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Presidential Shooting 03/30/1981 (1)
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135840947
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Presidential Shooting 03/30/1981 (1)
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Records of the Office of the First Lady (Reagan Administration)
Sheila Tate's Office Files
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1982-12-31
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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Tate, Sheila: Files Folder Title: Presidential Shooting 3/30/1981 [2 of 2] Box: CFOA 6222 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing O'Toole & Strauss triumph in Masada APRIL 13, 1981=95c The zany new guru of diet. & fitness Polanski's Tess, weekly Nastassia Kinski THE SHOTS THAT STUNNED THE WORLD The courageous President The families' anguish The unlikely suspect 15 10227 0 24414 The President's wave changed to a grimace as the bullet struck (above). Moments later Tim So many of life's horrors come sud- in his left side might have been caused McCarthy (right, foreground), Officer Thomas De- lahanty and James Brady lay wounded. denly on dull, dark days. For Ronald by the Secret Service tackle. The Reagan, Monday lunch was just anoth- news came especially cruelly to the er stop on the rubber chicken circuit, First Lady. At the White House, Nancy followed by the chance to pitch his eco- Reagan had just returned from a lun- couldn't talk," recalls her assistant nomic program to labor leaders-and cheon when her Secret Service press secretary, Barbara Cook. the predictable lukewarm reception. In aide told her that Presidential Press During the next two hours surgeons the drizzle outside the Washington Secretary James Brady had been shot. removed a .22-caliber bullet that was Hilton, the President waved and She rushed to George Washington Uni- lodged in the President's left lung grinned and moved toward his limou- versity Hospital, where an old friend, and became the shot heard round the sine. Then the all too familiar sound White House Deputy Chief of Staff Mi- world. With Soviet troops poised on the -"like flashcubes going off," accord- chael Deaver, tried to reassure her that Polish border, the prospect of the West ing to an eyewitness-and the terrible the President was all right-but inad- deprived of its leader loomed cata- frenzy erupted. Agents slammed the vertently raised her fears. "If he is strophically. "I am in control here in the President into his car and sped him okay, why can't I see him?" she asked. White House, pending return of the away before he could see the devas- When Deaver investigated he learned Vice-President," Secretary of State tation. The bodies of three men lay a truth he wanted not to hear: The Haig announced as George Bush splayed across the sidewalk, and a doctors, upon removing Reagan's rushed back to Washington from Tex- swarm of lawmen had pinioned John clothes, had discovered a bullet wound as. Whether Haig's move was presump- W. Hinckley Jr.-yet another pudgy, below the left armpit. Nancy rushed in tion or a necessary attempt at stability shadowy figure who was entering the to see her husband. "Honey, I forgot to will be debated for weeks. Meanwhile American limelight with a pistol in duck," he quipped, commandeering the most awesome symbol of presiden- his hand. Jack Dempsey's excuse after Gene tial power-the black briefcase with Not even Reagan himself realized at Tunney's knockout punch. Despite his the codes to be used to order a nu- first that he had become the fifth Amer- brave assurances, Nancy was visibly clear strike-remained at the hospital ican President struck by gunfire-he shaken. "She didn't break down, but with Reagan throughout his ordeal. The arrived at the hospital thinking the pain there were tears in her eyes and she