Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, October 31, 1975 CONSERVATISM KEY FACTOR: !F__ -I 'But now, the Mr. Nice Guy period is over. The old four C's are replaced4 AT A TT T T /( ' I( NT /TP.... osi ground in '7M6 race? by a tion, iW, AOI HJ.I .N U UAu ter) - Sentiment is growing new set: confusion, contradic among Washington observers' that President Ford has lost confrontation and can't do.' ground in the country and that; his election chances next year are, at best, questionable. J enHis strict conservative philos- -sophy has already alienated or- Wall Street Journal ganized labor and the poor, and analysts say he is in danger of losing support in the big cities if he maintains his hands-' off attitude towards financially hard pressed New York City. the a n n awbar filnn co, o peratve-. i presents a'CARY GRANT-KATHERINE HEPBURN DOUBLE FEATURE Holiday (1938) in MLB 3 at 7 p.m. only The Philadelphia Story (1940) at 9 p.m. only in MLB 3 with THE KING OF HEARTS at - e IF THE election were to be held now instead of next No- vember, Ford's economic .poli- cies would be under strong challenge in nearly every large industrial state, and their elec- toral college votes are vital in any presidential election. "President Ford is gradually Association of JEWISH GRADS November Party Saturday, Nov. 1 8:3 0 p.m.I 7 & 9p.m. in Aud. 4 on Sat., Nov. 1-TOMORROW! double feature: $2.00 or single show $1.25 0 i FOOD-MUSIC at HILLEL, 1429 Hill building a record that is almost sure to lose him the big north- emn cities and states in next year's election," Columnist, James Reston wrote in The New York Times.' Economic indicators suggest that the country is rapidly re-' covering from the deep reces- sion which gripped it last year. BUT unemployment is still at the unacceptable figure of more than eight per cent of the work force and New York City," the largest in the nation, is faced with bankruptcy and eco-I nomic chaos which presidential critics assert could threaten the recovery and plunge the country' back into recession. President Ford has proposed to Congress a mammoth $28 bil- lion tax cut next year provided it is tied to a cut in govern- ment spending of a similar amount. But the proposal has not re- ceived any serious consideration from either the House of Repre- sentatives or the Senate, both of which are under the control - of the opposition Democratic Party. THE PROPOSAL has been labelled as "weird" by some and totally unrealistic by oth- ers. The President has already' clearly decided on his 1976 cam- paign strategy. It is to run against what he describes as a, "can't do" Congress, much as the late President Truman did in 1948; to charge it with be- ing reckless in spending tax- payers' money; to denounce Ford high taxes and government bu- reaucracy and to call for reduc- Wall Street Journal, "The Mr. lican p tions in expensive social pro- Ni'ce Guy period is over. The nation. grams and welfare payments. old Four C's are replaced by a' Ford came into the presi- new set: confusion, contradic- THE dency following the unprece- tion, confrontation and can't the ch dented Watergate - generated do." dent's resignation of President Nixon A few months ago, fresh from ing ar 14 months ago. He was imme- his decisive actions when the ,though diately hailed as a "Mr. Nice merchant ship, Mayaguez, was ened it Guy" and applauded for reviv- attacked by Cambodian gun- was ra ing confidence in government. boats, President Ford seemed interse He ended the long Watergate to have the Republican field to One nightmare and promised a himself. An incipient revolt by that, a "policy of communication, con- the conservative wing of the' to won ciliation, compromise and coop- party, unset over the policy of dent h eration." detente towards the Soviet Un- Prob ion and improved relations with ing po "BUT NOW," noted corres- China, was quieted; a poten- Ford a pondent James Gannon, of the tial challenge from the conser- confusi !_____vative hero, former California over w Th'Governor Ronald Reagan, was party's This apparently nipped in the bud. Weekend But there has been a change TEN FRI.