nation THE BATTALION Page MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1980 Bush now leads Reagan in N.H. United Press International BOSTON — George Bush is now in a dead heat with former front runner Ronald Reagan in the New Hampshire Republican presidential primary race, according to the latest public opinion poll published in Sunday’s Boston Globe. The sample of 616 New Hamp shire Republicans and independents polled the week after Bush s victory in the Iowa GOP caucuses showed Bush leading Reagan 45 to 36 per cent. No other Republican candidate broke out of single figures. Among the sample, the 275 per sons who said they were likely to vote favored Bush 43 to 39 percent over Reagan with a five percentage point margin of error, the survey showed. In a similar poll last September, Reagan dominated with 50 percent of those polled favoring the former California governor. Bush received only 8 percent. Since then the former CIA dire ctor has jumped 37 percentage points. Ragan has slipped by 14 points. The surveys were conducted by Research Analysis Corp. of Boston, an independent firm formally affili ated with the Globe. The latest poll consisted of telephone interviews conducted between Jan. 24 and Jan. 27. Sen. Howard Baker, R-Ill., was a distant third with 8 percent of the overall sample, a drop of 5 points from his standing in September. In the latest Globe poll, former Texas Gov. John Connally had 4 per cent; Reps. Philip Crane and John Anderson, both R-Ill., had 2 per cent; and Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., had less than 0.5 percent. Baker, Connally, Crane and Dole have lost support slightly in New Hampshire since the September poll, the surveys showed. The shift from a pack chasing Reagan into a two-man race in New Hampshire, the Globe said, appeared to be credited to Bush’s rise from obscurity rather than Re gan’s fall from grace. Last September, Reagan’s favora- bility rating was 66 percent in the Globe Poll. This time it was 67 per cent. Bush, who had a 38 percent favorable rating in September, Consumer group hits legislators soared to 81 percent this time. During the same period, Bush’s unfavorability rating dropped from 26 percent to 14 percent while Reagan’s remained constant at 30 percent. United Press International WASHINGTON — The Consum er Federation of America, the na tion’s largest organized consumer group, has charged the last session of Congress with betraying the con sumer. The federation awarded “zero” ratings to two senators (James McClure, R-Idaho, and Milton Young, R-N. D.) and 25 House mem bers for their voting records. The only perfect rating in the 96th Congress, 100 percent, went to Rep. John Seiberling, D-Ohio. Kathleen O’Reilly, executive dire ctor of the federation, said Saturday two votes — on the decontrol of domestic crude oil and on blocking the Federal Trade Commission from regulating funeral homes — were “particularly significant symbols of the congressional betrayal of con sumers.” The funeral home measure has passed the House but not the Senate. Other actions which figured in the ratings, she said, were billion dollar subsidies to big energy companies to develop “a questionably effective, and arguably dangerous synthetic fuel industry,” subsidies to aeros pace firms, and exemptions for air lines from noise standards. Four senators — all with 86 per cent ratings — tied for top ratings. They were Sens. Paul Sarbanes, D- Md., Paul Tsongas, D-Mass., Carl Levin, D-Mich., and Donald Riegle, D-Mich. In the House, the 25 members who drew zero ratings were: Reps. Don Young, R-Ark.; John Rousselot, R-Calif.; Ken Kramer, R- Colo.; Phil Crane, R-Ill.; Be Michel, R-Ill.; Larry Winn, R-Kan Bob Livingston, R-La.; Dona Treen, R-La.; Claude Leach, D-Le Henson Moore., R-La.; Trent Lot R-Miss.; Gene Taylor, R-Mo.;Jam< Cleveland, R-N.H.; Delbert Latt; R-Ohio; Dan Flood, D-Pa.; Janu Abdnor, R-S.D.; Ray Roberts, E Texas; Marvin Leath, R-Texas; Je Wyatt, D-Texas; Charles Stenholn D-Texas; Tom Loeffler, R-Texa David Satterfield, D-Va.; Da Daniel, D-Va.; Kennety Robinsoi R-Va.; and William Wampler, R-V: National Guard blamed for death of Fort Dix trainee United Press International CLARKSBURG, W.Va. — Lawson D. Hileman, called David by his family and friends, wanted to enlist in the West Virginia National Guard more than anything. He joined and it cost him his life. Hileman didn’t die a hero’s death in a war. He collapsed on a dusty dirt road on a hot and humid July night during a 10-mile hike while training at Fort Dix, N. J. He died a few hours later. The autopsy revealed that he died of acute lung congestion caused by an irregular heart beat. There was also evidence of myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, and pheumonitis, benign pneumonia. “We also think that heat and exercise stress may have been related to his sudden death,” the death report stated. His parents, Aaron and Velma Hileman, say the Army killed him by ignoring his complaints of illness and disregarding his physical limitations. Now they say the Army is trying to sweep his death under the rug. “They tortured him to death,” Mrs. Hileman said. “The night before he died he called and said he wanted to come home. He coughed every breath he took. He said, ‘Ma, I can’t take this any more.’” It was an unfortunate accident, the National Guard and Army officials said. They said it was precipitated by Hileman’s zeal to enlist. “We very definitly have made no determination that there was any negligence,” Col. Paul McGowan, commander of Hileman’s brigade at Fort Dix, said. McGowan said Hileman had been on sick call about a dozen times before his death. At one point, the soldier received a chest X-ray which showed his lungs to be clear. Col. John Moon, commander of the West Virginia National Guard, said there was no evidence that the guard was derelict in its duty to ferret out any disabilities. “We in the guard are terribly upset this happened. It’s the first time this has happened. You might relate this to some of the athletic personnel who expired this year in West Virginia. They are practicing and all of a sudden they collapse from heat exhaustion — an accumulation of a number of things.” Hileman had tried to enlist as a 17-year-old, but his parents refused to sign the waiver papers. Three days after he turned 18 on March 3, 1979, he went to Fairmont and carried through his plans despite his parents’ protests. 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