INDEPENDENT NO, YES, MA YBE ... Anderson keeps trying a MILWAUKEE (AP)-The Question just won't go away. Everywhere he goes digging for votes, John Anderson answers no, he's not thinking about running as an independent candidate; no, he's not ready to give up his quest for the Republican presidential nomination. And, no, he won't absolutely rule out either one. However, if he doesn't get 25 per cent of the vote in Wisconsin this Tuesday, Anderson says he'll think seriously about giving it all up. BY THE END of a long day's campaigning for Wisconsin's primary, . Anderson gets a little testy when The Question is posed once more by reporters on his plane. "How many times do I have to say the same thing," he says. "I'm trying to win the Republican nomination in the state of Wisconsin. Lord! You've seen the kind of schedule I keep. I don't sit up nights thinking about independent candidacies and third parties. I go to sleep and worry about where I'm going to be the next day." The reporter apologizes for touching a sensitive nerve and Anderson waves Local bars ite in lquor vlations him off. "I'm just being my usual emphatic self," he says. "Other people are talking about independent candidacies and third parties. Not me. Yeah, the media. This is media hype at this point." DESPITE THE no, no, and who- knows sequence, there is no doubt that George Bush, and some lesser candidates, but, becadse of the open primary, his rivals no less are Edmund Brown Jr. and Edward Kennedy, who are on the Democratic ballot with President Carter. After Wisconsin, Anderson falls off the map as far as making news is 'Other people are talking about independent candi- dacies and third parties. Not me... this is media hype at this point." °-Republican presidential candidate John Anderson s a Republican does not deserve the nomination showing, he insists that Wis because he won't promise to support won't make or break him. the party's presidential nominee, no "Suppose Ronald Reagai matter who it is. another lapse of memory next we "I think the issues of today and the this time, instead of forgetting interests of the country rise above parity is, he can't remember th party," says Anderson, "and anybody capital is in Washington, like George Bush who wants to poke his Anderson says. "Lots of thing finger in your nose and say, 'You happen." support the nominee of the party' Bush's campaign staff d doesn't have the faintest glimmering of hesitate to tell reporters that Ar what's going on in the country and what has vanished as a threat. Ande the transcendental importance of the no more charitable about the issues of our time are." U.N. ambassador's chances. After 20 years as a Republican "I think Bush has had it. I real congressman from Illinois, wouldn't he he says. feel like a traitor if he declared as an independent? "A TRAITOR?" Anderson says, with some outrage. "Why should I feel like a traitor. No. Of course not. I never even have received a membership card. I never remember signing any affidavit." Anderson won't predict the outcome of the Wisconsin primary, but says that l any thing less than 25 per cent of the vote would cause him to reassess his .0wh candidacy. But barring such a poor Tuesday is important to Anderson's ambitions and that Wisconsin is ready- made for his sort of lone-wolf campaign. A voter can register at the polls simply by producing a driver's license or a utility bill to show residence. No party declaration is necessary. Because of that, Anderson has concentrated rheavily on college audiences., On the Republican side, Anderson is competing against Ronald Reagan,; concerned. His next primary, due to amonumental failure to get enough signatures to be on the Pennsylvania ballot for the April 22 primary, is on May 6. He intends to spend the time in California in a drive to get that state's Democratic voters to re-register as Republicans. GEORGE BUSH, the former ambassador to the U.N. has been getting applause from Republican audiences by insisting that Anderson .5-. .. (Continued from Page 1) manager who was on duty the night Thano's restaurant was cited, said that two young men were sent in wearing big cowboy hats who ordered a couple of drinks when the restaurant was full to capacity "THE OFFICER came in, checked the restaurant out, went back outside and sent in the two guys," he explained. "Our waitresses were in a rush, the lights are very low to begin with, and the hats prevented them from seeing their faces clearly. They should have checked for the I.D.'s, but I still think it was a cheap move on the police's part." An unidentified manager of Manikas Steak House, which was also cited Friday, said that two young men came in, one of whom was wearing a cowboy hat, and ordered a couple of drinks. "Unfortuantely my daughter neglec- ted to ask them for identification," the manager said. Police said the Veterans of Foreign Wars Club at 314 E. Liberty was cited for selling liquor to a non-member. HE NOTED THAT City Police Chief Walter Krasny, Sheriff Thomas Minick, Ypsilanti City Police Chief Jimmy Moore, and Pittsfield Township Police Chief William Holifield supplied Pursel opposes draft registration (Continued from Page 1 on the House floor next week. "They (proponents of increased defense funding) have a lot of votes," Pursell said. "The Southern Democratic coalition and the Republican party want a major increase in the defense budget." Defense spending currently accounts for about 23 per cent of a federal budget of some $600 billion. A reduction of about $16- billion is expected from various areas of the budget. Bill Kerans, Pursell's news secretary, said federal revenue sharing to both states and cities may be completely eliminated. The state of Michigan currently receives $95 million from the federal revenue sharing fund. Such a cut would probably have "a domino effect" on the University, according to Pursell, because much of the University budget is derived from a state appropriation. Your apartment: cramped? PRESENTED BY THE SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES NEW GROUND: A COMING OF AGE FOR NATURAL RESOURCES FILM SERIES: MARCH 31-APRIL 4 Each evening at 7 P.M. AUDITORIUM B ANGELL HALL-FREE ADMISSION MARCH 31: Mzima: Portrait of a Spring (MCGrow Hill, 1973) and The Other Way (E. F. 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