THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT

                         THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT
                 Copyright (c) 1994, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: THURSDAY, June 2, 1994                    TAG: 9406020463 
SECTION: LOCAL                     PAGE: D3    EDITION: FINAL  
SOURCE: BY MARGARET EDDS, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: 940602                                 LENGTH: RICHMOND 

DAY BRINGS FLOOD OF SENATE ENDORSEMENTS \

{LEAD} Some constitutional officers prefer Democratic state Sen. Virgil H. Goode Jr.

The United Mine Workers political committee is backing incumbent U.S. Sen. Charles S. Robb.

{REST} Secretary of Health and Human Resources Kay Coles James has signed onto the Jim Miller for U.S. Senate campaign.

And Secretary of Public Safety Jerry Kilgore is backing Miller's rival for the Republican nomination, former Lt. Col. Oliver L. North.

So it went Wednesday as various organizations and individuals joined in a drumbeat of endorsements in the U.S. Senate race.

Goode, of rural Rocky Mount, announced at a morning news conference that 112 of Virginia's 640 constitutional officers - including sheriffs, treasurers, clerks of court, commonwealth's attorneys and commissioners of the revenue - are backing his campaign for the Democratic nomination.

The list served to highlight Goode's weakness as well as his strength, however.

Eighty percent of the officials listed live in four congressional districts stretching across the southern half of the state. The bulk reside west of the Tidewater. Only 5 percent of those listed are from three Northern Virginia districts.

Goode is ``the gentleman with the most integrity in the race,'' said Franklin County Commonwealth's Attorney Clifford Hapgood, who joined several officials from Goode's home county at the press conference.

Meanwhile, the United Mine Workers political arm announced that it is siding with Robb in a Democratic primary field that includes Goode, Richmond lawyer Sylvia Clute and Lyndon LaRouche-backer Nancy Spannaus.

``Sen. Robb is the only candidate who is talking about issues that directly affect the lives of coal miners and their families,'' said Jackie Stump, a member of the union's executive board and a state delegate. The union represents 7,300 United Mine Workers members and their families, Stump said.

On the Republican side, a spokesman for Gov. George F. Allen said the governor is sticking by his pledge to remain neutral in the Senate campaign, despite endorsements by cabinet secretaries.

Allen's personal staff is instructed to stay out of the fray, but cabinet secretaries chart their own course, the spokesman said.

{KEYWORDS} SENATE RACE CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENT

by CNB