U—The Dail% Collegian Wednesday. November 6. 197 Landslide victory for Democrats WASHINGTON (UPI) Democrats forged an apparent . landslide victory yesterday and took commanding charge of the Senate and House in the first post-Watergate elections. President Ford pledged to Work "wholeheartedly - with the Congress which will act on his programs for the next two years In addition to strengthening their grip on the Senate and Howse, the Democrats ousted Republicans from statehouses around the nation although the (101' averted a shutout in the 10 most populous states by hanging onto the Michigan go% ernorship A a aye of discOntent over inflation, unem plit meat and recession engulfed Republicans, threatening Ford's legislative program and :strengthening Democratic presidential prospects in 1976 Ford. %%ho barnstormed around the country for a month in a desperate effort to save Republican candidates, called inflation the No. 1 issue in the campaign The mandate of the electorate places upon the next Congress a full measure of responsibility for resole ing this problem," Ford said from the Elections '74 co \GitEss 4/1 the next Congress corn- Cl'l at 12 . 46 a in. EST sro,ite 51 necessary for control. GOP Dems Others 5 19 0 5 5 0 28 38 0 38 62 0 42 58 0 1.1 e( ted Le mtittu, I I oltlo% et ti \ e%% total PI e sent liepublicans won S Democratic seats, leading for I Democratic seat. Demo crats won 3 Republican seats, leading for 2 Republican seats. 218 necessary for control GOP Dents Others 78 226 0 Elected Ella Grasso Election Grasso becomes Conn. governor HARTFORD, Conn. (UPI) Democratic Rep. Ella T. Grasso, a household word in Connecticut politics who has never lost an election in 22 ears, succeeded yesterday in her at tempt to'become the nation's first oman governor elected on her own merits Democratic Sen. Abraham A. Ribleoff, 64, seeking a third term, defeated commercial jet pilot Jar i nes H. Brannen 111. •a freshman Republican legislator and the first track in Con necticut to win a major party en dorsement for the U.S. Senate-. Early returns confirmed predictions that Grasso could handily. defeat Republican Rep. Robert H. Steele and R!bicoff would beat Brannen. . Grasso. the 55-year-Old daughter of an immigrant Italian baker, enjoyed a commanding lead from the outset in her quest to become the nation's first woman elected governor in tier own right. Three other women governors followed in their husbands' footsteps. She won a spring primary election over Robert K. Killian for the right to carry the party banner against Steele, 36, a former - CIA agent and the youngest major party candidate for governor in state history. One of 16 women in the House of Representatives. Grasso. married and the mother of two grown children, campaigned mostly against rising electric utility costs. Her sex was not a major campaign Issue Mills Bumpers win in Arkansas LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) Democratic Rep. Wilbur D. Mills, chairman ot the House Ways and Means Committee. yesterday won political forgiveness for the Tidal Basin Incident from Arkansas voters who returned him to a 19th term in Congress. But his opponent, Judy Petty, the first Republican challenger Mills every had, ran him the closest race of any opponent he has faced in 36 years. With 150 of 441 precincts reporting, Mills had 36,631 or 54 per cent to 30,788 or 46 per cent for Petty, a 31-year-old divorcee making her first political race. White House where he had watched the returns. "I will work with them wholeheartedly in this urgent task which is certainly beyond par tisanship." Democrats picked off at least four Republican Senate seats; four GOP governorships in cluding New York denied the Democrats for 16 years and were rolling up large margins in The House. CBS projected a 50-seat gain by the Democrats which would give them the biggest majority since Franklin D. Roosevelt's heyday in the late 19305. Among the victims of the Democratic tide were two Republican senators, Marlow W. Cook of Kentucky and Peter H. Dominick of Colorado. Deriwrats alsci picked up the Florida seat of retiring Sen. Edward J. Gurney. Cook was thrashed by 49-year-old Gov. Wendell Ford and Dominick lost to - Gary Hart, who managed George S. McGovern's presidential campaign in 1972. Three other incumbent Republicans expected to have trouble Milton