r r C I 4 With lOccitilulthouts Bulletin Jimmy Carter of Georgia wrestled the presidency away from President Ford Wednesday morning when Mississippi gave him its seven electoral votes and pushed him over the necessary : 27o votes. , WASHINGTON (UPI) Georgia's Jimmy Carter built a lead over President Ford in their race for the ~..White House early today but the Out- Tome hinged on cliffhangers in California and the industrial Midwest. - r l Carter swept most of the southern and 'border states and won in the big states of New York, Pennsylvania and Texas. But- the' California vote was far froth counted and the races in the industrial midwesL— Ohio, Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin were neck and neck. • Althotigh , Carter, the 52-year-old . kirmer Georgia governor, held only a narrow lead in the': popular vote he — , moved within 20 electoral votes of winning the 1976 bicentennial election and ending eight years' of Republican, rule. ' ti . Republican candidate Gerald Ford kid a Substantial lead over Democrat :urainy Carter in , the race for the ,''presidency 'in Centre County, despite 10 key State College precincts . not report ing, as of 2 a.m. today. • • With Ia of 80 precincts, having reported, a breakdown of the count shows Ford carrying 45 precincts to 'Unofficial 21. 77 Unofficial voter count in the county • .has 12,384 votes for Carter and 15,278 for Ford. Near midnight, James Baker, Ford's -Heinz ,'.. PHILADELPHIA (AP) Republican ' John Heinz, rode a massive vote cpunt from. his Democratic ' 'home - base •'s4.li3terday into the U.S. Senate seat vacated by a man he once worked for, Hugh Scott. The man he beat, 'William Green of _Philadelphia, complained to the end that he was beaten by money; not the man. "Itwas a little like taking on a bazooka ',.with a baseball bat,!' Green said. • DemOttath ;'t WASHINGTON (UPI) Democrats swept , % .t. ontrol of the House and Senate yesterday, extending their 24-year domhiation of Congress. Leading the Democratic parade was Daniel P Moynihan, the former U.N. ambassador, who defeated Sen. James L. Buckley in New York; Rep. Paul Sarbanes, who ousted Sen. J. Glenn Beall in Maryland, and former state Democratic 7.'chairman James Sassei., who'beat Sen. William Brock, R-Tenn. Democrati also, won the traditiOnallY Republican seat in Nebraska, where the in- cumbent was not running. ' „ But the big Democratic bulge came from the re-election of a troop of warhorses names like Edward, Kennedy of Massachusetts; Edmund Muskie of Maine, Hubert Humphrey of Min nesota, John Stennis of Mississippi and Henry Jackson of Washington. Republicans also scored four gains ousting Decisions, decisions I I / 110 lleg a ll I the daily wins campaign ' manager, gave a • grim assessment 6f Ford's chances but held out hope that, theyresident could stage a comeback. 1 The failure to crack through Carter's native South with the exception of Virginia increased the pressure of Ford to win in the industri4l north, Baker said.- , - The 1:09 a.m. EST national vote for President with 68 per cent' 121,057 out of 178,159 of the precincts reported. Popular Vote; Pet: , Carter: 28,444,159; 51 per cent Ford: 26,754,707; 48 per cent McCarthy: 429,732; 1 per cent Maddox: 114,135; 0 per cent . Carter had won 20 states with 250 `electoral votes, and was leading in 3 states with 43 electoral votes. ' Ford ' had, won 15 states with 105 electoral votes; and was leading in, 13 states with 140 electoral votes. • Carter's victories in New York, Pennsylvania and Texas narrowed FOrd's , hopes of staging the most remarkable 'eomeback in presidential politics ""since Haril Truman beat Thomas E. Dewey in 1948. ". • After trailing all night, the Georgian ' finally moved ahead in the Empire State by a' slim margin. .. . New York state GOP •chairman Richard Rosenbahm late last night asked for it court order to impound all voting machines in New York, saying he had received allegations of tampering in some districts.) . State Attorney General Louis Lefkowitz asked city Police Com- .". ' G re e n I U. S. is S In Centre County: Republicans won the major plate races. With 60 Out of 80 precincts reported, ' Republican John Ileinz had 13;396 votes in the U.S. Senate race to, Democratic challenger William Green's 11.102; Republican Pat Gleason , hud',112,908 votes to Al- Bengdict's . lo.7lo 'for the' office of state audi t or general; and in the race for state .Creasurer, Patricia Crawford had 12,083 'votes to •RobertE. Casey's 11,840.,„ : Sens. Vance Hartke in : Indiana and Joseph W.Va., who are batting for majority leader faced Montoya in New 'Mexico, and picking up almOst no opposition. Rep. Thomas P. O'Neill, previously Democratic Senate seats in Rhode D-Mass., likely to be the new speaker, won by a Island and Missouri where incumbents were not landslide, as did Judiciary Committee chairman running. Peter Rodiiii), D-N.J., and John Anderson, R-111., .. . . _ . While there were eight turnovers in the Senate third-ranking Republican in the House. —'and the promise of more as the returns rolled The big 92-member freshman class from 1974 in the picture in the House of Representatives showed no casulties in early . returns, and remained static. In the first 200 House races likewise black and women members were called, just three seats changed hands = all winning re-election. Deinocrati losing to Republicans. , . 