-SAT. since then, reflected in Ford's the fi inability to restore his stand- more I Ding in the public opinion polls. cited The conservatives have begun promp Xcriticizing again and Reagan that, M ARC V I gives every sign of seriously by Se challenging Ford for the Repub- be ac turn to one of its senior states- SOME rightwing Republicans men, Senator Hubert Hum- believe Reagan can oust Presi- phrey. dent Ford and become the par- He is seen by many Demo- ty's nominee. crats as the only candidate out- That theory is not taken seri- side the reluctant Senator Ken-' ously, however, by knowledg- nedy who could unite the par- able analysis such as Wall ty's divided factions. % Street Journal columnist Ver- Senator Humphrey's greatest mont Royster. drawback is that he will be 65 "Certainly the Republicans at the time the election cam- aren't going to repudiate the paign is mounted in earnest President they've got and turn next year. a possible defeat into a sure one," he wrote. "So any talk SHOULD he win the nomina- about a successful challenge to tion, it would represent a come- Mr. Ford from Ronald Reagan back just as dramatic as that of is just that." Richard Nixon, who looked ab- solutely out of the political pic- PERHAPS the most outspoken ture following his defeat by comments about President President Kennedy in 1960 and Ford's future come from Jo- his failure two years later to seph Harsch of the Christian 'But no veteran politician ... would still classify him (Ford) as the 'most probable' wiaer in Nor. 1976.' -Joseph Harsch, Christian Science Monitor J e )arty presidential nomi- RE IS little doubt that ange followed the Presi- insistence on campaign- round the country even; his life was twice threat- i California and his car mmed into at a traffic ction in Connecticut. commentator hlas said s a result, people began nder whether the Presi-j ad good judgment. ably the most encourag- litical circumstance for at present is the obvious ion among the Democrats who is going to be their 1976 standard bearer. hopefuls are already in ield and there could be by January. None has ex- any great following, ting growing speculation in the continued refusal nator Edward Kennedy to candidate, the party will win the California governorship. Senator Humphrey, who was the late President Johnson's Vice President for four years, failed in his presidential bid against President Nixon in 1968 and was defeated in his quest; for the party nomination again in 1972. Humphrey has been running for the presidency since 1960 and is still known as the "happy warrior," a quality which the Democrats, might want to try to exploit in 1976. IF Humphrey's age or his health preclude him from run- ning again, the party might seek out Senator Sdmund Mus- kie, of Maine, who is three years younger, or Senator Hen- ry Jackson, of Washington State, who is 63 and is the ac- knowledged front runner of those who have declared their candidacy. Other possibles are Represen- tative Maurice Udall, of Ari- zona, Senator Birch Bayh, of Indiana, and Senator Frank Church, of Idaho, all younger men. Science Monitor. Two months ago, he wrote, the President's personal attrac- tiveness plus the visibility he quickly won by being in the White House made him look both like the next Republican candidate and the most prob- able winner for 1976. "But now," added Harsch, "It is necessary to subtract 'most probable' from the formula . . he still has the inside track for the Republican nomination. But no veteran politician ... would still cl'ssify him as the 'most probable' winner in Nov. 1976. He may have an edge over any- one else presently in the run- ning in either Harty. But that edge is narrow and probably getting narrower." Renublican party leaders, as a consequence, are looking armvnd to see whether just pos- sibly they might have among themselves someone young, new and interesting "who just might catch the nonilar imagination as a Wendell Willkie once did," Harsch added. Reagn culdgivePreidet Willkie came from virtually Reagan could give President nowhere to give the late Demo- Ford trouble in the Republican ngD rc i I r fkln D .7 baloting in New Hampshire. Governor Meldrim Thomson is a Reagan supporter and the anti-Ford conservative element in the state is well-organized. "U" lowers cratic President p'ranmi n .. Roosevelt a stiff fight in 1940. Despite Ford's r- nt heavy schedule of campaigning, his popularity remains virtually un- changed according to a Gallup poll. This showed 47 per cent of those questioned expressing approval of his performance. Thirty seven per cent disap- proved and 16 per cent were undecided. ordelier plunges the audience into a universe dominated by idealism Queen of Glitter Folk nd a denial of reality. With Jean-Louis Barrault, Teddy Billis, Michel "deranoed"-casting direc- Vitold. tar of "Hair" SAT.: THE LITTLE THEATER OF JEAN RENOIR SUN.: THE CRIME OF MONSIEUR LANGE ERIC U ARTY ANGELL HALL (BEERS) NAGLER Cinema 11 TIG,, A 'AUry 7:00 is 9:00 Adm. $1 .25 barrio, fiddle, psaltery 1421 HilII 761-1451 A KNt IUSSLLF1LP STAPJIHnG I OU DALTV'T \LACCCONCERTCO-OP Ti aRRW NIGHT !! I I BO NE RAITT BUDDY GUY-JUNIOR WELLS BAND ROBERT PETE WILLIAMS SIPPIE WALLACE $5.00-$4.50-$4.00: Available at UAC box office in Mich. Union 10:30-5:30 (763-2071). Sorry. no personal checks. 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