SUNDAY MAGAZINE See inside WIN Ile fri au :4dliii COLD High-40 Low--13 ° Cloudy, windy Latest Deadline in the State Vol. LXXXVI, No. 123 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, February 22, 1976 10 Cents Eig ht Pages Daily Photo by KEN FINK Democratic presidential candidate Morris Udall hands out literature during his campaigning at the Nashua Arts and Science Center yesterday afternoon. TEPID DEBATE: eis til strugling Reaga rightis By JIM TOBIN and DAN BIDDLE Special To The Daily; MANCHESTER, N. H. -- Saying he has recently been accused of "everything but eating my young," Ronald Reagan last night describ- ed some of his controversial posi- tions before the largest audience of his New Hampshire campaign. Reagan, addressing a rally of about 1,000 supporters at Manches- ter's National Guard Armory, de- nied two recent charges made by President Ford and other adminis- tration officials-that the former California governor supports a weakening of the Social Security system, and that he is too extreme a candidate to win a majority in November. REAGAN INSISTED that he had not urged voluntary payment of Social Se- curity benefits, as Ford claimed last week, but simply warns that payments would run the government into debt by the year 2005. He proposed a presiden- tial commission to study the problem, desoite the fact that he has been advo- cating a d e c r e a s e in government bureaucracy. Reagan called his twoilandslide vic- tories in California gubernatorial races evidence that he appeals to "more than just a narrow segment." The rest of the former movie actor's half-hour speech covered his standard campaign issues: reduction of govern- ment waste, a balanced budget, and tough stances on crime and nationl de- fense. THE LARGELY partisan crowd cheer- ed Reagan wildly for urging a Cold War-style foreign policy. He drew his loudest ovation when he called the Vietnam War an "unforgiv- able sin" in which young Americans were "asked to fight and die in a cause which they were not allowed to win." Sweeping the Manchester area yester- day, Reagan pounded "giantism" in the federal government and promised he would reduce the federal bureaucracy. He also claimed his candidacy would not duplicate the disatrous failure of Sen. Barry Goldwater in 1964, who tried to capture the voters with staunch con- servatism. "BARRY WAS trying to warn the peo- ple about some things they weren't quite ready to hear," he said. "The voters," he continued, "were not sufficiently fed up with Washington to listen more close- ly to the Republican party's right wing." Yesterday morning, Reagan visited three Manchester nursing homes and told elderly residents President Ford had incorrectly accused him of hedging on support of Socal Security. "It makes me angry that some people are claiming I'm against Socal Secur- ity," Reagan said, without naming Ford. "I deplore this sort of thing, even on the political scene." But he never ex- panded on his earlier suggestion that ome social security payments could be made on a voluntary basis. defends cre en~tials THE PACKAGED quality of Reagan's approach repeatedly emerged in his use of little stories to explain his position on big issues. In recent weeks, he has backed his call for reducing the federal bureaucracy by telling audiences here of a Chicago woman who allegedly earned $150,000 annually from illicit welfare payments. Yesterday, a student in Reagan's a-dience at St. Anselm's College asked him about tax loopholes for the rich, and Reagan responded with the tale of a gambler who paid no federal tax on his income of $400,000-"until they found out he also listed a loss of over $500,000," Reagan said with a smile. WHEN ANOTHER student asked Rea- gan about the power of multi-national corporations. he responded by telling of a friend of his, the owner of the Tokyo Giants baseball team, who owns an American baseball farm club. "I never tCioght I would see that happen," Rea- g m said. The former governor's campaign style is a sometimes awkward hybrid. He at- tempts to project an image of simple downhome populism, but his stances on many issutes smack of Madison Avenue streamlini-ig to slit particuhr audiences. R agan aides denied that their candi- Slate's controversial $90 billion federal bh'dget cut proposal his hyrt his chances here, but they now shy away from pre- diitihg a New Hampshire victory. See REAGAN, Page 2 wi th fr By ELAINE FLETCHER and PAUL HASKINS special To Th . Daily MANCHESTER, N. H. - A show- down held here last night between front-running Democratic presi- dential primary hopefuls further compounded the candidate identi- ty crisis settling over the race. Specators packed a local high school to hear Birch Bayh, Morris Udall, Jimmy Carter and Fred Harris debate topics ranging from unemployment to vice- presidential potentials. BUT THE APPEARANCE of the four -billed as a New England style town meeting-failed to unearth any major rifts in their generally liberal political stances. The candidates avoided such hot spe- cifics as busing, abortion, and the con- troversial S-1 bill in favor of more gen- eralized issues. Carter, however, stood out as the most moderate of the four candidates, regu- larly using the vaguest of