Page 10--Thursday, February 21, 1980-The Michigan Daily Liberal Anderson faltering in New Hampshire w U ' °ss By MICHAEL ARKUSH A Daily news analysis MANCHESTER, N.H. - On trial before a hostile jury of New Hampshire owners a few days ago, the candidate brushed aside the path of political wisdom and told the crowd exactly what they did not want to hear. "I would like a system for the state to screen those who want to own an upright handgun," he said calmly. This courageous stance before one of the state's most powerful special interest groups in- spired little sympathy, as the audience - almost spontaneously - shouted, booed, hissed, and screamed. Some even urged him to leave the auditorium FOR THOSE unfamiliar with Rep. John An- derson (R-Ill.), this scene may seem unusual in the American political trdition in which most presidential candidates tailor their views to suit the particular audience. But while Jerry Brown may have jumped onto the Proposition 13 bandwagon and Howard Baker is accused of playing presidential politics with SALT II, this youthful-looking 10-term congressman tells it like he thinks it is - no mat- ter how it may affect the polls. And while his bravery may permanently doom his chances to occupy the Oval Office, Anderson appears quite satisfied, if not enthusiastic, with his unique campaign style. He might even thrive on it. "WHAT MAKES me different is that I'll tell you what the harsh reality of this nation is, and I won't make promises that can't be kept," he says proudly. "I'm different than the other Republicans." No one can dispute that. WHILE THE other six Republican hopefuls emphatically endorse drastic hikes in the defen- se budget, the fifty-eight-year-old representative says he wants to cut it. His opponents have gone to extreme lengths to defend the role of nuclear power in the country's future energy supply, but Anderson prefers the development of solar energy and other alter- natives to establish independence from foreign oil imports. "Six of the seven Republican candidates offer the same solutions in the traditional hard-line terms. They say we have to cut the_ federal deficit, raise the defense budget, and still provide for the social and welfare needs of our people, They didn't explain how such miracles can be made," he said. SINCE HIS quest for the presidency began last summer, Anderson has stressed his proposal to institute a 50 cent per gallon gasoline tax to force a quick reduction in domestic oil consumption because the recent voluntary conservation methods have failed. He adds that the poor and unemployed will not suffer under this tax because there would be a supplementary fifty per cent slash in Social Security taxes. "The American people must make the sacrifice. OPEC will continue to tax us if we don't tax ourselves," he insists. As a new wave of Cold War-like apprehension spreads through the country - prompting his opponents to toughen their anti-Soviet rhetoric - Anderson still calls for the reduction of strategic arms, and says America's views should not committed to a war in the Persian Gulf to defenW our oil imports. Instead, he asserts, the nation must make "internalsacrifices." HIS LOCAL opposition to draft registration spurred a significant amount of student support in New Hampshire. More than five hundred students attended Anderson's speech Tuesday night at Dartmouth and cheered when he told them they wouldn't go to war for barrels of oil. The student newspaper recently endorsed his candidacy. These stances, making Anderson an enigma i the current mainstream of Republican can- didates and voters, paint a gloorhy picture for his future campaign prospects. Though his popularity has risen - especially since a for- midable showing in the Iowa debate last month - he still fares well behind the* party's heavyweights, Reagan and Baker. Anderson b . GOP liberal 1 \ i ' 1 d AL TERS CAMPAIGN S TRA TEGY Conservative Crane also DICK GREGORY A UAC VIEWPOINT/ALPHA PHI ALPHA P PRESENTATION February 22: By KEITH RICHBURG A Daily news analysis MANCHESTER, N. H. - His blue and gold bumper stickers proclaim him "the early bird," but by all indications, Rep. Philip Crane's presidential can- didacy is about to get shot down over the snow-capped mountains of New Hampshire next week. He shows barely above three percen- tage points in most of the polls here, and his campaign stops around the state draw only a few dozen curious spectators. Moreover, in a Gallup sur- UNION BALLROOM 8:00 in 763~ 107 $1.75 h A A A A A A A A A A A A A AA A A A A A A A CEDAR POINT AMUSEMENT PARK, Sandusky, Ohio, will hold on-campus interviews for summer employment: Date: Thursday, February 28 -Time: 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Over 3,400 positions available for a _ wide variety of jobs. Dormitory or . Place: Placement, Student Activities Building atment style housing available. -Contact Career Planning&Placement # - } -Office for information and appoint- ment. Spend a summer in one of the' **finest resorts in the North. vey of 570 registered Republicans, Crane's latest approval rating was only 10 per cent; 76 per cent of those polled did not even know who he was. But none of that deters Crane, a con- servative Illinois Republican who began his presidential campaign exac- tly 567 days ago as a younger, ideologically purer Ronald Reagan. WHEN CRANE announced his can- didacy the summer of 1978, he said that Reagan's presidential ambitions were still uncertain. Should Reagan not enter the race, Crane said, he wanted to have an ,early start so he could inherit the Republican right and pick up the man- tle of conservatism. But now Reagan is indeed in the race, and is considered locked in a struggle for first place with former U.N. AM- bassador George Bush. Crane has.since been forced to reassess his campaign strategy. The Crane strategy now is to let . George Bush puncture holes in Reagan's myths of invincibility, and once Reagan is knocked out of the race, to offer himself as heir apparent to Reagan's wing of the party. EXPLAINING THE strategy of tur- ning his scant 6.7 per cent showing in Iowa's precinct caucuses into the Republican party nomination, Crane sounds self-confident. One of the assumptions when his campaign first began, Crane said, "was that Ronald Reagan would prove not to be ten feet tall. As he was proven vulnerable and his vulnerability showed, we would be in the best position." Indeed, should Reagan's latest presidential drive falter early - which is at best a premature prediction - Crane could have the right end of the political spectrum all to himself, being the only other die-hard conservative among the six remaining Republican candidates. Crane, in fact, often makes Reagan look progressive by com- parison. TTHE PRODUCT of a south side Chicago Depression family, Crane inherited his conservatism from his father, who made family dinners a forum for indoctrinating the five Crane children in his conservative ways. Crane sees Reagan, his conservative political mentor, as drifting to the left and has offered himself to his party's true believers as Reagan's rightful heir. But his candidacy has so far seemed only to divide the right wing, leading some party stalwarts to suggest he withdraw. At the Iowa precinct caucuses, Reagan could have defeated winner George Bush if he had the Crane sup- port. And at a national conservative conference earlier this month, two con- servative House Republicans said that, failing" their wing of the GOP could no longer support both Reagan and Crane. Crane, however, doesn't see it that way. He said, "We won't be chased off, even if we lose New Hampshire" which he will probably do if the polls and public opinion are any indication Crane ... still confident A woman attacked near Michigan Union THE LEADING NEWSMAGAZINE AT THE LOWEST PRICE. BY WILLIAM THOMPSON An unidentified person thwarted the attempted abduction of an 18-year-od woman outside the Michigan Union early Tuesday morning, police said yesterday. The woman was walking home near the Regents Plaza at 1:46 a.m. when two men in a car asked for directions, according to Ann Arbor police spokesman Harold Tinsey. When the woman approached the car, one of the men got out and demanded money. __ THE WOMAN refused, and theW tacker grabbed her and tried to force her into the car, Tinsey said. "She began fighting and screamingh" Tinsey said. "By the time he had her halfway in the car, the woman and her attacker noticed that someone was coming to her aid.' The man who broke off the attempt had heard the screming, said Tinsey, "but nobody has identified who that .person was." WHEN THE assailant saw the ap- proaching person, he returned to his car and drove away on Union Drive, according to Leo Heatley of the Univer- sity Department of Safety. Two cab drivers who had parked in front oJ the Union were also approaching the at- tacker when he fled, Heatley said. According to Tinsey, the assailant, who is still being sought, was described as about 30 years old, heavy-set and muscular, end well dressed groomed. The other man remained the car, said Tinsey, and "didn't do much of anything." ~{, ', Because you attend college you are eligible to receive TIME, the world's lead- ing newsweekly at the lowest indi- vidual subscription -' r rate, just 35C an issue. That's BIG SAVINGS off the regular subscription ~ rate of 59C an issue and even BIGGER A ' 'SAVINGS off the $1.25 ,- newsstand price. And it's so simple to subscribe-just look for the cards with TIME and its sister publications, Sports Illustrated, Fortune, Life, Money and People. 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