Late Edition :Y A6F !AA t r4 t n Diii Late Edi tioni Eighty-Four Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXV, No. 54 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, November 6, 1974 Ten Cents Eight Pages Lan slide! ems crush Votegives wide margin in House WASHINGTON (AP) - Riding on a high tide of public reaction to Watergate and inflation, Demo- crats yesterday surged to a landslide of off-year election victories that cemented their grip on Con- gress and stole several major governorships from the battered Republicans. The Democrats swept easily to control of both House and Senate, and to increased margins in both branches of the 94th Congress. Democratic challengers were ousting Republican House veter- ans on a wholesale basis. DEMOCRATS took away Republican Senate seats in Colorado, in Kentucky and in Florida. They added to their big state gubernatorial vic- tories in takeover of Republican governorships in Tennessee and Colorado. While the statewide races for senator and gover- nor featured the biggest names that rose and fell on election day, the Democratic sweep apparently went deepest in the House. DROVES of GOP veterans were ousted or strug- gling to survive. They had won or were leading for 256 House seats, 18 more than they currently hold, with re- turns yet to come from the races in 60 congres- sional districts. President Ford conceded his party had been trounced. "I have accepted the verdict," the Presi- dent said. "Those who lose often come back to win another day." IN THE Senate, the Democrats won GOP seats with Colorado's Gary Hart, who had managed George McGovern's campaign in the presidential debacle two years ago; with Gov. Wendell Ford of' Kentucky; and with Richard Stone, a former Flori- da secretary of state. McGovern won Senate re-election in South Dakota over ex-POW Leo Thorshess. In Connecticut, it was Democratic Rep. Ella Grasso for governor. At 55, she became the first woman elected a state governor without succeed- ing her husband. See DEMS, Page 8 Grasso IEagleton Lilikebusks Re therEsch statewide trend, edges Levn;l0 rioLe resuts still 'n doubt Incumbent leads with student vote U. S. Congressman Marvin Esch (R-Ann Arbor) appears to have won a fifth consecutive term in the House of Representa- tives over Democratic challenger John Reuther but a number of precincts which could tip the balance have not yet reported. With over half of the votes compiled late last night, Esch led Reuther by a 53-47 per cent margin. A slew of minor party candidates, including Phil Carroll of the Human Rights Party (HRP), trailed far behind Esch and Reuther. AN ELATED Esch called the victory a "reaffirmation of the work I have done" and promised to fight unemployment and other economic problems when he returns to the House. Esch appeared to be doing well across the district, accord- ing to incomplete returns. He led in Washtenaw County where Reuther anticipated making a powerful showing to offset re- turns from more conservative areas. In a victory speech to his supporters gathered at the Ann Arbor Inn, Esch claimed he captured the "working man's vote" which helped provide the margin of victory. Despite numerous reports giv- ing the race to Esch, Reuther, and his backers at the United Auto Workers' union hall in Ypsilanti refused to concede de- feat and even confidently pre- dicted victory. Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN U.S. CONGRESSMAN MARVIN ESCH (R-Ann Arbor) speaks to jubilant supporters last night as incomplete results showed him winning re-election over Democrat John Reuther. CLOSE BATTLES: Rir4JV nn IA T S e ' GD Austin Kelley win as Dems sweep all but governor's post t B u c k i n g a nationwide Democratic tide, Governor illiam Milliken w o.n narrow victory over Demo- # cratic challenger Sander Levin. With 61 per cent of the vote in, Milliken tenaciously hung onto a slim lead he had established early in the evening. With many outstate returns not yet report- ed, incomplete resultstshow r. , Milliken with 837,000 votes and }} Levin with 806,900. / In his victory speech, the Governor profusely thanked all his campaign workers and ask- ed for bi-partisan support. Milliken } ."I look forward to the next four years," a jubilant Milliken declared. And I look forward to a working relationship with the eg _..;....f.. legislature, Democrats and Re- Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS publicans alike." ANN ARBOR DEMOCRATS Perry Bullard (left) and Kathy Conceding to Milliken at 1 Fojtik greet each other with a victory hug last night after a.m., Levin wished the Gover- tooo se returns showed Fojtik an easy winner in her bid for re- nor "every success with the election to the Washtenaw County Commission. The results of problems confronting the state." Bullard's state representative race, however, were too close to In two predictable contests, call. Secretary of State Richard Aus- call , tin and State Attorney General Frank Kelley swept to decisive Democratic candidates for the victories over Republican chal- University Board of Regents, lengers Lorraine Beebe and My- Thomas Roach and Sarah Pow- ron Wahls by nearly a 2-1 mar- er, and Republican Donna Park- gin.er led a crowded field with 30 v ic to rAlthough Milliken's lead over per cent of precincts reporting s Democratic opponent reach- in one of thetightest races on ed over 70,000 votes earlier in the staste ballot. the evening, as of press time, it had shrunk to about 30,000. It Power led with 368,381 votes; appears that Levin will lose to Parker