cliches and worn-out rhetoric. "WE NEED well structured, long- range planning to restore the confidence of labor and industry in the policies of government," Carter said at one point when asked how he would mediate the economic conflicts between labor and business if elected. Responses from the other three more liberal candidates were injected with heavy doses of sympathy for the "little man," oppressed by big business and lentity crisis smothered by big government. "We're at a rare and perhaps pivotal point in our history," said Harris. "We need to get back to the kind of democ- racy Jefferson had in mind when he said equal opportunity for all and privi- lege for none." YET THE economic solutions propos- ed were old hat. "I will use the influence of the office (of President) to see that taxes are eas- ed ,and the cost of food is kept down if they (organized labor) will be temporate and moderate in their economic de- mands," stated Bayh. Bayh avoided any commitment to a government - financed work program for the unemployed. Instead, he stressed the importance of reforming the federal re- serve policy to ease tight credit and suprlv more jobs through the private sector. UDALL and Harris, however, both reaffirmed their suoport for government nrograms to employ those unable to find jobs in the private sector. Harris also repeated his support for a moratorium on the use of nuclear pow- er, saying, "It makes no safety sense or economic sense. It has been proven that nuclear energy costs more and employs fewer workers. "We've got to stop Ford's budget and ask ten times more for research on solar power, geothermal energy and cleaner coal." a life-long minimum rate on electricity in this country." Udall defended his own commitment to energy reform saying he could and would limit the energy growth rate to two per cent a year without stifling economic prosperity. "It's false to say that you've got to have energy growth to have economic growth," he said. "You can put work- ers currently inthe field of energy into other areas where they can generate as much economic growth." UDALL, WHO has gained something of a reputation in this state among stu- dents and intellectuals,swas well received yesterday afternoon by a predominantly middle-aged crowd as he met store- keepers and shoppers in a tour just south of the Manchester area. Warm smiles and mutual praise were the order of the evening. They barely bertayed the fighters' zeal and unfluinch- ing nerve which is traditionally re- quired of a New Hampshire victor. Birch Bayh, labor liberal from In- diana, spoke first, aid reflectively praisd the competition as presidential timber to a man. Bayh's soft-sell lead was quickly repeated by Carter and Udall. Crusader-at-large Fred Harris, See DEMOCRAT, Page 2 AP Photo Nixon arrives in Chinia; greeted by Premier Hum HE ADDED, will guarantee "But if you elect me I workers and old people By Reuter and UPI PEKING - Former President Richard Nixon arrived in China last night on a controversial visit that marked his re- turn to the public spotlight after months of seclusion. Smiling broadly, but looking slightly nervous, Nixon was met on the tarmac of Peking Airport by China's new act- ing premier, Hur Kuo-feng. "TODAY, FEB. 21, is a very able day for us because of that visit," Hua told Nixon during informal chat. memor- historic a brief ters of a presidency that ended in his resignation. Mrs. Nixon, wearing a light green coat with a gray fur collar, chuckled over Hua's teasing and said, "We have pro- mised to call her from here." "YES, YOU MUST do that," Hua re- plied, Nixon, who sat with folded hands and listened attentively to Hua, told his host he was "very honored" to be back in China. He said Feb. 21 "is a very memorable date for us also. Nixon said he was "particularly ap- preciative of the great courtesy' the Chinese had demonstrated by sending a special plane for him. Nixon will spend eight days in - China. His first activity was to be a meeting before noon Sunday (China time) with Tang Ying-chat, the widow of the late Premier Chon En-lai, the official hostess during the first Nixon visit. THIS AFTERNOON Nixon meets with Daily Photo by STEVE KAGAN Former Senator Fred Harris (top) looks at coins exhibited in a Nahsua shop- ping mall yesterday during a tour to meet New Hampshire voters before Tues- day's presidential primary. Below, a discarded campaign sign lies on a chair after former Gov. Ronald Reagan's speech at the National Guard Armory in Manchester. Teahinfg drives ed: Unsafe at any speed "Four years ago - it was exactly four years this year - when Mr. Nixon took his courageous action coming to China," Hua said. "It was during that visit that our two sides issued the Shang- hai communique that opened the door to development of relations." Hua recalled that Nixon's daughter Julie recently was in China and met with 82-year-old Mao Tse-Tung. It was during that meeting, Hua said, that By JENNY MILLER It is morning, and a select group of highly skilled technicians have had their coffee, sent their children to school, wonder why I'm getting paid for it," says Thomas MacKenzie, counselor and Driver's Education instructor at Huron High School. "But then, in the next five