Pennsylvania election roundup; after the count PHILADELPHIA ( AP ) Democrat Milton J. Shapp became the first Pennsylvania governor in 99 years to succeed rie tn hi self and Republican Sen. Richard S. Schweiker survived a emocriatic onslaught in yesterday's election. I Shapp, a 62-year-old millionaire electronics engineer, called his 307.000-vote victory carved out of Democratic Philadelphia and its normally Republican suburbs -7 "a really great night for the Democrats.- _ Democrats regained control of the state House, t in GOP hands the past tw•o years, and lengthened their margin in the State Senate to the biggest in 36 years The' Congress races were a standoff, remaining 14 Democrats and 11 Republicans, with some changes in per sonnel Schweiker. 48. said his triumph for a second six-year term was the result of an unprecedented share of the black vote and the support of working men and women. He referred to the fact he was one of the few Republicans in America to have AFL CIO endorsement. "In short we have forced a new coalition for responsible and responsive government." Schweiker told cheering supporters. "It's a new coalition based not on the politics of personalities buton the politics of substance " Schw•eiker won by 254.000 over Peter F. Flaherty, the Democratic mayor of Pittsburgh. surpassing his 222,000 rrtajority of 1968 Sliapp defeated Drew Lewis, a professional party politician making his first run for public office, but fell short of his 54k).000-vote landslide four years ago. Elections '74 Identical voting trends elect Shapp, Schweiker PHILADELPHIA (AP) Democratic Gov. Milton Shapp and Republican U.S. Sen. Richard Schweiker were swept into office by voting trends that look almost identical. De`gpite their party diffetences, both can didates scored surprisingly well in are that previously were awarded to the opposition: Shapp carried Delaware County, a GOP stronghold; and Schweiker pulled 62 per cent AP news analysis 'of his victory margin from the five southeast counties, including. Philadelphia which has the state's strongest Democratic machine. In the northeastern counties, where Republican Drew Lewis tried to convince voters that Shapp did noilhelp them enough during Tropical Storm Agnes, the governor carried the area by 12,000 votes. And in Lackawanna County, a Democrat labor stronghold, Schweiker beat his op ponent Peter Flaherty by almost 10,000 votes. Schweiker, of course, campaigned with the endorsement of the state AFL-CIO, not the kind of backing commonly connected with Republican candidates. Instead of dodging the salvos fired from the House Committee investigating state corrup tion and his 1970 campaign finances, the governor marched in front of the television cameras and gave three days of testimony "ItSIZ M;MgM 2-4*T-4 i t ~~ ~:1C Have you proposed a Christmas wedding? Of / \ ~ ( 76 : Av//rele CI "wefedyi one three two south a'.'n Street Lb. member american gem society. Lewis, unknown to the public,when he started 16 months ago, was consumed by the Watergate firestorm that wiped out a score of state Republicans in the State House and Senate. He had centered his attack on Shapp's alleged tolerance of corrupt practices. Shapp responded with an accusation of "witchhunt." Schweiker survived because he divorced himself early from Watergate and was among the first to call for President Nixon's resignation. The Liberal, pro-labor image Schweiker built made massive ballot splitters of Democrats and in dependents and it paid off handsomely in the big Democratic cities of Philadelphia, Scranton, Erie, Wilkes- Barre, Reading and Allentown. It was especially important in Philadelphia where Shapp piled up a 223,000-vote advantage, the largest ever for a guber natorial•candidate. Schweiker neutralized Flaherty in Philadelphia, losing by 3,300, a startling improvement over 1968 when he lost the city by 195,000. "Our close vote in Philadelphia was the modern day record for a Republican candidate," Schweikpr said. About 63 per cent of the 5.5 million registered voters a total of 3.3 million went to the 9,618 polling places on a gloomy day dampened by occasional showers. It was the smallest turnout since 1942 when 2.5 million, or 55 per cent, participated in the electoral process but exceeded the 49 per cent predicted by the U.S. Census Bureau. Lewis was admittedly disappointed at his showing after predicting he'd win by 100,000. "We still have a job ahead to that all but reduced the committee probe to a witchhunt. Both Sl)app and Schweikerrdid poorly in Pennsylvania's southwesterri counties Fayette,? Allegheny, Washington, West morelandand Beaver. But Schweiker's opponent is mayor of Pittsburgh, the region's largest city; and Shapp's opponent borrowed almost half of his campaign money from Richard Mellon Scaife, heir to one of the area's largest for tunes. In some ways, Shapp and Schweiker are viewed as friends of the working - man. Schweiker had his AFL-CIO backing as well as a strong record for pushing through bene fits for victims of "black lung disease." Shapp, on he other hand, allied himself most ly with the workers last winter when he helped settle the truck drivers strike. Republicans who were worried about voter apathy as an outgrowth of Watergate found that the problem was not a low turnout as some had feared, but rather a definite trend toward putting Democrats in office. The U.S. Census Bureau had predicted that 49 per cent of the state's registered voters would cast ballots. But about 62 per cent voted. That's not a figure to be proud of, it represents the lowest vote cast in a guber natorial election since World War 11. MEM Demos unseat State GOP'S PHILADELPHIA (AP) Democrats recaptured the state House- yesterday and helped themselves to their biggest Senate majority since the Depression. Unofficial figures gave Democrats 29 of the 50 Senate