Young of North Dakota, Robert Dole of Kansas, and Henry Bellnaon of Oklahoma were in desperate fights to avert GOP Dems Others 67 64 0 145 290 0 187 248 0 Leading Nev. total Present Republicans won 2 Democratic seats, leading for 6 Democratic seats. Demo crats won 26 Republican seats, leading for 24 Republican seats. " GOVERNOR Standing of Governor races at 12:48 a.m EST. GOP Dems Others 3 23 0 2 6 1 6) 9 .0 11 38 1 18 32 0 Elected Leading Holdovers New total Present John Glenn results in other states In other Arkansas races,-Gov. Dale L. Bumpers, who defeated Democratic Sen. J. William Fulbright in last sum mer's primary and is now mentioned in 1976 presidential speculation, - routed Republican John Harris Jones in their Senate election. In the governor's race, Democrat David Pry" or also had an easy time defeating Republican Ken Coon. Petty declined to make Tidal Basin incident a campaign issue. Mills was found intoxicatedC . lct. 7 in the company of a former strip tease dancer by U.S. Park Police wl stopped his speeding car in Washington near the basin. ; Mills was forced to campaign' hard for 'the first time since his election to Congress in 1938. He apologized for the incident in his first public appearance after returning to Arkansas. "I apologize and I am more embarrassed than I can say," he said then. He refused to commen . t on it fur ther during the campaign. Carey victorious, Javits holds seat NEW YORK (UPI) —Democrat Hugh L. Carey was elected governor of New York yesterday, ending the 16-year "Rockefeller Era"' in the statehouse and carrying his runningmate, Mary Anne Krupsak. into office with him as the state's first woman lieutenant governor. Republican Liberal Sen. Jacob K. Javits won in his race against Democratic former U.S, Attorney General Ramsey Clark to return to the Senate for his fourth term. With about 10 , per cent of the state's 13,757 election districts reporting, Carey held a commanding lead over incumbent Gov. Malcolm Wilson, Former Gov. Nelson A, Rockefeller's ham' licked candidate, with the trend clearly establishing the Brooklyn congressman as the winner. The victory puts a Democrat' in Albany's executive mansion for the first time since Rockefeller was erected GOP governor in 1958. Javits hid a 46 per cent to 39 per cent edge over Clark, with 15 per cent going to Mrs. Barbara Keating, the Con servative Party nominee. 'Early results in other races: —Democratic Comptroller Arthur Levitt won his sixth term, taking an insurmountable lead over Republican At the same time, entrenched Senate Democratic incumbents were rolling to easy victories all across the country none even threatened by an upset defeat. They were joined by three Democratic newcomers, Rep. John C. Culver of loi,va, Dale Bumpers of Arkansas and John Glenn of Ohio. A number Of popular Senate Republicans, most of them from the moderate-liberal wing, survived the Democratic onslaught. They included Sen. Jacob Kf Javits of New York, who turned back the strongest challenge of his career from former Attorney General Ramsey Clark; Sen. Richard Schweiker, of Pennsylvania who defeated Pitti burgh Mayor peter Flaherty; and Charles Mathias, Jr. of Maryland who turned back Baltimore councilwoman Barbara Mikulski, and Robert Packwood of Oregon who beat Betty Roberts. Rep. Louis Wyman managed to hold onto the Republican seat in New Hampshire, left open by the retirement of Sen Norris H. Cotton, but Patrick Leahy was leading Republican Rep. Richard Mallary for a vacant seat in Vermont. Demos win 6 governors WASHINGTON ( UPI) Democrats ended Republican control of governorships inorNew York, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Colorado, Oregon and Tennessee yesterday but the ' GOP stopped a Democratic sweep of the nation's 10 largest states by re-electing Gov. William Milliken of Michigan. The Democrats won the bulk of the 35 governorships at stake, electing Rep. Hugh Carey over Nelson' Rockefeller's hand picked successor in New York, and in Connecticut Rep. Ella Grasso became the first woman ever elected governor on her own. By midnight, Democrats captured 23 governorships, and led in three;_ other races. Republicans won only three, re-electing Govs. Milliken, Meldrim Thomson Jr., of New Hampshire and Robert Ray of lowa. Republicans held narrow leads in Kansas and South Carolina, but the