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Ford to meet with French leader
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
President Ford flies to Mar
tinique in the West Indies today
for talks with French President
Vajery Giscard d’Estaing, and
the hope that cooperation in the
cil area will pay dividends that
silence criticism of his trave
ling.
France is perhaps the United
States’ oldest ally, going back
to the Revolutionary War. The
summit meetings began in 1918,
when President Woodrow Wil
son went to Europe at the end
’ of World War I.
Ford is apparently sensitive
to criticism that he should park
Air Force 1 in the hangar and
concentrate on the home front,
particularly the economy.
“Some factors —especially fuel
and food production —contrib
ute formidably, as you well
know, to our current economic
problems,” he told business
executives Wednesday night.
“And when I fly to meet the
president of France this week
end, I will be by no means
neglecting our domestic dif
ficulties if I improve the
climate of cooperation among
the fuel-consuming industrial
nations by a common effort
ensure adequate food and fuel
supplies at acceptable prices.”
Secretary of State Henry A.
Kissinger and Secretary of the
Treasury William E. Simon
were among the top advisers
accompanying Ford to the
sunny Caribbean island where
energy, recession, and Euro
pean defense will be discussed.
On leaving a NATO meeting
in Brussels, Kissinger foreshad
owed the possibility of a
Klan
meets
today
ATLANTA (UPI) - Ku Klux
Klan leaders from across the
nation were gathering today at
nearby Stone Mountain to
formally nominate Dale Reusch
of Lodi, Ohio, as the Klan
candidate for president in 1976.
James Venable, imperial
wizard of the National Knights
of the KKK, said some 50 Klan
leaders were expected for the
weekend meetings.
Venable said Reusch, a 35-
year-old Ford Motor Co.,
employe, would be nominated
for president and Scott Nelson,
35, of Houston, Tex., would be
nominated for vice president.
Reusch is the KKK grand
dragon in Ohio. Nelson, a bill
collector for a utility company,
is the imperial wizard of the
Texas Fiery Knights, an
independent Klan organization.
Venable, a Decatur attorney,
said the Klan strongly opposes
the nomination of Nelson
Rockefeller as vice president.
He predicted President Ford
will resign and let Rockefeller
step up to the presidency before
the 1976 elections.
Venable said the candidates
for president and vice president
will be formally ratified Sunday
at a closed meeting of the 16-
member Imperial Klan Board.
He said the leaders would
also discuss other issues which
the Klan supports, including
abolishing the United Nations,
the Federal Reserve system
and the Environmental Protec
tion Agency and stopping the
“mixing and mingling” of
whites and blacks.
IN MEMORY
In memory of our beloved
son and Grandson (Wayne
Crane) who departed this life
six years ago Dec. 14th, 1968.
It seems like only yesterday
Wayne that you were with
us, a little freckled face boy
full of joy and life. It has
been six years ago today
since God called you to His
great Heaven. Days of
loneliness and heartache.
Part of our life went with you
that day, for nothing will
ever be the same here on
earth again.
Time changes everything,
but nothing will ever change
our love for you. Naturally
our hearts are sad at this
time, so today Wayne our
thoughts are all of you. Our
memory strays to the
yesterdays . We picture a
little heart that was happy
and gay. Remember that we
will always miss you, our
little boy of yesterday.
Gone but never to be
forgotten.
Sadly missed by the family
of little Wayne Crane.
compromise that may permit
the United States and France,
along with other major consum
er nations, to coordinate their
approach to energy shortages.
Kissinger said the United
States and its allies “agreed on
the sequence of moves” to
achieve consumer cooperation
and a dialogue with oil
producing countries.
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Giscard, who has close
relations with the Arab coun
tries, had proposed an interna
tional conference now between
oil producers, users and the
developing nations. The United
States wants consumer nations
to form a cooperative unit
before meeting with the expor
ters.
The Vienna agreement Fri-
day by the world’s major oil
exporting nations to increase
crude oil prices 38 cents a
barrel was also expected to
spur consumer nations to adopt
a cooperative strategy.
Both Ford and Giscard also
will swap notes on their recent
sessions with Soviet Communist
Party Secretary Leonid I.
Brezhnev.
The Ford-Giscard formal
talks begin Sunday. Betty Ford
will not be along because of a
recurrence of osteoarthrisis, a
back ailment. Saturday eve
ning, Ford will ride by boat to
Fort de France for a dinner in
his honor. He will return the
honor Sunday with a charcoal
broiled steaks and baked
potatoes.
Page 7
Macon newswoman is dead
MACON, Ga. (UPI) -
Veteran Macon newspaperwom
an Gertrude Smith Trawick
died Friday of cancer.
Mrs. Trawick, business editor
of the Macon News, had been
ill since early September and
was hospitalized at Middle
Georgia Hospital here.
Funeral services are sche
duled for 3 p.m. today at Christ
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, December 14,1974
Episcopal Church with burial to
be in Rose Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Trawick began her
newspaper career in 1940 and
held positions ranging from
reporter to society editor and
news editor on the News and
Telegraph.
She was also a former
feature editor for the Coastal
Georgian, a onetime weekly at
St. Simons Island.
After her marriage in 1951 to
Macon News managing editor
Jay Trawick she left the
newspaper business but later
returned to the afternoon
publication.