just possibility of an international crisis 30 "I think Nancy will hold up very well," predicted a longtime friend, actor Charlton Heston. "She's a gallant lady." Emerging from a buried life into a nightmare, Hinckley may have been driven by a murderous movie fantasy When a reporter phoned JoAnn Hinck- In and out of Tech for the next seven ley to tell her that her son had been ar- years, he switched from the school of rested for shooting the President of business to the college of arts and sci- the United States, she reacted with ences before dropping out for good last stunned disbelief. "This is some kind July. The impression he left was hardly of joke, isn't it?" she asked. Inevitably, indelible, but Otto Nelson, an associate her shock was shared by nearly every- professor of history, remembers that one who had known John Warnock Hinckley wrote two well-thought-out Hinckley Jr. as he passed through a papers on Nazism-a review of nondescript boyhood. To them, Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf and a report this blond, blue-eyed son of a wealthy on a book on the death camp at Ausch- oil executive was quiet, polite and de- witz. At about the same time Hinckley scribable in all the standard clichés: He took a one-bedroom apartment off- was "a nice guy" and "a normal kid" campus and lived there alone, seldom from an "all-American family." But speaking to neighbors. Mark Swoffard, those who knew him recently remem- the building's superintendent, bered another Hinckley-a gun- remembers being called in once to ROBIN collecting recluse living in a filthy clean out a drain. "It just blew me apartment, flirting with fascism and away," he says. "There was garbage The FBI believes Hinckley became ob- fantasizing about a teenage actress he piled up all over the cabinets and even sessed with Jodie Foster, for whom would never have the courage to speak in the bookshelves. Other than that, it Robert De Niro turned killer in Taxi Driver. to. At yet another level was a hidden looked like no one lived there. A anger, revealed only to those he be- guitar and a television set were the only lieved shared his fanaticism. Recalls things that he had." president-elect Michael Allen, who ex- No doubt sensing in himself the root- pelled him from the National Socialist lessness that Swoffard briefly ob- Party: "He wanted to shoot people and served, Hinckley drifted from Lubbock blow things up." last summer. He tended bar for a while As is so often the case, there were no in Denver, near his parents' new home landmarks in Hinckley's background to in Evergreen, Colo., then unsuccessful- suggest the tortured course he would ly sought a job selling photography in follow. Now 25 years old, he grew up in Hollywood. Last October 9 he was ar- Dallas' affluent Highland Park area. rested at an airport in Nashville and His father-an engineer, president of charged with the possession of three an oil exploration firm and an active concealed handguns. Though Presi- member of the local Episcopal church dent Carter was also in Nashville at the -set high standards for his three time, speaking at the Grand Ole Opry, children, and Hinckley's brother and no connection was ever suspected. sister seemed to live up to them. His Four days later Hinckley turned up in sister, Mrs. Diane Sims, was a high Dallas, where he bought the pistol al- school cheerleader and homecoming legedly used to shoot Carter's queen. Scott Hinckley entered the fam- successor. ily business and became a vice- Finally, of course, no one could have president; ironically, he was scheduled predicted what Hinckley was planning to be a dinner guest the night after the -no one but Hinckley himself. And shooting at the home of Vice-President that, in a chillingly prophetic note to ac- George Bush's son Neil. But in John Jr. tress Jodie Foster, is precisely what he the flame seemed to be lacking. He