The Christian Science Monitor
RAN 2/16 
By Linda Feldmann
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
IT'S a snowy, unforgiving night in the state capital, but the stands are 
filling up at the arena. The crowd anticipates a tough contest ahead, fueled by 
hard shots and high ambitions ­ and not a candidate or political slogan is in 
sight. 
This is youth hockey, the "national" pastime of New Hampshire, a regional 
specialty that isn't eclipsed in importance even by next Tuesday's first-in-the-
nation primary. But in interviews with adults in the bleachers and other voters 
in the area, it's clear Granite Staters take their politics seriously, almost 
as seriously as their kids' slapshots.
It's also clear, in this unscientific survey, that many Republicans remain 
undecided and aren't enthusiastic about their choices. Some seem, almost by 
default, to be settling on Kansas Sen. Bob Dole, the front-runner who barely 
won a plurality in Monday's Iowa caucuses.
"Well, I liked [Sen. Phil] Gramm, because of his economics," sighs Tom O'Hara, 
a bank officer with a teenage son playing defense. "I liked Gramm-Rudman," he 
adds, referring to the balanced-budget legislation the senator had sponsored 
with former New Hampshire Sen. Warren Rudman. 
But Senator Gramm has dropped out of the race, and his supporters are left to 
ponder the alternatives. "[Steve] Forbes is too monodimensional," says Mr. 
O'Hara. "The flat tax is a scam; it's regressive and it's not going to help 
balance the budget." Pat Buchanan, he continues, is "just too out there." So he 
thinks he'll go for Dole. 
Cathy Miller, a customer-service representative at the Concord Monitor 
newspaper, says she's narrowed it down to two candidates, either Lamar 
Alexander or possibly Steve Forbes (though she's been turned off by the 
negative ads). Her concerns: the size of government and taxes. "I want the 
government out of my family," she says. "There are too many laws at the federal 
level."
Wayne Komm, an auto-glass installer, strikes a familiar theme on the economy. 
He and his wife are doing better than ever, he says, but he doesn't think the 
New Hampshire economy is as strong as people say.
Many people here are afraid they'll lose their jobs and won't get something 
else that pays as well. This is the kind of concern that Mr. Buchanan is 
tapping into, with his anti-free-trade, keep-the-jobs-in America stand. But Mr. 
Komm says he's not a Buchanan guy. He liked Gramm, but now he's undecided. 

Granite State rite
New Hampshire has been holding the first presidential-preference primary in the 
nation since 1952, a quadrennial rite that has become an object of political 
mythology and, for the locals, an entitlement. With the exception of President 
Clinton, all presidents since the state's primary began have gotten their start 
by winning in New Hampshire. 
Even with the rise of the Iowa caucuses and preceding straw polls as important 
tests that can begin narrowing a crowded field of candidates, New Hampshire 
remains a crucial geographic detour on the way to the Oval Office. 
One myth about New Hampshire is that every voter meets the candidates two or 
three times, asks a question or two, then makes a decision. "The truth is that 
about 20 percent meet a candidate," says Dayton Duncan, author of "Grassroots," 
a book on the New Hampshire primaries. "Compared to the image, that seems not 
too high."
But, he adds, for the rest of the country, the rate is about 1 percent. And in 
New Hampshire, a small state, anyone motivated to press potential presidential 
flesh doesn't have to go too far to find an event ­ especially this week. 
New Hampshire also breeds an image of Norman Rockwell, homespun values, of 
flinty New Englanders sitting by the wood stove. The candidates willingly 
perpetuate this, staging events in diners and country stores.
But it's a state as much buffeted by national challenges as any other state, at 
least to some degree. Police have to fight drugs. Immigrants are moving into 
Manchester, New Hampshire's biggest city, causing some locals to grumble. 
Southern New Hampshire has practically become a suburb of Boston. 
"The truth is, they're typical voters here," says Mr. Duncan. "There's nothing 
in our air or water makes us more earnest or more civic-minded." And that, it 
seems, is why New Hampshire almost always picks the winner. 

Uncertainty lingers 
At Mémé's Restaurant in Allenstown, owner John Anderson cheerfully takes a 
moment to talk primaries. "I thought about Buchanan ­ he's the only one who 
wants to keep good-paying jobs in the country," he says. But, in an interesting 
leap of political logic, adds that he "thinks he'll stick with Clinton. He 
tried to get health-care reform through." 
Back at the ice arena, the second game is about to start ­ featuring Concord 
High's female hockey phenom, Tara Mounsey, captain of the otherwise all-male 
team ­ and the primaries have definitely taken a back seat. But between 
slapshots, Mike Kapusta bemoans the role of charisma in politics. He liked 
Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar, whose lackluster campaign leaves Mr. Kapusta 
wondering whom to support. 
After eight years in the state, Kapusta says he doesn't go to political rallies 
anymore. But he still gets a kick out of politics. His best memory? Running 
into candidate Bill Clinton in the men's room at the Concord Monitor.
(Copyright 1996, The Christian Science Publishing Society. Used by permission.)