being held, Haynes said, and be tabulated throughout the day. After the polls closed at 8 p.m. the final ballots would be key punched, run through the sorter and the results printed out. The delay in getting the ballots was the reason for the delayed results. George Walton, president of the Election Commission said there may be a protest of the elections due to the senior yell leaders ballot. “The ballot said vote for two yell leaders when it should have said three. The commissioners were supposed to inform the stu dents to vote for three but some of them may not have. If they didn’t there may be a valid rea son for protest.” Later, Walton was unavailable for comment on the delay in get ting results. “It’s just screwed up like it is every year,” said Kent Caperton, president of the Student Senate. “It’s been this way for the past four years. It just symbolizes gross inefficiency on the part of the election Commission,” he said. “As a whole, the Election Com mission has messed up,” said Rog er Miller, vice-president of the Student Senate and presidential candidate. “Their first mistake was in not allowing enough polling places,” he said, “this just compounds the problems.” John Sharp, the other presiden tial candidate, was unavailable for comment. DSC awarded to prof here Capt. Charles H. Briscoe of the Military Science Department has received the Distinguished Service Cross, the nation’s second highest military honor, for extraordinary heroism in South Vietnam. The 27-year-old career infantry officer was presented the award by Lt. Gen. George V. Undei*- wood Jr., new 4th U. S. Army commander, in a ceremony at Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio. Second in importance only to the Medal of Honor, the DSC was earned by Captain Briscoe while leading a company of the 173rd Airborne Brigade against a forti fied enemy base camp in South Vietnam on June 7, 1968. Casting ballots was the thing Wednesday for the students voting in the general elec tions. The turnout was light for most of the day with the tempo picking up around lunch and dinner times. (Photo by Hayden Whitsett) Court ruling upheld Profs, staff must forgo pay AUSTIN