did. Apparently possessed by some They have a quiet dabbled in school activities-the Span- deeply felt secret vision of the actress, home life and stay ish club, the rodeo club and Students in he carried her picture in his wallet, to themselves," said a neighbor of Government-but made little impres- wrote letters to her and somehow de- Hinckley's parents, sion on teachers or classmates. "He veloped the idea that President who live in this was quiet and low-key," says class- Reagan had treated her shabbily. $180,000 home in mate Beverly McBeath. "Something Searching Hinckley's Washington hotel Evergreen, Colo. A self-made million- must have happened to him after high room after his arrest, federal agents aire with a record of school." came upon a message allegedly in- involvement in is- Perhaps something did, but if there tended for Foster. "I will prove my love sues like hunger was a turning point it passed unper- for you through an historic act," it read. and the environ- ceived. After graduating from high "I will probably die for what I am about ment, John Hinck- ley Sr. supported school in 1973, Hinckley enrolled to do. It is now 12:30, an hour before I Ronald Reagan for at Texas Tech University in Lubbock. go to the Hilton Hotel." President. CARL CONTINUED 34 "We had to look him up in our annuals," No more memorable at Texas Tech (in Hinckley's descent into his personal says a high school classmate of Hinckley. 1974, above), "He was an anonymous face depths seemed reflected on his recent "Nobody remembers him real well." in the crowd," says a history teacher. Colorado driver's license. An eerie foreshadowing of last week's assault underscores the President's vulnerability The tableau is hellishly familiar to America. As a public figure works his way through a crowd, a revolver sud- denly appears from a sea of outstretched arms. Sometimes the re- sult is tragedy, sometimes just a nerve- shattering scare. As this dramatic 1975 photograph illustrates, Ronald Reagan knows the scene all too well. In Miami in November, just a few hours after Reagan launched his unsuccess- ful '76 presidential campaign, a 20- year-old college dropout named Mi- chael Lance Carvin pulled a gun from a paper bag and took aim at the can- didate. For just a split second, before he was wrestled to the ground, Carvin had a clear shot at Reagan. Although Se- cret Service agents later discovered that the "gun" was only a toy, Carvin was convicted of intimidating Reagan and interfering with federal officers; he is now in prison in North Carolina. This was the second attack on Reagan-the first came when two men attempted to firebomb the California governor's home in 1968-and he reacted with smiling and predictable nonchalance. "I'm fine," he told supporters 30 min- utes after the incident. "It doesn't DENNIS BRACK/BLACK STAR change my view about campaigning." But every public figure in America must live with the possibility of irratio- on Gerald Ford's life-observed of whenever you go into a public place." nal violence, or even death, not least their constant anticipation of disaster Last week's tragedy transformed the First Family. "I think you always that "in some ways, it's more difficult that permanent anxiety into an acute have it in the back of your mind," Nancy for the relatives of potential assassina- agony for the President's family. Rea- Reagan said that day in 1975. "I hope it tion targets." Adds former Reagan gan's younger daughter, Patti Davis, doesn't happen again." In her memoirs, aide Nancy Reynolds, a close friend was particularly "devastated" by the Sheila Rabb Weidenfeld-the press of the current First Lady: "The news, according to family friend aide to Betty Ford during both attempts concern and tension are always there Mary Jane Wick, who reports: "The fear 36 It was only a toy pistol, but Michael Carvin got 10 years after pulling it on