The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, July 16, 1980-Page 7 Reagan softening adamant anti-union position DETROIT (AP)-In a bold overture to lure t;raditionally Democratic union members to the Republican Party this fall, Ronald Reagan is retreating from anti-union stances'that have riled labor leaders. Trying to bridge the historic chasm between the GOP and most of the \ nation's 24 million union members, the Republican presidential nominee-in- waiting has assembled a group of ad- visers-including a Teamsters of- AP Photo ficial-to promote his candidacy in union halls and labor leaders' suites. THE INFORMAL GROUP of labor ep i eidentify- advisers-has urged Reagan, apparently its behind Stein with success, to adopt less hostile positions on matters of top concern to labor. The group's intention is to under- cut an AFL-CIO campaign that is por- traying Reagan as a stridently anti-labor candidate who is an enemy of working people. The advisers note for example, that Reagan himself was a union president at one time, heading the Screen Actors Guild for a time during his move- making days in Hollywood. - Although Reagan has yet to win any endorsements from national union leaders, at least one of these advisers s released the same said there is a good possibility that he well and returned to will gain the support of the nation's e 17. largest union, the two million member Teamsters. ter supported Ford, Some of Reagan's labor advisers, the nomination over who wished to speak anonymously, said Hater became one of that since their recent participation in in supporters in the the campaign, Reagan is no longer calling for repeal of the federal minimum wage law. Gacy victims Cook County Medical Examiner Dr. Robert Stein asks members of the press in Chicago yesterday for h ing the remaining bodies found in the crawispace of John Wayne Gacy's home. The picture composi is of the faces reconstructed from unidentified skulls found in the crawlspace. Goldwater promotes Reagan at conventio* DETROIT (AP) - Barry Goldwater left a hospital bed yesterday to address the Republican National Convention, helping Ronald Reagan celebrate a conservative takeover of the Republican Party much like his own 16 years ago. The appearance of the party's "Mr. Conservative" was expected to set off cheering as loud or louder than that ac- corded former President Gerald Ford when he addressed the convention Monday night. THE ARIZONA senator is recovering from a problem similar to the one that had his right foot in a cast when he won the party's 1964 presidential nomination in San Francisco. It was at that convention that Reagan, then newly embarked on a career of speaking out on conservative causes, took his first national bow on the political stage, exhorting the delegates to embrace both Goldwater and his philosophy. There were three memorable speeches at that convention. THE BEST remembered was Gold- water's controversial declaration that "extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice" and "moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue." Another was by moderate Nelson Rockefeller in support of an amen- dment that would have called on the party to repudiate the efforts of ex- tremist groups. Rockefeller, then governor of New York, was booed and interrupted frequently by Goldwater supporters. But also remembered as electrifying was the address by Reagan. It so im- pressed party leaders that not long af- ter the convention, he went on a speaking tour for Goldwater. He was embarking on a course that will climax today when his party nominates him for president. Goldwater, 71, has suffered for years from calcium deposits. He was on crut- operations. He wa ches when he went to San Francisco in day, but didn't heal 1964, although he was able to stand 'the hospital on Jun( alone to accept the nomination. He has had replacement of both hips. In 1976, Goldwat On June 11, at the hospital at Andrews who narrowly won Air Force Base, the senator underwent Reagan. But Goldm surgery to remove calcium from his the earliest Reaga right hip, the site of previous 1980 campaign. .ME U S U,,Mon Tue, hur, Fi 7:0 Wattsuhwedey00-4:00 s~~ NS/RAFCER ® Knowng yute arW- (UPPER LEVEL) Mon, Tue,. Thur, Fr7:40-10:00 Sat, SunWed1:404:40-7:40-10:00 OPEN;P.M. SHOW AT DUSK! SISSY SPACEK TOMMY LEE JONES An American Dream Becomes a Love Story. - Ces/fhrko DAGHE