results were too close to call. If Democrats win as expected in Ohio and California, they will go into the 1976 presidential race with solid grassroots organizations in all of the big 10 states ex cept Michigan. Wilbur Mills Stephen May, former maxor of Rochester. —Republican Attorney General Louis J. Lefkowitz was trailing his Democratic challenger, Bronx Borough President Robert Abrams by about 5,000 votes. Astronaut Glenn wins Ohio seat COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Democrat John Glenn, the first American astronaut to orbit the earth, won landslide election yesterday in Ohio's Senate race. -Glenn, who failed in two previous at tempts to win a Senate seat, swamped Republican Mayor Ralph J. Perk of Cleveland, defeating him in every county as the returns rolled in. Glenn even captured a commanding margin in Perk's home county of Cuyahoga, where Cleveland is located, leading the mayor by more than 2-1: • It appeared that Glenn's victory would carry Democrats to a near-sweep in statewide races. Gov. John J. Gilligan, seeking a second term, took ' the lead over former Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes in one of the closest races on the slate. Brown predicted victor in Calif. LOS ANGELES (UPI) Democrat Edmund Brown Jr. and Republican Houston I. Flournoy jumped off to a nip anck race yesterday as Californians a - 6d to elect a successor to Gov. Ronald -Reagan. In light voting statewide, Flournoy received 51-per cent of the votes-and Brown 49 per cent with 3 per cent of the precincts counted. Half an hour after the polls closed, a - pm television network estimate of key sampled precincts indicated Brown as the winner. Casino gambling defeated in NJ TRENTON (UPI) A ballot proposal to legalize casino gambling in New Jer sey was defeated yesterday despite a half million dollar promotional cam paign by Atlantic City business interests where the casings would be located. With 63 per-cent of the state's 5,461 One of the strangest races of the night was in Maine, where an independent, James Longley, held a narrow lead over Republican. James Erwin and Democrat George Mitchell. In key gubernatorial races: . New York Carey, a veteran Brooklyn congressman who won a surprise victory in last fall's Democratic primary, ousted Gov. Malcolm Wilson, who succeeded Rockefeller last December after ser ving 15 years as lieutenant governor. Connecticut Grasso led her Republican House colleague Robert Steele by more than 200,000 votes with nearly all the ballots counted. Though three women have been elected to succeed their husbands as governor, she is the first to win the post on her own merits. Michigan Milliken, fighting unemployment in Michigan and the effects of the Watergate scandal, won a narrow re-election victory over challenger San- der Levin Massachusetts Gov. Francis Sargent, an apparent Abraham Ribicoff Dauphin, Lackawanna, Susquehanna, districts reporting, there were 515,594 Carbon, Luzerne, Delaware and Phila votes in favor of casinos with 887,269 op- delphia. posed. Democrats won at least 46 of the 203 • The Atlantic City resort area gave the House seats, including seven held by strongest support for the measure. It also s Republicans. • drew support from urban Essex County The election kept alive a piece of and shore areas around Atlantic City. modern political history. In every guber- The measure was opposed by religious natorial election year since at least 1906, leaders, including the state's four the party which won the governor's race bishops who represent 3.1 million Roman also captured the House. Catholics„ a Democratic challenger Edward M. Some of the strongest opposition to the Early upset GOP Sen. Robert D. measure came from Bergen County, a Fleming, a legislator since 1939 who had heavily populated northern suburb been rated a heavy favorite by insiders where voters o from both ,parties, in the 40th district of pposed the measure by a Allegheny County. 