Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pag Fur HEMICIG N DIL Weneda July ||| 30 |||975|| V-P sweepstakes: Taking aim on Rocky Baker B rock Kemp Rumsfeld By GORDON ATCHESON WASHINGTON - President Ford last week blasted .a gov- ernment report accosing his administration of having no concern for the plight of the elderly, and claimed that he loves old folks just as much as the next guy. Yet, at the same time, his campaign director was telling a group of reporters that Ford is considering hooting Vice Presi- dent Nelson Rockefeller off the 1976 ticket because he wants a younger man in that position. According to campaign chief Howard "Ho" Callaway, the thinking runs something like this: Rockefeller, at 67, would he too old to succeed Ford in the White House if the President wins a second term next year. While there is probably more. than a tinge of truth in that view, it's basically a smoke screen. Underlying the "old age" argu- ment is an incredihie amount of pressure from the conservative wing of the Republican Party to give Rocky the heave-ho be- cause of .his comparatively lib- eral bent. CONSERVATIVES h a v e de- tested Rockefeller for a long time, and those feelings became solidified when he thought .about challenging Harry Goldwater for the presidential nomination in 1964. In many ways Rockefeller has tried to move to the right since .then-or make it look like he has. But the conservatives just won't huy it. Now Ford is heginning to feel the same kind .of heat, as Ron- ald Reagan has all hut said he wviii fight the old Wolverine for the right to run. But Ford could disarm a po- tential Reagan insurrection by replacing Rockefeller with some one flying more conservative colors. - Of course, that kind of move would he hound to rile the mod- erates a hit. Then again, none of them in threatening to enter the primaries. "The President sincerely and genuinely is keeping an open mind and he may choose any one of the good Republicans,"' Callaway said. Be did not, howv- ever, say whether Rockefeller was a good Republican or who the bad guys are. AMONG THE names heing tossed arouind as possible Rocke- feller replacements are: -Sen. Howard Baker, the conservative f r o m Tennessee. His strengths include a right- leaning -posture and. a national reputation as a crusader for good and justice, thanks to the Senate Watergate Committee on which he served. -Sen. William Brock, Baker's counterpart in the Tennessee - delegation.. He is also a con- servative, hut lacks much of a name outside his home state. As a southerner, he would give geographical balance to a ticket headed by Ford. -Rep. Jack Kemp, a Buffalo, New York congressman who is better remember'ed as the quar- terback for the Buffalo Bills professional football team. His background is right-wing. And with a Ford-Kemp ticket, the people would have a duo that could hike a football properly, if nothing else., --Donald Rumsfeld, currently the President's counselor and a former Congressman from Illi- nois. Out from conservative cloth, Rumsfeld is a powerfully ambitious man who admits he wants to be president some day. It wouldn't be surprising to find that he was the first to -float the Rumsfeld name in the Veep sweepstakes. --SEN. CHARLES PERCY, an Illinois Republican who is every bit as liberal as Rockefeller. His name probably creeps in just to keep the moderates from . getting angry. But as one ob- server remarked "if Percy re- places Rockefeller, the Reagan people would scream bloody murder." What it all boils down to is that Ford-or at least his cam- paign architects-are definitely looking to the right for support. But it's also apparent that they aren't gazing to the far reaches of the conservative ele- ment or Reagan's name would probably have come up. Ford is trying to rally all the troops so he can actually win a term in office thanks ~to the voters. After all, who wants to Percy go down in history' as a person who became president only be- cause of o t h e r politicsans' scandals? Gordon Atchetan is ca- aditor-in-chief of the Daily, working in Washington as o summer intern for Knight Newspapers. To the Daily: I READ with she greateat aleasure Tim Schick's "Seeing America on a Thumb a Day" (Daily, July 26). Having hitch- hiked through Michigan, Can- ada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, N e w York, Massachusetts, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, N 0 r t h Carolina, Sooth Carolina, Flor- ida, Tennessee, Kentucky and Indiana, I have only two com- ments to make: don't hitch-hike through Ohio, and wasco your ass- -Robert Bernard July 26 , Tur~~ ke bluffstetam 'fHE RECENT turn of events in Turkey may appear unfathomable on the surface, but the interests of the Turkish government remain as clear as ever, The charade of the past week, In which the Turks have attempted to take control of U.S. installations without kicking Ameri- can personnel out, has apparently been engineered to force the House of Representatives to change its mind about not lifting the arms embargo against that Asian nation. Hopefully, the members of the House will not be fooled by this trickery. Past events have shown that Turkey most likely intends to use those arms In Cyprus, a conflict the U.S. should certainly not be involved In, JN ADDITION, we must not be fooled by Defense Depart- ment strategists who argue that the intelligence bases in Turkey are vital for the security of this nation, They contend that the U.S. gathers some 25 per cent of Ite intelligence on the Soviet Union from Turkey, but this claim is almost certainly a great exaggeration. We have plenty of other sources for these very same data, so that these bases are not all that essential for our defense. In fact, Turkey's recent actions appear suspiciously like a bluff. They don't seem to want our installations or troops out, hut they are quite serious about wanting more arms. Clearly, it's now up to the members of the House to demonstrate that tl'is country is most serious about not doling out arms to nations that intend to use them for war. 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