'Democrats will hold a majority in the House of the 95th Congress much like their present 290-145 edge. • Among the House winners were the only husband and wife team' in Congress Rep. Andrew Jacobs, D-Ind., and Rep. Martha Keys, D-Kan. The men who will run the new Congress won easily. Humphrey, and Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D- control .CorligresS: The State College area reflected a national trend yesterday with a heavy voter ' turnout. At right. Doug Borie (Ist-science) turns in his ballot at Wagner Building. At left, other students vote after waiting in long lines in some polling places. election missioner Michael Codd to impound all machines. . . Waiting at the White House for the outcome, Ford, the first nonelected president in U.S. history and seeking.a full four-year term in his own right, was described as confident of pulling 'off a modern political miracle. ' White House press secretary , Ron Nessen said "The mood is good, con fident" and added the election was going as planned. He said, "We haven't lost any states we expected to win." , Carter, surrounded by his family at his Atlanta headquarters, also was waiting for the outcome of his 22-month, 500,000- mile quest for the presidency which brought him from near political ob scurity. ' . Jody Powell, Carter's preis'secretary,, said the election was going "pretty much as . we expected. We feel cautiously optimistic at this point." Democratic vice presidential can didate Walter Mondale, the liberal Minnesota senator, stayed at his home in Afton. • ' National , Chairman Robert Strauss reigned over jubilation at party , headquarters in Washington. He told merrymakers "Get ready for a hell of a celebration. , "There have been no surprises so far," Strauss said. "We , haven't lost a single state we expected to carry and are doing better in some than we thought we wobld." Carter cast the 11th ballot of the day Green had made Heinz'i)t ; • s key win. Maybe we'll wake up in the morning . nding a " ' campaign issue, saying that •pumping . and find that will be the case," he told millions of his own. money into the race supporters at a Philadelphia hotel. meant Heinz was trying to buy his seat. "I told him I didn't think that that Heinz spent some $2.5 million in the - 10- would be the case." month race. Green spent less than Heinz told jubilant supporters in $900,000. ' .; Pittsburgh: "I , just think the effort we By midnight, Green was beginning to put together was magnificent. We can realize the loss.show , the people of Pennsylvania we can , "My son (11-year-old) Billy .said . do a good job for everyone." Truman wen t to bed thinking he,didn't Green didn't have the draw of the Intervals of clouds and sunshine with just a slight chance of a' brief light shower. High 49. Partly cloudy, windy, and turning colder tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight 30 and high tomorrow 39. yesterday in Plains, Ga., his home town, and said he was confident of taking oiler the White House. Carter planned a relaxed day at home with a brief, late afternoon speech to supporters at the abandoned white frame railroad depot which served as his campaign headquarters. The Democratic nominee returned to Plains in the pre-dawn hours yesterday after a hectic final day campaigning in California and in Ford's own state of Michigan, the latter a minute drive to snap up the state's 21 electoral votes. Ford voted in his home town of Grand Rapids, Mich., yesterday, kissed an 61d , friend,' wept at the dedication of a mural depicting his life and flew back to Washington to await the verdict in one of America's most closely run presidential elections: Ford's tears flowed openly at the Kent County Airport in Grand Rapids where a goodbye crowd :of 200 watched the dedication of a wall of murals, showing high ,points of his career from Eagle Scout to commander-in-chief. , His voice breaking, his efforts failing to control his deep• emotion, the President said: "I just can't adequately express my gratitude for bringing my 'Held this wonderful airport for so many people to see. "It expresses our life and our personal relationship." ' , Tears coursed- down his cheeks. His wife, Betty, joined• him on the podium and they held hands