Reagan during a 1975 of assassination was one of the rea- asked about the threats on our lives," Miami rally. Secret Service men suspected sons Patti didn't want her father to run that Carvin had earlier telephoned their Denver she wrote in her autobiography, Nan- office threatening to harm Reagan or then- in the first place." The normally unflap- cy. "I don't know how many there have President Ford. pable Nancy Reagan was also deeply been and I don't want to know." Last shaken. For years she had been able week, an assailant's bullet had finally to put the possibility of violence out converted all those threats from an ab- of her mind with a finely developed straction to a terrifying and constant strategy of avoidance. "I've never reality. CONTINUED 37 A stricken President showed the pluck and grit his friends knew he had Political critics of the President have suggested that much of his seeming accomplishment is mostly acting. Last week no one said that about his courage. Like the cowboy hero he once portrayed, Ronald Reagan strode into DARLENE the hospital emergency room under his "There's no depression within him," Jim- own power, joking off the bullet that my Stewart says of his pal. "He has always had jeopardized his life. Throughout his stayed on top of everything." ordeal, he varied rakishness with sangfroid: He told nurses who flocked to his side, "If I'd gotten this kind of portant part of his physical health." attention in Hollywood, I would have That stoic side, so rarely displayed in stayed"-and quoted Churchill's public, is a legend among his friends. dictum that life's greatest exhilaration "The President has always been a per- is to be shot at without result. "I know son of great strength and tremendous my father," Michael Reagan said with spirit," says his producer friend A.C. forced confidence while the surgery Lyles. "Both Nancy and Ron are. I know was in progress. "He'll be running this their faith and strength will carry them country again tomorrow." Incredibly, through." Old pal Bob Hope remem- he was: The next morning the President bers with a shudder the day last signed the dairy price support bill from November when Reagan pointed out his bed in intensive care. the bulletproof flak jacket beneath his Reagan's stamina surprised even raincoat. "He just said the Secret Ser- doctors at George Washington vice asked him to wear it,". Hope University Hospital. "He's an amazing recalls. The President may also have a physical specimen," said clinical streak of fatalism in him, suggests his affairs dean Dennis O'Leary, who longtime barber, Harry Drucker. "He called Reagan "physiologically very once said, 'If they're gonna get me, youthful." A private man with no taste they're gonna get me,' Drucker re- for showy exercises like jogging or calls. "He doesn't entertain any fears." pumping iron, Reagan has for years To some extent, Reagan's grace un- quietly kept fit and trim. He takes pride der pressure may even have its roots in the fact that he has kept around 180 in Hollywood. Edward Langley, a writer pounds-his college football weight who worked with Reagan at General -by eating and drinking abstemiously Electric, reports that the President was and by doing 10 minutes of sit-ups. a great admirer of Errol Flynn's pa- He also uses an exercise wheel daily. nache. "He called himself the B- Until the election he and Nancy reg- movies' Errol Flynn," Langley says. "He ularly went to a Los Angeles exercise even walks like Flynn. He's a swash- studio run by Mike Abrums, who was buckler, and walking into that hospital scheduled to install gym equipment in is just like him." But whatever the oth- the White House just this week. Lee er roots of his resiliency, Ronald Clearwater, 60-Reagan's ranch fore- Reagan clearly has an incurable case man, fellow woodcutter and best crony of optimism. "Ronald Reagan has no -says the doctors