3-1 margin. Fleming, 71, spent 24 years in the Las Vegas oddsmaker Jimmy "The Senate and was minority leader two Greek" Snyder had reduced his odds years ago. Prior to the campaign, he was from 20-1 to 2-1 for the measure passing a good friend of Early, a 39-year-old con before voting began. servative Democrat. Election workers attributed the heavy interest generated by the casino issue to public statements from figures as di verse as Archbishop Peter L. Gerety of Newark who opposed it to Playboy publisher Hugh M. Hefner who favored it. Sandman among defe ated f 4 Nixon defenders lose WASHINGTON (UPI) Four of Richard M. Nixon's staunchest defenders during the eight-inonth impeachment proceedings— all Republicans were defeated in re-election bids yesterday Reps. Wiley Mayne of 4owa, David W. Dennis of Indiana and Joseph Maraziti and Charles Sandman of New Jersey voted against every one of the five articles proposed during the House Judiciary Committee's final decision on the fate of Nixon. The four who had opposed Nixon from the beginning of the proceedings _early this year won re-election easily or were leading in early returns. All four losers were defeated by Democrats they had beaten in earlier races. Rep. Harold V. Froehlich, R-Wis. who voted for two articles of impeachment, was trailing. Mayne had ,openly worried about his chances for re-election against the strong bid of BerkleY Bedell, whom he had beaten by only 9,000 votes in 1972. Mayne apparently misjudged the anti-Nixon feeling in his district. The four-term Republican said in a pre-election in terview, "I find my constituents seem to be understanding of the role I played in the impeachment hearings. They seem to respect the reasons for my doing what I did." Although BeAell, 53, a fishing tackle manufacturer, ignored the impeachmlnt issue and concentrated his attack on the GOP administration's inflation problems, Mayne's pro-Nixon stance on national television was believed to have hurt him badly. Maraziti may have been hurt more by a growing scandal involving a mysterious woman, real estate and weak Maraziti Leahy would become the first Democratic senator ever elected in Vermont. McGovern, seeking a second term after his disastrous defeat as a presidential candidate, won relection by defeating former POW Leo K. Thorsness in South Dakota. Other Democrats winning re-election were Abraham Ribicoff of Connecticut, James B. Allen of Alabama, Herman E. Talmadge of Georgia, Adlai Stevenson of Illinois, Birch Bayh of In diana, Russell B. Long of Louisiana, Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii, Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri, Ernest F. Hollings of South Carolina, Warren G. Magnuson of Washington and Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin. Two more newcomers, in addition to Culver, Glenn, and Hart, were Robert Morgan of North Carolina and Richard Stone of Florida. ' Republican House losses were widespread, including long-entrenched veterans and some of Richard M. Nixon's strongest, supporters. The heaviest GOP lows were in Indiana where Republicans lost five ttnuse seats, -New Jersey with four, Virginia and New York with two, and 11 other states with one each. Only two Democratic Democrats` win big: hold state Senate take House control PHILADELPHAI (AP) Democrats strengthened their hold: on the state Senate in yesterday's elections, Winning four key seats to assure a majority of at least 28-22. They presently have a 27-23 margin over Republicans. The new edge will be the largest enjoyed by Democrats since the 19305. . Democrats also apparently took con trol of both houses of the General As sembly last night as well as the govern or's office for the only second time since 1937. i The key to the Democratic takeover of the House, where Republicans held a 108- 95 edge, were a series of victories in for merly Republican districts- comprising In one of the state's most hotly con tested races, Democrat Denny J. Bixler, and Republican RobeDt. C. Jubelirer were running even in the 30th district. They were fighting for the seat being vacated by Republican Whip, Sen. Stanley Stroup, who is retiring. The incumbents were ousted, one in Florida and one in Louisiana. Among those to fall were Rep. Earl Landgrebe of Indiana, who refused to vote for the im peachment report on Nixon; Reps. Charles Sandman and Joseph Maraziti, WM of New Jersey, who backed Nixon almost to the end; Rep. Joel Broyhill of Virginia, one of the two senior Republicans in the House from the South; and Rep. William B. Widnall of New ,Jersey, ranking Republican on the House Banking Committee. Rep. Wilbur Mills of Arkansas, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, survived an escapade with a stripper