seats, up from the current 27- In the House, Democrats turned a 108-95 deficit into a 114-88 advantage with one seat undecided. Democrats took over 20 Republican districts while the GOP could win only one Democratic seat. The Democratic margins will give Gov. Shapp- the op portunity to push through legislative programs which of ten- were stymied by the Republican House. It was an all-Democrat legislature which passed the state's in come tax in 1971, although some Republicans supported the levy. Republican incumbents lost, but po Democrat suffered the same fate. Among the losers were Donald W. Fox, Republican caucus. chairman; H. Francis Kennedy, chairman of the In the Senate, Democratic Agriculture and Dairy In- a challenger Edward M. Early dustries Committee; and upset Republican Robert D. Stanley Kester, a 10-year GOP Fleming, a legislator since stalwart from Delaware 1939. Until Early, a House County and chairman of the member, announced for the Liquor Control Committee Senate, he and Fleming rode which investigated Shapp ad- to Harrisburg together in the ministration liquor practices. same car pool. do," Lewis told a subdued group of supporters-. "We have a major rebuilding job in the Republican Party and I'd like to be a part Of that. I think we need• a two party system. I feel it's necessary to get more people involved in politics." Flaherty, boasting he was a pilor man's candidate, said his campaign cost around $150,000, cheapest of any major state wide candidate in modern Pennsylvania history. SchWeiker spent around $700,000 while Lewis, and, Shapp each had a $1.5 million campaign budget. Flaherty blamed his lack of cash and what he said was failure of newspapers and television to give him adequate coverage as major factors in his defeat. Not since 1875, when Republican John F. Hartranft was e lected to a second term, has any governor succeeded himself. Shapp was the first allowed to try because of the`l96B con stitutional amendment. Democrats had a net gain of at least 19 state House seats, giving them a minimum lead in the lower chamber of 114-87. In the current legislature, which expires Nov. 30, Republicans have a 108-95 advantage. Fifteen Republican incumbents lost. No Democrats lost. In the Senate Democrats increased their margin to 29-21, a gain - of two, with the \ major surprises in Delaware County where a Democrat was elected to replace retiring Sen. Clyde R. Dengler, 75, and in Allegheny County where voters retired GOP Sen. Robert Fleming. In the Congress fights, Democrats won the Delaware County district for the first time in history but lost their 20-year hold on Frank Clark's seat in western Pennsylvania. Democrats attempted to make the House elections a referendum on the conduct of GOP House investigating committees, including Kester's. Their main target was the committee on con tract practices which tried to convince voters the Shapp ad ministration was corrupt. The panel delved into Gov. Shapp's 1970 campaign finan cing, his firing of al cabinet member, his business dealings and forced political contributions. Gov. Shapp ap peared voluntarily before the panel for three days and politicians from both parties said his performance blunted the GOP attack. Six members of the contract committee headed by Rep. Patrick Gleason, R-Cambria won re-election. A seventh lost in the May primary Four of the Republican losses were in Delaware Coun ty, a onetime GOP stronghold which went Democratic in several races, including the governor's contest. The normally Republican from both parties had given last month. was trounced by 26th senatorial district of Sweeney almost no chance of H. Craig Lewis; - a 30-year-old Delaware County also went winning. Democratic attorney from Democratic, with John J. Incumbent Republican Feasterville, Bucks County. Sweeney squeezing by F. Robert A.Rovner, who was in- The district extends into Joseph Loeper Jr. Insiders dieted on extortion charges Philadelphia. a • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •.,. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • se • A Game of Tennis Between Classes . . . Someday -You Will Want ONE BOOK IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS -Order your 1975 yearbook at the La Vie table on the ground floor of the HUB Nov. 4-8, 9:30 a.m. - 4 p.m. • Senior Book $9.00 •••••••• • • • • • • • • The Daily Collegian Thursday, November 7. 1974- The senior Congressional Republican, Herman T. Schneebeli, barely survived the debacle, narrowly winning an eighth term over Democrat Peter Wambach, a Harrisburg broadcaster. The Rev. Robert W. Edgar, Methodigt chaplain at Drexel University, knocked off Delaware County Dist. Atty. Stephen McEwen. the organization candidate who had ousted in cumbent Republican Lawrence Williams in a bitter primary. Edgar tagged the GOP organization with corruption to win the 7th District seat. • Clark was turned out by Republican Gary Myers in the 25th District that embraces Butler, Lawrence, Beaver and parts of Allegheny counties. Iniother important Congressional fights Democrat John Murtha easily defeated Republican Harry M. Fox in western Pennsylvania's 12th district. Murtha last February had defeated Fox by 100 votes in a special election Republican William Goodling was elected to succeed his father, George, who retired after six terms. And Republican Richard Schnlze• captured the seat held by retiring John Ware, also a Republican. • Campaign spending was an issue only in the senate race. • Four years ago Shapp spent nearly $2 million of his °on money in wresting the state-house from the Republicans who then denounced him for allegedly buying the election. This time Shapp said he contributed only $15,000. The Shapp majority is the fifth largest in gubernatorial elec tion history. To Remember . . . ••• • • Underclass Book $7.00 - •••••••••••••••••