Newspaper Page Text
LEANING OR COMMITTED TO:
Delegate Other, Un-
State Vote Muskie Humphrey McGovern Jackson Wallace committed
NEW ENGLAND
Maine (20) 20
Vermont (12) 10 2
New Hamp. (18) 13’/i
Mass (102) 27 55 20
Rhode Island (22) 22
Conn. (51) 38 13
TOTAL 225 130 4 13 61420
MID. ATLANTIC
New York (278) 85 193
N. Jersey (109) 55 28 26
Penna. (182) 85 60 24 13
Delaware (13) 3 6 4
Maryland (53) 29 18 6
W. Virginia (35) 12 19 4
TOTAL 670 155 14214318212
SOUTH
Virginia (53) 20 5 6 8 14
N. Carolina (64 ) 46 18
S. Carolina (32) 11 1 20
Georgia 53) 4 49
Florida (81) 6 75
Alabama (37) 10 27
Mississippi (25) 25
Louisiana (44) 18 18 6 2
Arkansas (27) 27
Tennessee (49) 40 9
Texas (130) 20 70 5 20 15
TOTAL 595 69 991529192191
MIDWEST
Kentucky (47) 37 352
Ohio (153) 70 60 10 13
Indiana (76) 20 15 41
Illinois (170) 60 13 97
Michigan (132) 34 32 24 28 14
Wisconsin (67) 13 54
Minnesota (64) 38 20 6
lowa (46) 14 12 20
Missouri (73) 51 12 10
TOTAL 828 286 170136571160
PLAINS
N. Dakota (14) 4 5 5
S. Dakota (17) 17
Nebraska (24) 4 6 12 2
Kansas (35) 26 9
Oklahoma (39) 12 11 6 10
TOTAL 129 46 3140102
MOUNTAIN
Montana (17) 17
Wyoming (11) 9 2
Colorado (36) 10 5 21
New Mexico (18) 10 8
Arizona (25) 9 5 11
Nevada (11) 6 3 2
Utah (19) 10 9
Idaho (17) 9 6 2
TOTAL 154 80 1346213
PACIFIC
California (271) 271
Oregon (34) 34
Washington (52) 10 42
Alaska (10) 4 2 4
Hawaii (17) 1 16
TOTAL 384 4944291
OTHER
Dist. of Col. (15) 15
Puerto Rico (7) 7
Virgin Islands (3) 3
Canal Zone (3) 3
Guam (3) 3
TOTAL 31 724
GRAND
TOTAL 3,016 773'/z 468490*680291913
First Poll 3/20/72 1282*6 402287*6 102220680
NEEDED TO NOMINATE: 1,509
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Sacred Heart School (
1323 Mac Arthur Drive J
$200,000 bond
set for Prater
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)-
A cash bond of $200,000 was set
Wednesday for a United Mine
Workers of America official
charged with conspiracy in
connection with the deaths of
UMW leader Joseph Yablonski,
his wife and daughter.
U. S. Commissioner Harve
Dug gin set the bond after a
brief hearing for William Jack
Prater, 52, LaFollette, Tenn.,
District 19 field representative
for the union. Attorneys for the
Justice Department indicated
they would seek a removal
hearing today.
Prater was taken into custody
without incident in Lake City,
Tenn.
The indictment, handed down
by a Pittsburgh grand jury,
accused Prater of conspiracy to
obstruct justice, a criminal
investigation and the rights of a
union member.
Yablonski, his wife Margaret,
and their daughter Charlotte,
25, were found shot to death in
their Clarksville, Pa., home
Jan. 5,1970.
Already convicted in the
slayings are Paul Eugene Gilly,
38, of Eas f Cleveland, Ohio, and
Aubran Wayne Martin, 24, of
Cleveland. They received death
sentences. Claude Edward Vea
ley, 28, of Cleveland and Gilly’s
wife, Annette, 31, have pleaded
guilty to murder and are
awaiting sentencing.
Mrs. Gilly’s father, Silous
Huddleston, 62, of LaFollette, a
former UMW official, is sche
duled to go on trial on murder
charges in Washington, Pa.,
April 17.
As the gray-haired Prater
entered the federal building
here Wednesday night he was
asked what would happen to
him. “I have no idea,” he
replied.
Penalties for conviction on
the charges range up to five
years in prison and SIO,OOO fine.
Second Biossat poll
Me Govern: new man to watch
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEA)
Sen. Edmund Muskie of Maine, the Democrats’ long
time presidential front-runner for 1972, has taken a steep
downward plunge in his delegate prospect for the the
nominating convention in Miami in July. He has lost
nearly half the potential he had a month ago.
The second 1972-NEA-National Observer Democratic
box score gives Muskie 773*6 votes, still enough for first
place in the candidate lists but 509 fewer than the 1.282*6
first count gave him in mid-March.
The new survey elevates Sen. George McGovern of
South Dakota to second place with 490*6 delegate votes,
a jump of 203 from his total on the initial count. This
reflects his clear victory in the important Wisconsin
primary, his rising position as a real contender, and
Muskie’s decline.
Sen. Hubert Humphrey, second the last time with 402
votes, slips to third now even though he picks up 66 more
votes for 468 total. He has not yet won a primary, and is
igniting no big fire.
A continuing surprise is Gov. George Wallace of Ala
bama. First time out, he scored an impressive 220 votes.
Now his prospective total is up by 71 to 291, and he could
very well rise later to a point above 300. Some of his
gains come out of Muskie’s hide.
The rest of Muskie’s dramatic vote loss goes into the
limbo of the temporarily “uncommitted.” This movement
mirrors the confusion which besets many political fig
ures and prospective or actual delegates. In New York,
for example, Muskie earlier had 167 indicated, and the
word was he could have gained much more of the state’s
278 votes had he recovered from his first faltering pri
mary showing. But his fourth-place finishes in Florida
and Wisconsin threw his supporters into bewilderment.
Most have retreated behind the curtain of indecision, to
await clearer signals from later primaries in Massachu
setts, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana. Michigan, Oregon and
California.
Muskie actually is worse off than the figures reveal. A
good part of his remaining 773*6 is soft and loose, staying
put only because it doesn’t know where to go or doesn’t
Navy plane crashes;
pilots jump safely
ALBANY, Ga. (UPI) — The Albany Naval Air Station
chalked up its third loss of a $3 million Vigilante Navy
photo plane this year with a crash about 10 miles north of
here Wednesday.
Cmdr. W. Stern Volpe of Camden, S. C., the pilot, and
navigator Lt. Cmdr. Charles W. Hawkin of St. Louis, both
parachuted to safety. The plane cut a swatch through pine
trees and burned.
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— Griffin Daily News Thursday, April 13,1972
Page 19
want to go to Humphrey or McGovern, Muskie’s present
chief rivals.
Humphrey’s very modest gains are a danger sign for
him. Few party leaders think he is a good bet to beat
President Nixon. They think he has the look and sound of
the past about him. His third-place finish in Wisconsin is
deemed poor. McGovern is acknowledged as climbing
fast, organizing well, and campaigning doggedly. But
labor and the party regulars still dislike him, see him as
a dubious challenger of Nixon, don’t think one primary
victory makes a summer. Nevertheless, indicated victo
ries for him in Massachusets and Oregon might alter his
prospects upward very substantially. He is the new man
to watch.
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