to win re-election. Rep. Hugh Carey won the New York gover norship by beating Gov. Malcolm Wilson; Michael S. Dukakis ousted Republican Gov. Francis Sargent in Massachusetts; Democrat Ray Blanton defeated Lamar Alexander for the Tennessee governorship held by the GOP; and Ella Grasso bOame the first woman elected governor on her own by beating Robert Steele in Connecticut, another statehouse now held by the Republicans. victim of Boston's busing dispute,. lost to Democrat Mike Dukakis, a former state legislator. Colorado Democrat Richard Lamm, a state legislator and law professor who led the battle to keep the 1976 Winter Olympics out of the state defeated Gov. John Vanderhoof. Democrats were especially strong in the South. Gov. George Wallace of Alabama won a landslide re election, giving him the power base to launch an ex pected 1976 presidential drive. Another key figure in the Democrats' 1976 picture, Gov. Reubin Askew of Florida, easily won re-election. Elsewhere in the South, Democrats elected George Busbee in Georgia, David Pryor in Arkansas, and for mer Rep. Ray Blanton topped Lamar Alexander, a for mer Nixon aide, for governor of Tennessee. Big state Democratic governors who easily won re election included Milton Shapp of Pennsylvania, Dolph Briscoe of Texas, Marvin Mandell of Maryland and Patrick Lucey of Wisconsin. district includes Bedford, Blair, Hun tingdon and parts of Somerset counties. Incumbent Republican Robert A. Roy ner, who : Was indicted on extortion charges lad month, was unseated by H. Craig Lewis in the 6th district, which in cludes parts of Philadelphia and Bucks County. Lewis, a 30-year-old Feasterville at torney, will become the Senate's youngest member. He had been rated an underdog prior to the indictment. In a hotly contested race in Lehigh County, Senate Majority Whip Henry C. Messinger defeated Republican challenger Charles D. Snelling for the 16th district seat. Although Messinger, 59, had risen in one term from obscurity to a position of Senate leadership, Democrats were con cerned about his chances. In another key race, incumbent Democrat Joseph S. Ammerman turned back a strong challenge by J. Alvin Hawbaker to keep his seat from the 34th district in central Pennsylvania. Ammerman, 50, is the caucus secretary for Senate Democrats. Hawbaker, a State College realtor, waged an intensive campaign with am ple financial backing from the GOP. Other Senate elections appeared to be going according to predictions, except in the 26th district in Delaware County, where John L. Sweeney was making a surprisingly strong bid to defeat the Republican favorite, F. Joseph Loery Jr. Sweeney and Loeper, both of Drexel Hill, were fighting for the seat being vacated by retiring Republican Sen Clyde R. Dengler, 75. Twenty-five of the Senate's 50 districts were involved in yesterday's voting Of the other 25 sitinators not up for election this year, 13 are Republicans and 12 are Democrats. explanations, than he was by impeachment. Helen Mayner, wife of a former governor who lost to Maraziti in a last-mintite bid in 1972, kept impeachment in the background of her suc cessful campaign. Sandman stridently and sarcastically defended Nixon during the televised impeachment debates. New Jersey political experts believe, however, he may have be en hurt more by a loser image resulting from his unsuccessful bid for governor last year. Replacing Sandman will be William J. Hughes, 41, an at torney from Ocean City. Dennis, a three-term conservative, was defeated by. Philip R. Sharp, 32, a Ball State University political gpience professor. Sharp came within 3,000 votes of beating Dennis in 1970, but lost decisively in 1972 when Dennis rode the landslide victory of President Nixon. Sharp centered much of his criticism of Dennis on his strong and steady defense of Nixon throughout the eight-month impeachment procedure. Only after Nixon revealed a tape which eventually led to his resignation did Dennis oppose the President. "My area is a strong Nixon area, but I think they liked the fact I was willing to follow evidence," Dennis said in a pre election interview. "I think the position I took has been well received in general." But, he acknowledged, "I suppose having Nikon out of office politically is probably a plus," underestimating the adverse effect of his strident support of the President.