The Michigan Daily-Thursday, Februry 14, 1980-Page 9 Dole backs Baker in Puerto Rico race Close primary expected in NH r WASHINGTON - Sen. Bob Dole (R-Kan.), announced yesterday he is supporting Sen.. Howard Baker, a rival candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, in Puerto Rico's presidential primary election on Sunday. Rico voters to support Howard Baker," he said. "I have no quarrel with the other candidates, but feel Sen. Baker is the best qualified to address Puerto Rico's problems." That appeared to be an effort to slow the campaign of former United Nations Ambassador George Bush, who won the first GOP contest in Iowa on Jan. 21 and could gain new headway in Puerto Rico's first primary. DOLE, CAMPAIGNING. in Con- cord, N.H., yesterday, was asked about the endorsement. "Well, I think in Puerto Rico, it's a question of resources," he said. "We'd have to spend, I think we figured $50,000 to $75,000, to really get anywhere," he said. Asked if the move would hurt his chances in New Hampshire's primary, Dole replied, "No, I don't think so. I think you have to husband your resources." BAKER, ALSO campaigning in New Hampshire, issued a statement saying, "Bob Dole's statement of support for my candidacy in Puerto Rico is gracious, and I thank him very warmly. Dole decided Tuesday against en- tering the presidential primary in Kansas, his home state. Dole, who was Gerald Ford's vice presidential running mate in 1976, has fallen from a high of about seven per cent to around two. per cent in most GOP presidential polls. He said in a statement: "My Senate duties continue to be my first priority. I am confident that the people of Kansas and the rest of the nation will support a candidate who places his job above politics." CONCORD, N.H. (UPI)-Campaign leaders for both President Carter and Sen. Edward Kennedy said yesterday that Kennedy's better than expected showing in Maine will not cause them to change strategy for the Feb.126 New Hampshire primary. Both camps agreed Kennedy's campaign has gained momentum as a result of his close second-place finish in the Maine caucuses. Carter's New England spokesman Ellis Woodward said, "We see New Hampshire as a very close race today." Both sides predicted California Gov. Edmund Brown won't do as well in New Hampshire as he did in Maine, where he won almost 13 per cent of the delegate count. BROWN IS NOT concentrating as much effort on New Hampshire. The turnout in a primary is much higher than for caucuses, and a greater effort is needed to win votes than in a caucus state. With less than two weeks to go, the Kennedy and Carter camps are putting on the most intense campaigns ever organized in New Hampshire. The goal of both camps-and it appears they will ,meet them-is to contact every one of the state's 146,000 registered Democrats either in person or by telephone. "The voters are beginning to say they're getting tired of being called," Woodward said. The Carter campaign has 33 telephones being used night and day to contat between 80,000 and 100,000 voters by primary day. KENNEDY IS bringing volunteers by the busloads from his home state of Massachusetts for door-to-door canvassing, said Jeff Petrich, his New Hampshire spokesman. Some 20 Kennedy relatives-mostly nephews and nieces of the senator-also are taking part in the effort. -Kennedy will spend 12 of the last 14 days of the campaign in New Hampshire. The senator stresses that he is campaigning in the state, meeting the voters, while Carter is "hiding" in the White House. "They want to see the candidate," Petrich said. "The Rose Garden strategy is wearing very thin in New Hampshire." A random poll taken Tuesday by Concord radio station WKXL showed a majority of voters responding felt the president should campaign in New Hampshire, even while the hostages are held in Iran. Reagan said U.N. should investigate Shah WA Baket ..gains Dole's endorsement The upusual endorsement came a day after Dole decided against en- tering the April 1 primary in his home state. It was another signal that Dole's campaign is faltering and may not last long. He already is under pressure from supporters at home to drop the presidential bid and run for the Senate again.. DOLE SAID that while his name is on the Puerto Rico ballot, he has not campaigned actively there. "In my absence, I urge all Puerto DETROIT (UPI)-Ronald Reagan said yesterday a U.N. investigation of. the deposed shah of Iran is not "too high a price to pay" for release of the 50 American hostages, but said he hoped the United States would not play a role in such a review. The GOP presidential hopeful spoke at a news conference at the Radisson Cadillac Hotel in Detroit, site of the 1980 GOP Republican convention, at the start of a week of campaigning that includes three days of stumping in primary-important New Hampshire. His evening's events included a GOP fundraising dinner with liberal Gov. William G. Milliken, who has made no secret of the fact he and Reagan are far apart philosophically. MILLIKEN HAS remained neutral on the question of endorsing a Republican presidential . contender and has said in the past he expected to name his choice in April or May. He told reporters later yesterday he now plans to reveal his choice "considerably sooner." Reagan said he would not want to see an investigation that "smacked of finding someone guilty before the trial," but did not obect to a U.N. tribunal looking into Iranian complaints against the shah. "IF THE UNITED Nations wants to investigate him, they certainly can, and, I wouldn't think that would be too high a price to pay,"'Reagan said. However, he said, "as far as I'm concerned, I would prefer it if the .United States did not play a part" tin such an investigation. "I think the shah deserved better than he's got so far from the United States," Reagan said. REAGAN HAS BEEN a long-time defender of the shah, who is living in Panama. Reagan has said he would have allowed the shah to enter the U.S. for medical reasons because of his ties to the U.S. as a strong ally for many years. In response to atquestion, he said he, would speak in the shah's defense during such an investigation if asked, but said it was unlikely he would be asked. On another subject, Reagan said his decision to debate fellow Republican George Bush in a head-to-head confrontation in Nashua, N.H., before the Feb. 26 primary was not an indication he had narrowed the GOP contest down to himself and Bush. REAGAN SAID the final two con- testants'would not be decided at least "until we've had several primaries." But when asked if Bush, who defeate Reagan in the Iowa caucuses, was t New Hampshire frontrunner, Reaga replied that Bush is "perceived as northeasterner." "George is accepted as being theri He's a hometown boy." FBsreveals meeting plans of organzied crime chiefs Do a Tree a Favor: Recycle Your Daily:' SUSAN TITUS BE MY VALENTINE Lev, YOUR LONG DISTANCE SWEETHEART BRIAN WASHINGTON (UPI)-Organized crime chiefs. from across the nation were planning a summit meeting, possibly to divide up territory, before recent public disclosures about FBI undercover operations, sources said * Wednesday. Leaders of the mob, which the FBI calls La Cosa Nostra, were preparing as recently as last week for the meeting scheduled for "the near future," the sources said. They presumably canceled it after learning that the FBI had penetrated crime circleswith undercover agents and wiretaps, the sources said. But federal law enforcement officials said they are not sure whether a new summit meeting might still be in the works. One FBI undercover investigation, called Brilab for "Bribery-Labor," has implicated reputed Louisiana mob chieftain Carlos Marcello, who was among those involved in planning the syndicate meeting, the sources said. Deadline For The Nontraditional Fellowship is March 14, 1980 Contct the Fellowship Office 160 Rackham for details. 764-2218 WHY IS IT EVERYTME He THINK$S A8OUT ASKING TH IS CHICK FOR A ATE HR GETS TONGUE-TIED? 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