through the rest of the ceremony: ) Weather Ten cents per copy Wednesday, November 3, 1976 Vol. 77, Number 72 16 pages University Park, Pennsylvania Published by Students of The Pennsylvania State University . . , cards that Democratic presidential hopeful Jimmy Carter pulled: .. Carter swept through normally Democratic counties, riding his party's registration edge to maintain an early lead over President Ford. The winner would pick up 27 electoral votes, one-tenth the number needed to win nationwide. There were not state issues, between Carter and Ford, and those between Ammerman easy victor In the wake of _heavy voter turnout, Democrat Joseph S. Ammerman soundly defeated incumbent Albert W. Johnson for the 23rd Congressional District seat. With more than 80 per cent of the district's voting population appearing at the polls, Ammerman carried a projected 7 of the 11 counties, piling up a more than 14,000-vote lead after iocomplete tabulations early this morning. Ammerman was well ahead of Johnson in Centre CoUnty with 58 out of the 80 precincts counted, receiving 14,046 votes to Johnson's 8,202. , The victor, a state senator from Cur wensville, ended seven consecutive terms of representation by Johnson in Congress. Johnson was appointed to fill a vacant seat in the district in 1963. Wise probable winner in race with Williams Collegian Staff Writer • With 37 precincts in the 77th State . -Legislative District having reported at 1 a.m. today, Democrat Helen Wise is the apparent victor in the race for the State House of Representatives over her Republican opponent Albert F. Williams. The unofficial voter count at 1 a.m. today had Wise leadingwith 4,088 votes compared to 3,369 for Williams. Wise won 12 of 16 precincts that reported by 1 a.m. She won all four State College precincts that reported, with 12 remaining to report. She' is expected to do well in the remaining State College precincts, which include all of the campus precincts. The other - precincts that reported by 1 a.m. were rural areas, Wise lost four of these rural precincts by close margins. They are Union Township, Unionville Borough, and a precinct each in Ferguson and Benner Townships. "I have held my own in rural areas where my opponent was expected to do well," Wise told The Daily Collegian in a telephone interview early this morning. "I have lost a few precincts, but not by a lot." Photos by Jett Pfister W 202 PAT.TEE AP Laserphoto Democrat Jimmy Carter, victor in the campaign to be the 39th holder of the high est governmental office in the United States, voted yesterday in his home in Plains, Georgia. Senate bid By JEFF HAWKES She also said she was confident that Green and Heinz rested more on the men themselves th - an on the issues. l'o counter Green's charge of buying the election, . Heinz said the Philadelphian was a product of the Democratic machine, particularly Gov. Shapp and Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo. Green denied that, pointing out that he unsuccessfully ran against Rizzo in the 1971 mayoralty race. Johnson won in his home county, McKean, with 8,334 votes to Ammerman's 8,052. On the other hand, Ammerman gathered in the majority of the popular vote in his home county of Clearfield by a margin of 16,053, to 11,343. In addition to Johnson's Democratic op ponent in this Congressional race, the Smeth port Republican felt pressure from several political and environmental groups, the most notable being Environmental Action's Dirty Dozen Campaign Committee. The non partisan organization evaluates all members of Congress , every two years, and chooses 12 congressmen who consistently oppose en vironmental legislation. Johnson was one of the 12 chosen because of his supposedly negative stand toward environmental legislation. she will carry the remaining State College precincts. She said 'the four precincts she lost "are areas that tend to be more con servative" and she speculated that voters in those precincts may have preferred voting f6r a man rather than a woman. Williams told the Collegian this morning he had no idea how the State College precincts, particularly the student precincts, would go. "I'm not too sure what we have yet," he cited as his reason for not conceding the race yet. "It's still too early to tell," he said. However, he suggested that the state going Democratic in the presidential contest may be a factor that could determine his chances. Wise is expected to carry the campus precincts because of the endorsement she received from Undergraduate Student Government President W.T. Williams and also because she is a member of the University Board of Trustees. . Wise campaigned on a broad platform appealing to students and faculty in terests. She called for a state law requiring minimum standards for municipal land-use planning. 4 COPIES