had 362,999, while Roach We about the same margin in his approximately 27 per cent of 1970 contest against Milliken the total vote reported. Ano- .Bullard over Weaver. opponent, Democrat Peter Eck- when he was defeated by less ther Republican, David Upton, Bullard, however, proudly ran ' stein had 17,400 votes. Only 63 than one per cent is in fourth place with 256,980 on that past performance - con- I per cent of the vote was tab- Milliken was the only Republi- (19 per cent). fident of victory throughout the ulated as of 2:30 a.m. can winner in a statewide race. Eleven candidates from campaign. Lisa North of the Human Drawing heavy support from minor parties including Ellen Although Bullard did not win Rights Party eeked out 1,664 nearly all areas except the Hoffman and Diane Kohn of the by the same large margin as votes. She was not considered southeastern part of the state, Human Rights Party (HRP), two years ago, he attributed a major contender by either Milliken's re-election effort was the drop in votes to student Bursley or Eckstein. See MILLIKEN, Page 2 See DEMOCRATS, Page 2 apathy and a general disen- "I am very optimistic," chantment with politics after the Bursley said in a 10 p.m. state- Watergate affair. ment. His mood, however, STATE SEN. Bursley garner- changed once student district D eeain ed 18,067 votes while his major votes were counted. - - - - - "They say Bursley's scared but I don't know why he's scar- wins; ed unless he can't count," Eck- conm_ 11issoners race stein said. BULLARD first won election to the state house in 1972 with Democrats Kathy Fojtik and generally conceded that Fojtik's a comfortable victory over his Kathy McClary cruised to vic- incumbency had played a major ep ealed Republican and HRP opponents. tory in the predominantly stu- role in her re-election. There In that high-interest campaign, dent 14th and 15th district coun- was also speculation that the HRP ran a much stronger race ty Commissioner races last heavy mud-slinging campaign plan, voters cast both a first than it did this year. night, as the Democrats appear- conducted by the HRP may r - _ t _ n - . - - * --- - _ l '- -' a-..1 9 ..... I - - - . -. - 4U - Reuther lE d Elden barely edges j Koster Sandorf Elden barely defeated Donald Koster last night tol keep his position as 15th District, Court judge. George Alexander beat Shirley Burgoyne for the newly created eight year judge- ship in the same court. Elected as judges of the First District Court of Appeals in the statewide nonpartisan r a c e sF were Henry Heading and Rich- ard Maher. Maher narrowly de- feated Nathan Kaufman. The closest judicial race was for the two Justices of. the Su- preme Court. Thomas Kava- nagh appeared to lead the field of four candidates, with John1 Fitzgerald and Blair M a o d y; "I THINK you came here to- " "- ' night to hear a victory speech tonight," Reuther told the 154- ; person crowd. "Well, you're go- ing to hear one, even if we B have to stay up all night." Joining Reuther on stage were his parents as he gave the op- State Rep. Perry Bullard (D- timistic speech to the cheering, Ann Arbor) appears to have ecstatic audience of college won re-election in nearly com-1 students and union workers. plete returns early this morn-1 Reuther told the crowd his ing showing him fending off organization estimated that the Republican challenger Rae vote is almost evenly split be- Weaver. tween himself and Esch, but And Republican incumbent that the areas which have yet Gilbert Bursley was barely to report should go his way. leading his opponents in the race for the 18th district sena- THUS BOTH candidates have torial seat. claimed victory in what has With all but a few precincts been an expensive campaign reporting, Bullard had receiv- r^d e dgi ed 12,000 votes Weaver. Human candidate Robert Ronald Graham can Independent the pair. to 10,055 for Rights Party Alexander and of the Ameri- Party trailed THE REPUBLICAN hopes for victory in the predominantly Democratic 53rd District dim- med as the night wore on, but Weaver did not concede victory to Bullard. The areas not yet3 tallied are expected to favor, fought in every corner of the district. Originally expected to be a close contest, the Esch-Reuther battle never seemed in doubt last night as the incumbent took an earlier lead which he never relinquished through the' night. Running a well-oiled, smooth campaign, Esch fought off the 30-year-old Reuther's challenge. Preferential voting sales tax m~easure r r t THE DEMOCRAT, nephew of late United Auto Workers Prss- idevit Walter Relither, honed to With only two precincts not reporting, city voters narrow- ly passed a charter amendment establishing preferential ballot- ing last night, opening the way' for a new era in city nolitics. losing badly, with 262,000 against, 176,000 in favor. * With 11 per cent of the bal- lots counted voters favored cash bonuses for Vietnam vetarns by a 70 to 30 ner cent margin; and and second choice vote for may- oral candidates. Should there be j no candidate who carries a clear majority, the candidate receiving the lowest number of! Since going to Lansing, Bul- ed to be heading for control of have back - fired on then lard has developed an image of the Washtenaw Board of County prompting voters to shy frog nonconformity studded with a Commissioners for the second name-calling tactics in this fir: series of publicity stunts that time in history. post-Watergate election. cantered nationna attention and !With n in oeevn nreincts "We've nut dirtv camnaig Im °st ,n-