PATRONIZE KANSAN ADVERTISERS Kansas only one- Continued from page 2 elected she would "let George do it." Wallace, who could not run for re-election under the state constitution, intends to be a factor in the 1968 presidential election, possibly as head of a third party ticket. A vote for Mrs. Wallace was a vote against the policies of President Johnson. Martin also ran an anti-Johnson campaign, saying that only by electing Republicans could the South defeat Johnson in 1968. FLORIDA The GOP scored a major upset in Florida, electing Claude R. Kirk Jr., as its first Republican governor since 1877. Kirk, whom many critics thought should have dropped out of the running, defeated Democrat Robert King High, mayor of Miami. Kirk, a conservative who grabbed much Democratic support, defeated High, a liberal, who was supported by Robert F. Kennedy of New York. PENNSYLVANIA Republican Raymond P. Shafer will replace William Scranton as Pennsylvania governor. Shafer, Scranton's hand-picked successor, defeated Miltap Shapp who invested approximately $34 million in his quest for nomination and election. ILLINOIS Charles H. Percy, a young Republican industrialist, defeated Illinois veteran Senator Paul H. Douglas in the state's U.S. senatorial race last night. Douglas was seeking his fourth term in the Senate. White "backlash," the war in Viet Nam and Douglas' age-74, were probable key factors in the elections outcome. Other issues were Percy's Kennedy-generation image and the sympathy prompted by the murder of Percy's 19-year-old daughter, Valerie, six weeks ago. TENNESSEE Republican Howard Baker, son-in-law of Illinois Senator Everett Dirksen, kept political tradition in the family last night by upsetting Democrat Frank Clement for U.S. senator of Tennessee. The upset is even more gratifying for the Republicans because Clement defeated Tennessee Senator Ross Bass in the Democratic primary of this year. In 1964 Bass won over Baker in the Senatorial race. Incumbent Democratic Gov. Buford Ellington was reelected with no Republican opposition. Only three independent candidates provided competition. ARKANSAS Millionaire Republican Winthrop Rockefeller shattered Democratic voting patterns of 88 years' standing and set up the nation's only brother team of governors by defeating fiery segregationist Democrat Jim Johnson for governor of Arkansas. Rockefeller used an overpowering lead from his urban voting power base in Little Rock's Pulaski County to put down Johnson's hard-core strength in rural areas. With his brother Nelson, re-elected governor in New York, Rockefeller set up a moderate Republican power structure from the sidewalks of New York to the piney woods of the Ozark mountains. In West Virginia another Rockefeller scion, John D. IV (their nephew), used different tactics to win a seat in the state's house of representative as a Democrat. TEXAS Deep in the heart of Texas, the parties split the take for senator and governor. Democrat John Connally won an easy victory over Republican T. E. Kennedy. Perhaps the biggest share of the booty went to conservative GOP Sen. John Tower who toppled conservative Democratic challenger, State Attorney General Waggoner Carr, heavily backed by Texas Democrats—President opportunities with Johnson in particular. Tower won LBJ's own seat in a special 1961 election and was an outspoken Goldwater man in '64. OKLAHOMA One of the largest exploration and producing companies in North America Polls incorrectly predicted Bartlett's defeat but guessed right when they foretold the senatorial victory for Harris. ENGINEERS A Subsidiary of Standard Oil Company (Indiana) Oklahoma voters yesterday elected Tulsa Oilman Dewey Bartlett their second Republican governor, and returned incumbent Democrat Fred R. Harris to the U.S. Senate by a surprisingly narrow margin. GEOLOGICAL MICHIGAN PETROLEUM CHEMICAL MECHANICAL INDUSTRIAL Senior and Graduate students for permanent engineering positions responsible for drilling, producing, and gasoline plant operations. Also Sophomores, Juniors, and Seniors for temporary summer employment. The Company offers outstanding engineering and management careers. Arrange Now For An Interview November 15 at The School of Engineering Placement Office Pan American Petroleum Corporation An Equal Opportunity Employer Gov. George Romney's magnetic vote-pulling power gave him a 58 per cent victory over Zolton Freney in Michigan, and was sufficient to carry Sen. Robert P. Griffin, a political appointee, into a full U. S. Senate term of his own. Interest was centered in the Senate race between Republican Griffin whom Romney appointed to the Senate following the death of Democrat Patrick McNamara and former governor and former U. S. diplomat to Africa G. Mennen Williams. The showing enhanced Romney's status as a potential 1963 Republican presidential contender. Daily Kansan Wednesday, November 9, 1966 Stationery Department EATON'S OPEN STOCK LETTER PAPERS AVAILABLE AT CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. VI 3-6133