should not have down days," marveled James Stewart been shocked. "I could have told them the morning after the shooting. "He al- he was just a kid compared to me," he ways keeps going in the face of stress, says. Adds former aide Gordon hitting at those things he believes in. Luce: "He leads a very disciplined life He proved that throughout his cam- and just takes good care of him- paign. And he did it again yesterday. self-and his state of mind is an im- He is an extraordinary man." 38 Reagan keeps In shape by working out and working outside. One July weekend away from the stump, he pruned trees at home. ANO1 The A.C. Lyleses, members of the Reagan inner circle, never worried. "He's in such marvelous health," said Lyles. ANO1 Foster Brooks "He's been my friend for 40 years," Bob Hope says of Reagan. "The whole coun- try is with him." 39 N169 RW REAGAN-CHRONDLOGY WASHINGTON (AP) -- HERE IS A CHRONOLOGY OF THE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT ON PRESIDENT REAGAN ON MONDAY. THE TIMES ARE EST AND APPROXIMATIONS ONLY: 2 P.M. -- PRESIDENT REAGAN BEGINS ADDRESS TO THE BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION TRADES DEPARTMENT OF THE AFL-CIO AT THE WASHINGTON HILTON HOTEL. 2:25 P.M. -- REAGAN CONCLUDES SPEECH AND LEAVES HOTEL THROUGH A VIP ENTRANCE. 2:26 P.M. -- REAGAN, PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY, A SECRET SERVICE AGENT AND A WASHINGTON POLICEMAN ARE SHOT OUTSIDE THE HOTEL IN A BARRAGE OF GUNFIRE FROM R .22-CALIBER PISTOL. A MAN IS WRESTLED TO THE GROUND AND TAKEN INTO CUSTODY ON CHARGES OF ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF THE PRESIDENT. 2:35 P.M. -- REAGAN ARRIVES AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL. 3:15 P.M. -- REAGAN IS PREPARED FOR SURGERY. 4 P.M. -- REAGAN UNDERGOES SURGERY FOR REMOVAL OF A .22-CALIBER BULLET FROM HIS LEFT LUNG. 6:30 P.M. -- REAGAN IS REMOVED FROM SURGERY AND PLACED IN POST-OPERATIVE CARE. 7:30 R.M. -- DR. DENNIS D. D'LEARY, DEAN OF CLINICAL AFFAIRS FOR THE HOSPITAL, TELLS REPORTERS THAT THE PRESIDENT IS IN ''STABLE AND GOOD CONDITION. " AP-WX-03-30-81 2018EST UP066 R V (REAGAN SHOTS) WASHINGTON (UPI) -- SHOTS WERE FIRED AT PRESIDENT REAGAN TODAY AS HE LEFT A WASHINGTON HOTEL. THE PRESIDENT DID NOT APPEAR TO BE HURT. ..... UPI 03-30-81 02:33 PES UP068 R V 1ST ADD REAGAN-SHOTS, WASHINGTON (UP-066) THE PRESIDENT WAS LEAVING THE WASHINGTON HILTON HOTEL AFTER A SPEECH TO THE NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION TRADES DEPARTMENT, RFL-CIO. .... THE PRESIDENT TURNED AND LOOKED IN THE AREA OF WHERE THE SHOTS WERE FIRED AS SECRET SERVEICEEMEN SHOUTED FOR HIM TO GET INTO THE LIMOUSINE. THE ASSAILANT WAS TACKLED BY AGENTS AND POLICE OFFICERS AND PUSHED TO THE GROUND AS THE MOTORCADE DROVE AWAY. IT WAS UNCLEAR WHETHER THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN HIT BY ANY OFF THE SHOTS, BUT HE DID NOT APPEAR TO REACT IN ANY WAY THAT WOULD INDICATE HE WAS IN SOME KIND OF PAIN. THE INCIDENT TOOK PLACE APPROXIMATELY 2:30 P.M. EDT. THERE WERE APPROXIMATELY 4 SHOTS. UPI 03-30-81 02:39 PES ururu 8 W 2ND ADD REAGAN-SHOTS'''' REAGAN HAD JUST WALKED OUT OF THE BUILDING, ON THE FLORIDA AVENUE SIDE OF THE HOTEL. THE ASSAILANT WAS WAITING TO REAGAN'S LEFT AND REAR AND REAGAN TURNED WHEN THE SHOTS WERE FIRED, PLACING THE ASSAILANT TO THE RIGHT REAR. SEVERAL POLICE OFFICERS PINNED THE ASSAILANT TO THE GROUND, WHILE THE SECRET SERVICE AGENTS PUSHED REAGAN INTO THE LIMOUSINE. UPI 03-30-81 02:42 PES UPI 03-30-81 02:42 PES UP073 B W ADD REAGAN-SHOTS"'" THE FIRST LADY WAS NOT WITH THE PRESIDENT. HE WAS ACCOMPANNIED BY PRESS SECRETARY JIM BRADY, DEPUTY CHIEF OF STAFF MICHAEL DERVER AND OTHER ASSISTANTS. WHEN THE SHOTS WERE FIRED PEOPLE BEGAN TO PANIC, DUCKING, SOMETIMES FALLING TO GRUND OTHERS IN CROUCH. IT WAS RAINING AT THE TIME WITH SEVERAL HUNDRED PEOPLE STANDING ALONG THE SIDEWALK AT THE TIME. THEY