Wednesday, July 28, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Baker: In search of consensus (Continued from Page 3) didate to have run in an im- May, Baker took his sleek black ward other candidates. Esch, portant state-wide election - Schwinn Paramount ("I want- who received roughly SO per for supreme court justice. ed to ride an American pro- cent ratings from both the con- duct") to various starting servative Americans for Consti- WITH HIS only political base points and rode several hour tutional Action and the liberal the position of Regent, which long legs. Designed to attract Americans for Democratic Ac- he win in 1972, Baker has had media attention more than tion, is attractive to much of to fight to present his political reach individual voters direct- the left - leaning side of the views and do away with the in- ly, he trek generated newspa- party and is said to be the evitable question "Deane who?" per and television coverage choice of party chairman Wil- when Baker would roll into dif- liam McLaughlin and Gover- He attacked the problem with ferent towns. nor William Milliken. Huber the most original gimmick of can out-"free enterprise" and the campaign - a bike ride Billing himself as "the inde- "non - interference" anyone in throughout the state which took pendent Republican" and "the the nation, so he has many him from Sault Ste. Marie to only non-politician in the race," hard line conservatives in his Grand Rapids to Detroit and he took the message "where- pocket. Brennan's name is well- many towns and dusty country ever two or three believers are known and he is the only can- roads in between. Beginning in gathered together." O'Hara seeks Senate seat (Continued from Page 3) "My own personal preference is for a constitutional amend- ment that would make it clear that this decision-that the bal- ancing of these rights of the mother, of the potential life of the unborn child, the right of the father-is really not a con- stitutional question as much as it is a policy question. And it ought to be decided in a demo- cratic society by the democratic method." He added, "States make their own laws . . . I think that abor- tion ought to be restricted to cases where the mother's wel- fare is materially affected by the pregnancy, (but) I don't know as I'd do a great deal dif- ferently, if I had my druthers, than the Supreme Court." HIS RESPECT for the preser- vation of life carries over into his opposition to the death penalty. "There ought to be ways in which you can put par- tiularly vicious criminals be- hind bars. But I don't think we oueht to go around taking peo- ple's lives upon conviction of a crime," remarked O'Hara. "We ought to try to get the stte (Michigan) to continue to forbid it and other states to do so and if necessary we ought to go to a constitutional amend- ment," he added. O'Hara also opposes Senate hill 1, a bill which has elicited considerable opposition because some say it threatens many of oir constitutional guarantees to free speech and the right to assemble. "I think it's got to be junked," O'Hara said. "It was supposed to be a codification of existing law and it was put in the hands of a bunch of people who had axes to grind . . . John Mit- chell's Justice Department was in it up to their necks. "God only knows what's hid- den in there that we haven't found," he said. O'Hara disapproves of current foreign policy tinder Kissinger because he thinks the United States should provide aid and technology to those nations which are run under the same democratic principles as our country. "I THINK that there are cer- tain countries in the world that share our values, that share our goals, and we ought to be in the closest co-operation with them," he said. "We ought to try to maintain peaceful but arms length rela- tions with the others," OHara explained, "you sometimes may be forced into a situation where you're trying to choose between your bunch of bastards and their bunch of bastards . . . there is a certain pragmatic justification for helping a re- pressive regime but I think that ought to be only in the rarest of circumstances and o n 1 y where the benefit to the U.S. is very clear." He said that this would apply to most of the communist na- tions and many of the third world and Arab countries as well. He believes we should pro- vide for Israel's continued ex- istence. But added that we should realize that there are very important differences be- tween the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. He said we should not pat the Soviet Union on the back in terms of their domestic policy. He also said we should have a "one - C hi n a. one - Taiwan theory" because we cannot con- tinue to ignore the great num- her of people governed by the communist government on the mainland. HE CALLED for austerity in funding the defense budget be- cause so many of our weapons systems are duplicated between the branches of the services. He said this competition helped to escalate the defense budget