Page 2-Wednesday, August 2, 1978-The Michigan Daily Crane's hat in ring for 1980 WASHINGTON (AP) - The first hat in the 1980 Republican presidential ring belongs to Rep. Philip Crane, a youthful conservative who hopes to capture the support of the GOP right wing before Ronald Reagan decides whether to make one more try for the presidency. Crane intends to announce his can- didacy at a news conference today. "OBVIOUSLY, AS a House member without the name identification of a Gerald Ford or a Ronald Reagan, the earlier you get in and start working, the better," Crane told reporters at" a recent breakfast. His announcement will be no sur- prise, least of all to Reagan, who got advance word from the Illinois congressman at a closed-door meeting last week. "A very articulate man, a fine Republican," Reagan said after the meeting. And Crane is always careful to pay due deference to the former California governor, who remains the overwhelming favorite of Republican conservatives. IDEOLOGICALLY, Crane and Reagan are close; Crane served as San Bernardino County, California, the largest county in the United States, occupies 20,119 square miles. The smallest county is New York County, which includes New York City, and covers 23 square miles. Reagan's Illinois campaign manager in 1976. But at 47, Crane is 20 years younger than Reagan, and that may give the congressman's candidacy a boost. Crane, however, won't say he thinks Reagan is too old to make another run for the presidential nomination. "I don't think that, really, age alone is the most important consideration by any means." AN EARLY supporter of the presidential candidacy of Barry Gold- water in 1964, Crane was elected to Congress in 1969 to succeed Donald Rumsfeld, a Republican who gave up the seat to join the Nixon ad- ministration. As chairman of the American Con- servative Union (ACU), Crane began building a constituency on the GOP right that extends far beyond the bor- ders of his suburban Chicago district. He attracted national attention as a leader of the unsuccessful campaign to defeat the Panama Canal treaties, an effort on which the ACU spent $1.4 million, principally for radio and television ads that featured Crane arguing that, "There is no Panama Canal - there is an American canal in Panama." THE ACU NOW is mounting cam- paigns on other issues, including op- position to an arms limitation treaty with the Soviet Union and support for moves to cut taxes and limit federal spending. Crane acknowledges that his impen- ding candidacy has drawn some criticism from conservatives who don't want him to challenge Reagan. "I think we can both carry the con- servative banner," says Crane, "along with Jack Kemp and Orrin Hatch," two other conservative Republican mem- bers of Congress with presidential am- bitions. With an eye toward the need to broaden his base, Crane refuses to be drawn into this year's Republican primary contests, even those that pit conservative against liberal. Crane Cambodian border war escalating, WASHINGTON (AP) - The Viet- namese air force has been bombing and strafing Cambodian troops on an un- precedented scale in their border war, according to a U.S. iptelligence report. The Vietnamese pilots are believed to be flying American-built warplanes captured at the end of the Southeast Asia war. THE INTELLIGENCE report, cir- culated among U.S. Military and S --_ .'S THE 1978 MICHIGANiSIAN HAS FINALLY ARRIVED' Yearbooks can be picked up at STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG. Monday-Friday, 9 am-5 pm report says civilian officials, said the Vietnamese are using much heavier air power to support ground attacks against what was described as fierce resistance in- side Cambodia. There was no indication of any Cam- bodian air opposition. At best, the Cambodians are believed to have only a handful of old and small propeller- driven T-28s, which had been converted from training planes to fighter- bombers before the U.S.-backed Cam- bodian government was toppled by communist forces in 1975. Analysts wrote that the border fighting between Cambodia and Viet- nam, one-time communist allies, is no longer a territorial dispute but has become a matter of far-reaching national significance for both. BORDER FIGHTING has flared sporadically 'since shortly after the Southeast Asia war ended with the fall of Saigon in 1975, but is reported to have become especially serious since late last year. The analysts said the Vietnamese leadership is sending troops southward from the Hanoi area, along with significant amounts of equipment and that the Vietnamese Assembly in Hanoi recently approved a big increase in the country's military budget. The analysts do not suggest that the Vietnamese are planning a takeover of Cambodia, but say Hanoi's current ob- jective appears to be to punish Cam- bodian forces so badly that they will not be able to penetrate into Vietnam in the future. IN THEIR report, U.S. intelligence analysts wrote that Vietnamese war- planes have mounted intense and sustained air attacks since mid-June, particularly in a Cambodian area op- posite Vietnam's Tay Ninh Province. Intelligence sources did not identify the aircraft involved, but Pentagon of- ficials said it is believed Vietnamese pilots may be using some of the 113 U.S.-bujilt A-37 light bombers and 73 F- 5 fighter-bombers captured when South Vietnam collapsed over three years ago. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Vo.LLXXXVIII, No. 56-S wednendayAugost2, 1970 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. 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