WERE CHEERING AND WAVING WHEN THE PRESIDENT CAME OUT. HE TURNED TO WAVE AND THE SHOTS WERE FIRED. BRADY, A SECRET SERVICE AGENT AND A POLICEMEN HAVE BEEN REPORTED HIT. UPI 03-30-81 02:48 PES UP074 R V ADD REAGAN-SHOTS*** DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY LARRY SPEAKES, EXPLAINING THE INITIAL CONFUSION ABOUT REAGAN'S CONDITION, SAID, "THERE WAS SOME PUSHING AND SHOVING WHEN THEY WENT INTO THE CAR." THE PRESIDENT WENT TO THE HOSPITAL WHERE BRADY WAS TAKEN, SPERKES SAID. HE SAID DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF MICHALE DERVER ACCOMPANIED REAGAN TO THE HOSPITAL. UPI 03-30-81 02:49 PES UP076 U W ADD REAGAN-SHOTS THE WHITE HOUSE SAID REAGAN WAS NOT HIT, BUT WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY WAS SHOT AND WOUNDED. ..... SECRET SERVICE MEN SHOVED THE PRESIDENT INSIDE HIS WAITING LIMOUSINE AS SOON AS THE SHOTS WERE FIRED -- REPORTEDLY FOUR SHOTS, JUST TO HIS RIGHT -- BY AN UNKNOWN MALE. RBC REPORTED THAT IN ADDITION TO BRADY, A SECRET SERVICE AGENT WAS WOUNDED IN THE SHOOTING ABOUT 2:30 P.M. OUTSIDE THE WASHINGTON HILTON HOTEL. THE GUNMAN WAS TACKLED BY SECRET SERVICE AGENTS AND POLICE AND PINNED TO THE GROUND AS THE MOTORCADE SPED AWAY TO SAFETY. UPI 03-30-81 02:53 PES UP078 U W ADD REAGAN-SHOTS''' THE ASSAILANT WAS A YOUNG WHITE, BLOND MALE, AND HE WAS SHOVED INTO A DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA SQUAD CAR SHORTLY AFTER THE INCIDENT. AMBULANCES SPED TO THE SCENE TO TAKE BRADY TO THE HOSPITAL. BRADY WAS APPARENTLY STRUCK IN THE HEAD, BLOOD POURING PROFUSELY FROM THE WOUND. THE SEVERITY OF HIS WOUNDS WAS NOT IMMEDIATELY KNOWN. WHEN THE SHOTS RANG OUT, REAGAN WAS LEAVING THE HOTEL, LAUGHING AND WAVING TO A CROWD OUTSIDE THE HOTEL WHERE HE HAD BEEN ADDRESSING AN AFL-CIO MEETING. UPI'S DEAN REYNOLDS SAID THE GUNMAN WAS ABOUT 10 FEET FROM REAGAN WHEN THE SHOTS RANG OUT. BRADY WAS JUST A STEP OR TWO BEHIND REAGAN AS THE PRESIDENTIAL PARTY WAS LEAVING THE HOTEL. DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY LARRY SPERKES, EXPLAINING INITIAL CONFUSION ABOUT WHETHER REAGAN WAS HIT, SAID, "THERE WAS SOME PUSHING AND SHOVING WHEN THEY WENT INTO THE CAR." REAGAN WENT TO THE HOSPITAL WHERE BRADY WAS TAKEN, SPEAKES SAID. HE SAID DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE CHIEF OF STAFF MICHAEL DEAVER ACCOMPANIED REAGAN TO THE HOSPITAL. FORMER PRESIDENT GERALD FORD WAS THE SUBJECT OF TWO INCIDENTS IVOLVING SUSPECTED ATTEMPTS ON HIS LIFE. ON SEPT. 5, 1975, A WOMAN LATTER IDENTIFIED AS LYNETTE "SQUERKY" FROMME, A MEMBER OF THE CHARLES MANSON CULT, WAS ARRESTED AS SHE POINTED A PISTOL AT FORD. SHE WAS QUICKLY SUBDUED AND CONVICTED IN THE INCIDENT. JUST 27 DAYS LATER, FORD ESCAPED UNHARMED RS A SHOT WAS FIRED AT HIM WHILE HE WAS LEAVING A SAN FRANCISCO HOTEL. THE SUSPECTED ASSAILANT, SARA JANE MOORE, WAS SEIZED IMMEDIATELY. MRS. MOORE IS SERVING A PRISON SENTENCE IN THE INCIDENT. UPI 03-30-81 03:01 PES UP084 U W ADD REAGAN-SHOTS PRESIDENT REAGAN WAS SHOT IN THE CHEST AND WOUNDED BY A GUNMAN OUTSIDE H WASHINGTON HOTEL MONDAY. HE WAS REPORTED IN STABLE CONDITION AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL. UPI 03-30-81 03:16 PES UP086 U W ADD REAGAN-SHOT!!!!! PRESIDENT REAGAN WAS REPORTED CONSCIOUS AND IN STABLE CONDITION AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL. THE GUNMAN, FIRING AT CLOSE RANGE, ALSO WOUNDED WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY IN THE HEAD BEFORE BEING WRESTLED TO THE GROUND BY POLICE. A SECRET SERVICE MAN AND A DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA POLICE OFFICER ALSO WERE REPORTEDLY WOUNDED. PRESIDENT ADVISER LYN NOFZIGER SAID REAGAN WAS WOUNDED IN THE LEFT CHEST, AND ADDED HE WAS CONSCIOUS AND IN STABLE CONDITION. UPI 03-30-81 03:21 PES UPI 03-30-81 03:22 PES UP089 R H ADD REAGAN-SHOT'' NOFZIGER SAID: "I CAN CONFIRM THAT CHEST. THE BULLET ENTERED FROM HIS