be- cause each branch of the armed services wants to be able to destroy the world on its own, He also opposes the B-1 bomb- er as "a boondoggle." O'Hara would favor continu- ing federal aid to cities to help rehabilitate neighborhoods. He said he thinks that the key to rennovating cities lies in the rejuvenation of neighborhoods. This could come about not by public housing, but the concept of a 'housing allowance.' He also said that he is op- posed to cross-district busing because "the segregated school system is a product of a segre- gated society, not the cause of it." He said the best solution would be to encourage a re- ailgnment of housing patterns. PILOTS EXCELSIOR, Minn. ( - Flying has been a family tradi- tion for the Ohrbecks for nearly 60 years now. The tradition was established by Joseph Ohrbeck, who began flying in 1917, joined an airline in 1929 and flew commercially for 31 years. His son, Richard, also became a pilot and joined the same airline as his father at the age of 19. Ilhe has been flying for 33 years. Recently, David, the youngest of Richard's five children, made his first solo flight on his 16th birthday. Shortly after that, his 18-year-old brother, Tom, also made his first solo flight. IT IS difficult to assss Bak- er's performance as Regent in terms of the Senate campaign, for as he himself says, "it's not that kind of political base. You do it as a public service, it's an honor to be a part of it. It's a great institution." Baker has said "I speak for conservatism on the Board," but the context is a fairly lib- eral one. There is only one other Republican on the board, David Laro, and Baker is more conservative than he. In the lib- eral and academic atmosphere of the campus, Baker is por- trayed as almost a reactionary. He seems more at home in the realm of high-level politics and business. On several iccasions recent- ly, he lion expressed disbelief that party , leaders have al- ready backed a candidate. "I HAVE talked with both Milliken and McLaughlin," he said, "And they both said that they were going to stay coin- pletely neutral. There is ob- viously substantial damage to a candidate's campaign if the governor and the party chair- man are in the other man's camp. They solemnly told me that that was not the case. It would be a deep and bitter dis- appointment if that were the case." On the issues, Baker is neither an Esch liberal nor a Huber conservative. From a tough de- fense stand to guarded opposi- tion to the death penalty, he straddles many of the positions of his opponents. -ECONOMY. "T h e govern- ment doesn't have to stimulate anybody. The less government, the better off we are. I do not believe in the collective society, and that is the direction in which we are going." The Hum- phrey-Hawking employment bill "says that no longer do we be- lieve in the free economic sys- tem. The givernment is now the emaployer of last resort. It is also highly inflationary. "I hippen to think that con- Itl if the rost tif government is the central issue in the eco- nmic sense. Government is out of controil and if we proceed without some control we're go- ing to have an economic col- lapse. If you have that, you're going to have a totalitarian kind of government, whether on the right or of the left. I believe that. 1 want toli prevent that. "I believe in the economic system that has provided jobs in the free society. You go to tther countries and they don't have whai we have." -DEFENSE spending. "'Ihe single most important responsi- bility of any government is to protect the society against for- eign domination. I would spend that money required to oain- tain an adequate defense." -Crime. "You don't just say, 'is gonna throw them in the slammer and that's the end of it.' You have to build jails. You have to reorganize the judicial system. I'm an advocate of the 'c e r t a i n t y of punishment' theory." Baker opposes gun control and the Supreme Court deci- sions favoring legal abortions. He supports aid to Israel, and says the U.S. has "strategic, human, and economic" interests in Africa. n 1 1 SLY EARLYn Ct M taA u ES , - A- $tOOS 5 ,a- STUDfNT DISCOUNT$IIFt,.AF CI$&..S ,t tMo te PAUL NEWMAN in 1 "BUFFALO BILL 1t:30 ENDS ~ 12:30 THURS i 2:30 4:30,3 6:45 7:00 9:00 9:30 0-n 0 TONIGHT! Mike Nichols' CARNAL KNOWLEDGE (Mike. Nichols, 1971) AUD. A-7:15 & 9 An intriguing but tragic examination of the problematic moral- ity of the modern male. We follow the sexual escapades of two uniikely friends from their college days to middle age. Begin- ning as two obsessed post adaoescents, their tangled sex lives ieave one apathetic and the other impotent. Perhabs Jack Nicholson's seediest role, the film also proved Ann Margaret a competent actress. Screenplay by Jules Feiffer. Art Garfunkel, Candice Bergen, Caro Kane. $1.25-AND. A ANGELL HALL 10: 15 12:05, 2:00 4:00, 6 :30, 9:15 He's got to face a gunfight once more to live up to his legend oncemore TO WIN JUST ONE MORL TIME. 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