Newspaper Page Text
Griffin Daily News Wednesday, April 30,1975
Page 2
in Atlanta
Reagan wants Ford to stay for four more years
ATLANTA (UPI) - Ronald
Reagan, the former California
governor who conservative
Republicans would like to draft
as a 1976 presidential can
didate, said Tuesday he hopes
President Ford remains in
office another four years.
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Reagan brushed aside ques
tions about his possible can
didacy at a news conference
and denied he is “waging a
campaign.”
“I’m not going to put my feet
in concrete and predict the
future,” he said. “I hope that it
develops that President Ford
will remain in office for
another four years.”
He ruled out bolting to form a
third party because it would
“elect the opposition,” and said
the Republican primary elec
tion might “should be an open
primary...”
Reagan, in Atlanta to deliver
a speech at Georgia Tech, said
Vietnam will be a potent
political issue in 1976.
The South Vietnamese Army,
he said, was “the best in
Southeast Asia” and could have
prevented the fall of the
country if it had been adequate
ly armed by the United States.
He blamed Congress for
preventing more U.S. military
aid as allowed by the 1972 Paris
peace agreement.
“If they had been given
arms, then this wouldn’t have
happened,” he said. “South
Vietnam has not gotten a fair
shake from the United States in
recent months.”
Reagan predicted “a blood
bath for Vietnam unless Con
gress gets the refugees out,”
and said Americans are “the
world’s most generous people”
and could absorb the refugees.
When asked if there would be
recriminations over “who lost
Vietnam,” Reagan said “if
what I’ve said is a recrimina
tion, then so be it. As the
News summary I
By United Press International
Commies jubilant
SAIGON (UPI) — Hours after the South Vietnamese |
government surrendered and the completion of
evacuation of Americans a jubilant Communist army
entered Saigon in triumph. As they rode onto the grounds
of the presidential palace the laughing, cheering shouted
“Hello, comrade” to bystanders. The fall of Saigon ends
more than 36 years of war against American, French,
Japanese and Vietnamese forces in Indochina.
Evacuees pour into U. S.
Stewardesses who accompanied the first group of South
Vietnamese refugees to the United States said they appar
ently were healthy, clean, well dressed and well
educated. Some 350 of them have already left for their
final destinations across the country. Thousands more of
the homeless people are expected to arrive by the
weekend. Although some Americans expressed opposition
to the evacuees others urged the refugees be welcomed.
The total number of Vietnamese rescued is uncertain, but
I reports indicate up to 60,000 fled Saigon.
| Two marines killed
The last two Americans to lose their lives in Vietnam
were Marines. Cpt. Charles McMahon, 22, and
Lance Cpl. Darwin Judge, 19, were killed Monday by
rocket and artillery fire on Tan Son Nhut Airport just
outside Saigon. McMahon had been in Vietnam just two
weeks and Judge, a month. Their parents, who hadn’t
been worried when the young men were sent to Vietnam
because the war was practically ended, were in seclusion
today. Officials said it would be six to 12 days before the
bodies of the young Marines are brought home for
military funerals.
Steel up; GM down
Economic news was mixed Tuesday. U.S. Steel Corp.
and Bethlehem Steel Corp. said their first-quarter
earnings were sharply higher, but General Motors Corp.
said its earnings in the first three months of the year hit a
29-year low. Despite the bleak first quarter, GM
executives joined officers of the two steel companies in
expressing optimism about an end to the recession. Dun &
Bradstreet also reported business failures last week were
the greatest in more than eight years.
Death bill vetoed
BOSTON (UPI) — Less than 30 minutes after it had
been enacted, Gov. Michael S. Dukakis vetoed a new
capital punishment law in Massachusetts. A check with
Senate sources indicated the veto would be sustained with
no votes to spare in the Senate. Dukakis, explaining his
action, said he found it impossible to ‘ ‘reconcile the willful
| taking of a human life.”
*
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dominoes fall, there will be
recriminations. The American
people deserve to know the *
truth.”
“You absorb much more by #
reading the transcripts,” he
said.