BOSTON--Campaigners for David Duke left the office of Gov. William F. Weld '66 empty-handed yesterday when they came seeking his signature in their drive to get the former Ku Klux Klan leader's name on the primary ballot.
Supporters are trying to collect signatures from 2500 registered voters by tomorrow to guarantee the Republican presidential candidate's name will be included on the GOP ballot.
"We were led to believe that he would sign the petition," said Howell Farrell, Duke's national campaign director.
But the governor, in an interview with WBZ-TV, said he has no interest in signing the petition.
"He should have the right to try to get on the ballot," Weld said. "But I ain't signing no Duke papers."
Read more in News
Moonshine and MarxRecommended Articles
-
Judge Orders Cambridge to Put Anti-War Referendum on BallotThe people of Cambridge will probably get a chance to vote on the Vietnam war in November. A Middlesex County
-
City Blocks Porn ReferendumDespite mounting pressure from local women's groups, the Cambridge City Council decided for the second time in a week to
-
Freshman Organizes Fight For New State ConstitutionA Harvard freshman has been named Chairman of the Suffolk County Drive for a Massachusetts Constitutional Convention. The drive is
-
HOUSE ELECTIONSThe survey of the methods of election to the House Committees, which is printed in this morning's issue of the
-
Nov. Vote on Rent Control Is In DoubtA decision handed down last week by Massachusetts' highest court is casting a shadow over the referendum for rent control
-
Electrical Rate Vote May Lead To Tuition Increase Next YearA proposal to establish a uniform per kilowatt-hour rate for all users of electricity, one of three placed on the