ools lates in ' 5° AmericajkJ "i Iran. fp SKI on, nil £.-.?■ campaign 80 Carter leads Kennedy in L.A., Chicago polls United Press International |A poll of New Hampshire voters for a Los Angeles newspaper shows isident Carter far ahead of Sen. |ward Kennedy. And a poll in the icago area indicates Carter would t any GOP challenger, but Ken- ly would have a tougher time. tjgThc Los Angeles Times survey of t Hampshire Democrats showed tier leading Kennedy, 51 percent t$ 27 percent, with California Gov. jnundG. Brown Jr. getting? per- 'cftit. Including independents, Car- ter had 49 percent and Kennedy 24 percent. In the GOP race, the survey of 1,195 registered voters last week showed Reagan with 42 percent, Bush with 38 percent, and Tennes see Sen. Howard Baker with 6 per cent. With independents counted, Bush had 39 percent to Reagan’s 35 percent. A poll in Chicago for the Sun- Times and WMAQ-TV showed Car ter ahead of Republicans George Bush, Ronald Reagan and John Con- nally by at least a 2-1 margin. But, Kennedy was shown ahead of only Connally, indicated as the weakest GOP candidate in Illinois. The New Hampshire primary is Feb. 26 and the Illinois primary is March 18. The Los Angeles survey indicated Kennedy was trailing badly even within Democratic voter groups that normally would be expected to reject Kennedy. In the Bush-Reagan race, the Los Angeles poll shows the vote split according to age, education, income, philosophy and ex. It also indicates the outcome could hinge on how many independents turn out. >gei arter. Brown accused of an ‘unholy alliance’ .i ,,, i. U United Press International , as ™®Sen. Edward Kennedy said Presi- dent Carter and Gov. Edmund ate H' WMtsLgjL, j iave j 0 j nec i j n an “unholy work, butdropp am . e - to hurt him in the Maine nd, prefer,i! ^J lcuses »contract, tkryj Both the New York Times and the , lostepoutiigJston Globe have published >aid, but conim oun ( S { n recent days of an ex- esidential change of names of undecided early departeE m0Cra t voters, and Kennedy told n reports ABG Barters Tuesday his own workers lurtingDanRat j| Ve f ounc l evidence the two rival two of the pr. Hnpaigns “are working together in ■ceed Cronldlf (hi C W ay to try to slow my candidacy . , Ivn.” •ulated pressf. ks prompted^’ jproachhimte and say, “I it of a bind.” to know wha! he said New York sail® ; offering Rati* United Press International ion package,* MANCHESTER) N . H . — Re- he title °f ni --publican presidential hopeful Rpbert ime title Iroi j ias em harked on a massive He later added, “It is a rather un holy alliance. But these things occa sionally happen in politics.” A severe Kennedy loss in Maine, following his defeat by a nearly 2-to-l margin last month in the Iowa cau cuses could do more than slow him down. He has acknowledged the need to do well in Maine and in the Feb. 26 New Hampshire primary, if for no other reason than to re energize the faltering flow of cam paign contributions. On the Republican side, Ronald Reagan celebrated his 69th birthday Wednesday with a xcampaign swing through South Carolina. He heard the song “Happy Birthday” every where he went in New Hampshire Tuesday and said, “Another birthday sure beats the alternative,” Reagan, widely criticized for not participating in a GOP candidate de bate before the Iowa caucuses, has accepted the League of Women Vo ters’ invitation to join his six rivals in a similar forum in New Hampshire Feb. 20. Former U. N. Ambassador George Bush acquired the endorsements Tuesday of former Attorney General Elliot Richardson and his former de puty, William Ruckelshaus. Dole to revive campaign | advertising campaign in New Hamp- s circulate * re t0 reverse a trend that has seen es say Mudo t um ble to the bottom of the poli- red he would ■ al polls 'b. | At a news conference Tuesday, Arthur Kurlanski, president of Wes- . 1 Bh Advertising, said Dole will be lO ilv|P nnin K 30-40 radio ads on 17 diffe rent New Hampshire and Boston stations this week. The Kansas senator will also be king out full-page ads in 12 news- onfal) International iN — Presi® . news confer^ his first one i«| etary Jody P®' li ideally motiv® -ats in Maine (t “ incuses. papers as well as running campaign spots on six television stations in Massachusetts, Maine and New rtkiiipshire. “That’s a great deal more (adver tising) than any of the other candi dates are doing,” said Kurlanski, whose Manchester firm was recently hired to help Dole’s sagging cam paign in New Hampshire. Back in September, a Boston Globe poll showed Dole running neck and neck with former CIA Director George Bush with about 8 percent of the vote. Just ahead of them was Tennessee Sen. Howard Baker. At that time, former California Gov. Ronald Regan was beating all his challengers combined. A Globe poll released Sunday showed Bush had forged a narrow lead over Reagan and Baker had slip ped to third. Dole, meanwhile, had fallen to the bottom of the heap be hind Texas Gov. 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