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Rockefeller, backed by a superb organization, is campaigning for more jobs and better roads and against strip mining; he depicts former six-term Congressman Moore as an anti-conservation advocate of the surface mining that more and more West Virginians fear. Still, in spite of eight years' residence, Rockefeller frequently has to defend himself against charges that he is a rich carpetbagger using penurious West Virginia as a step toward national office. Sometimes he refutes the accusation too effusively, as when he scoops up a handful of dirt and croons, "I love the feel of it. I love the sound of the name West Virginia." But overall, the Rockefellers come across, and Jay is favored to defeat Moore in a close race.
> NORTH CAROLINA. Democrat Hargrove ("Skipper") Bowles Jr., 52, is being marketed for Governor of North Carolina like a detergent. His campaign consultant has divided the state into six "media markets" and thoroughly researched voter complaints in each market. In the eastern and mountainous western portions of the state, as a result, Bowles commiserates over bad farm roads and promises to revamp an inept highway commission. In Greensboro he emphasizes education, and in Charlotte, taxes.
Bowies' media campaign is the most expensive recorded in North Carolina history, and so far it seems to be working. The millionaire former state legislator is ahead of his opponent, James E. Holshouser, 38.
> ILLINOIS. The governorship of Illinois is a plum for either party; for a change, in a state where machine politics is a Daley occurrence, two attractive candidates are battling over it. The incumbent, Moderate Republican Richard Ogilvie, 49, is campaigning on a respectable record that includes improved mental health and welfare administration and increased state-local revenue sharing.
His Democratic opponent, Daniel Walker, 50, is a handsomely graying father of seven who graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy but altered course to a prosperous corporate law career. Walker became famousinfamous in Chicago municipal circlesfor a 1968 report which blamed the disorders during the 1968 Democratic Convention on "police riots." As a Democratic primary candidate last March, Walker made his name the game: in four months he walked 1,197 miles from one end of Illinois to the other, shaking hands. Walker leads Ogilvie as the campaign steams into its finale.
> WASHINGTON. In 1964, Washington Democrat Albert D. Rosellini was defeated in a third-term try by Liberal Republican Daniel J. Evans. Now Incumbent Evans, 47, is completing eight years himself and seeking twelveand being challenged by Old-Liner Rosellini, 62. Rosellini's familiar red rose campaign emblem and "Return Rosellini" signs appeal to older voters once more, and Evans is in trouble.
High taxes and the economy are Washington's principal issues. Rosellini attacks "Dangerous Dan" Evans for raising taxes to record levels. The Democratic candidate promises to cut the state budget by $100 million and simultaneously increase the salaries of teachers and state employees by 8% to 12%; he has not made it clear how he would do it. Evans retaliates with a credibility attack. He reminds voters that as Governor, Rosellini promised not to raise taxes, but in 1959 pushed through the biggest single increase in the state's history.