LEFT SIDE. HE IS IN STABLE CONDITION. HE IS CONSCIOUS AND MRS. REAGAN IS WITH HIM." UPI 03-30-81 03:24 PES MORE MORE UPI 03-30-81 03:26 PES UP091 U.M ADD REAGAN-SHOT!!!!! REAGAN WALKED INTO THE HOSPITAL, OFFICIALS SAID. NOFZIGER SAID THE PRESIDENT APPARENTLY DID NOT IMMEDIATELY REALIZE HE HAD BEEN WOUNDED AND THE BULLET WAS STILL LODGED IN HIS CHEST. NOFZIGER REPORTEDLY SAID REAGAN "IS NOT AT THIS TIME IN SURGERY, OR HERDED FOR SURGERY.' FOUR OR FIVE SHOTS WERE FIRED AT CLOSE RANGE BY GUNMAN, AND THE SECRET SERVICE IMMEDIATELY SHOVED REAGAN INTO THE WAITING LIMOUSINE. BRADY'S CONDITION WAS NOT IMMEDIATELY KNOWN, BUT HE WAS TAKEN TO GEORGE WASHINGTON BLEEDING PROFUSEDLY FROM A HEAD WOUND. THE UNIDENTIFIED WHITE, BLOND MALE, REPORTEDLY IN HIS LATE 30S OR EAROY 40S, WAS IMMEDIATELY THROWN TO THE GROUND AND PINNED BY SECRET SERVICE MEN AND POLICE OFFERS. HE WAS QUICKLY WHISKED AWAY IN A SQUAD CAR. NANCY REAGAN, WHO WAS NOT WITH THE PRESIDENT AT THE HOTEL, RUSHED TO THE HOSPITAL TO BE WITH HER HUSBAND. UPI 03-30-81 03:28 PES UP092 R V ADD REAGAN-SHOT VICE PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH, EN ROUTE FROM FORT WORTH, TEXAS, TO MAKE A SPEECH IN AUSTIN, TEXAS, HEADED TO WASHINGTON IMMEDIATELY UPON NEWS OF THE SHOOTING. HIS PLANE CHANGED COURSE AND HEADED FOR THE CAPITAL. UPI 03-30-81 03:29 PES UP094 R W ADD REAGAN-SHOT'' JIM BRADY WAS WHEELED AT 3:05 P.M. INTO A CRT-SCANNING ROOM ON THE FIRST FLOOR OF GEORGE WASHINGTON HOSPITAL. BRADY WAS BANDAGED AND APPEARED TO HAVE HEAD WOUNDS. HE WASN'T STIRRING. UPI 03-30-81 03:31 PES UP096 U W ASDD REAGAN-SHOTS''' OFFICIALS SAID SHOTS STRUCK THE BULLETPROOF LIMOUSINE, LODGING IN THE SIDE AND STRIKING THE WINDSHIELD, LEAVING A POCKMARK BUT NOT PENETRATING THE GLASS. THE BULLET ENTERED REAGAN'S BODY UNDER THE LEFT ARM, AND MISSED THE PRESIDENT'S HEART. HANK BROWN, AN ABC CAMERMAN, SAID THE GUNMAN "JUST OPENED UP AND KEPT SQUEEZING THE TRIGGER." NOFZIGER, ASKED IF REAGAN'S WOUND IS SERIOUS, REPLIED, "OBVIOUSLY A WOUND IN THE CHEST IS A SERIOUS WOUND." BUT HE SAID REAGAN HAD NOT LOST CONSCIOUSNESS AND HAD WALKED INTO THE HOSPITAL TALKING TO HIS COMPANIONS. ASKED WHY DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY KARNA SMALL ORIGINALLY SAID THE PRESIDENT HAD NOT BEEN SHOT, NOFZIGER SAID REAGAN "APPARENTLY DID NOT KNOW HE HAD BEEN SHOT AT THE TIME." UPI 03-30-81 03:36 PES UP098 R Y ADD REAGAN-SHOT'''' CBS IDENTIFIES REAGAN'S ASSAILANT AS JOHN W HIPPLEY OF EVERGREEN, COLO., AND SAYS THE SECRET SERVICE AGENT INJURED IS TIMOTHY J MCCARTHY. A .38 CALIBRE PISTON WAS USED, THEY SAY. UPI 03-30-81 03:38 PES UP100 R V ADD REAGAN-SHOT!!!! THE SECRET SERVICE IDENTIFIED THE SUSPECTED GUNMAN AS JOHN WARNOCK HINKLEY JR., 33, OF EVERGREEN, COLO. UPI 03-30-81 03:41 PES UP101 8 V RDD REAGAN-SHOT CBS IS REPORTING THAT THE SECRET SERVICE AGENT IS KEN MC CARTHY, 31, FROM CHICAGO, AND THAT HE WAS SHOT IN THE CHEST AND IS BEING OPERATING ON NOW AT GW HOSPITAL. UPI 03-30-81 03:42 PES UP102 U W ADD REAGAN-SHOT!!!!! "IT DOESN'T LOOK GOOD," A WHITE HOUSE AIDE SAID WHEN ASKED BRADY'S CONDITION. REAGAN RECEIVED AN EARLIER SCARE DURING HIS 1976 CAMPAIGN FOR THE REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION. IMMEDIATELY AFTER ANNOUNCING HIS CANDIDACY IN WASHINGTON, REAGAN FLEW TO FLORIDA. OUTSIDE A HOLLYWOOD HOTEL, A MAN PULLED A TOY GUN. REAGAN WAS QUICKLY HUSTLED INTO THE HOTEL, AND THE MAN WAS ARRESTED. UPI 03-30-81 03:44 PES UP103 R F MARKETS AT A GLANCE BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL STOCKS -- MIXED IN MODERATE TRADING. BONDS -- MOSTLY LOWER. AMERICAN STOCKS -- MIXED IN MODERATE TRADING. LONDON STOCKS -- CLOSED LOWER IN MODERATE TRADING. COTTON FUTURES -- LOWER. GOLD FUTURES -- LOWER. CHICAGO GRAIN FUTURES -- WHEAT CLOSED UP 1/4 TO OFF 2 CENTS; CORN UP 1 TO 4; OATS UP 2 TO 1 1/21 AND SOYBEANS UP 3 1/2 TO 6 CENTS. CATTLE TRADE -- 50 CENTS TO $1.00 HIGHER; TOP $61.00. UPI 03-30-81 03:46 PES UP104 UN ADD REAGAN-SHOTS**** OFFICIALS AT THE WASHINGTON HOSPITAL CENTER SAID THE WOUNDED DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA OFFICER, WHOSE NAME WAS NOT IMMEDIATELY RELEASED, WAS IN CRITICAL CONDITION. A WITNESS SAID THE ASSAILANT WAS WEARING A RAINCOAT, A BLUE SHIRT AND DARK TROUSERS. UPI 03-30-81 03:47 PES UP105 ? W (SHOTS-ALERT) WASHINGTON (UPI) -- THE ALERT STATUS OF U.S. ARMED FORCES WORLDWIDE REMAINED AT NORMAL PEACETIME READINESS THIS REERNOON DESPITE THE WOUNDING OF PRESIDENT REAGAN, THE PENTAGON SAID. ONLY THE STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND AND U.S. FORCES IN SOUTH KOREA WERE AT THEIR ROUTINE HEIGHTENED STATE OF ALERT, WHICH IS INCREASED SAID. INTELLIGENCE WATCH AND STRENGTHENED SECURITY MERSURES, THE PENTAGON ALL OTHER FORCES, INCLUDING THOSE IN THE UNITED STATES, WERE ON DEFENSE CONDITION 5 -- THE LOWEST LEVEL OF ALERT DURING PEACETIME, A PENTAGON SPOKESMAN SAID. UPI 03-30-81 03:49 PES UP107 R W ADD REAGAN-SHOT!!! AT SHORTLY AFTER 3:30 P.M., ASST. PRESS SECRETARY LARRY SPEAKS EMERGED FROM THE EMERGENCY ROOM ENTRANCE TO THE HOSPITAL IN A STEADY DOWNPOUR TO TELL REPORTERS THE PRESIDENT'S CONDITION STILL WAS STABLE, THAT HE WAS CONCIUOS AND SPEAKING. PRESSED ABOUT WHEHTER REAGAN WOULD UNDERGO SURGERY AND ABOUT THE EXTENT OF HISD INJURIES, SPEAKES REPLIED, "ALL I CAN SAY IS STABLE. I JUST CAN'T GO ANY FURTHER THAN THAT." SPEAKS SAID AS FAR AS HE KNEW, THE BULLET REMAINED LODGED IN REAGAN'S LEFT SIDE. UPI 03-30-81 03:53 PES UP110 R V ADD REAGAN-SHOT'''' PETE TEELEY, BUSH'S PRESS SECRETARY, SAID BUSH WILL ARRIVE AT ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE "BEFORE 7:00" EST. "I ASSUME HE WILL GO DIRECTLY TO SEE THE PRESIDENT,' HE SAID. BUSH'S ARRIVAL AT THE AIR FORCE BASE NEAR WASHINGTON WILL BE CLOSED TO THE PRESS, SAID TEELEY. HE SAID BUSH'S PLANE DID LAND IN AUSTIN, TEXAS, WHRE TE VICE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN SCHEDULED TO MAKE A SPE CH, BUT BUSH DID NOT MAKE #88803286CH AND HEADAD IMMEDIATELY FOR WENDUCWTON UPON NEWS OF THE ASKED IF BUSH WOULD BE STANDING BY IF REAGAN IS OPERATED ON, TEELEY SAID THAT IS "HYOTHETICAL" AND DECLINED COMMENT. UPI 03-30-81 04:02 PES UP113 R V ADD REAGAN-SHOT GEORGE BUSH'S OFFICE NOW SAYS HE IS ARRIVING AT ANDREWS AFB BETWEEN 6 AND 6:30 P.M. THE ARRIVAL IS CLOSED TO THE PRESS. UPI 03-30-81 04:17 PES UP114 RM (EYEWITNESS) (BY DEAN REYNOLDS) WASHINGTON (UPI) -- PRESIDENT REAGAN HAD JUST COMPLETED HIS SPEECH, ONE OF HIS MANY DEFENSES OF HIS ECONOMIC PROGRAM, WHEN HE HERDED AS ALWAYS TO HIS WAITING MOTORCADE. OUTSIDE THE WASHINGTON HILTON HOTEL ON FLORIDA AVENUE, THE PRESIDENT WAS GREETED BY THE CHEERS OF SEVERAL HUNDREDS BYSTANDERS. REAGAN WAVED AND SMILED TO THE CROWD AS HE WALKED FROM A SERVICE ENTRANCE THE 25 STEPS TO HIS PRESIDENTIAL LIMOUSINE. AS THE PRESIDENT STEPPED OFF THE CURB ONTO THE DRIVEWAY WHERE HIS LIMOUSINE WAS PARKED, SOMETHING ATTACKED HIS ATTENTION AND HE TURNED, FACING THE CURB AND THE HOTEL WALL WHERE HIS ASSAILANT WAS STANDING SOMEWHERE AMONG THE BYSTANDERS. MORE MORE UPI 03-30-81 04:20 PES UP115 B W ADD REAGAN-SHOT!!!!! PRESIDENT REAGAN HAS UNDERGONE EMERGENCY SURGERY AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL AND IS REPORTED IN GOOD CONDITION. UPI 03-30-81 04:20 PES UP116 R (EYEWITNESS) 1ST ADD UP114 SUDDENLY FOUR OR FIVE LOUD BURSTS ERUPTED, SOUNDING LIKE FIRECRACKERS, AND THE SMELL OF GUN SMOKE HUNG IN THE AIR. THE CROWD RECOILED IN HORROR. THERE WERE SCREAMS. HANDGUNS AND AUTOMATIC WERPONS WERE SUDDENLY VISIBLE IN THE HANDS OF POLICE AND SECRET SERVICE AGENTS. I DROPPED INTO A CROUCH BUT KEPT MY EYES ON THE PRESIDENT. HE APPEARED TO HAVE A FRIGHTENED ALMOST BEWILDERED LOOK, JUST AFTER THE SHOTS RANG OUT. SECRET SECRET AGENTS SPUN HIM AROUND AND SHOVED HIM HEAD FIRST INTO THE LIMOUSINE, ALL THE WHILE THE AGENTS KEPT SHOUTING "GET BACK! GET BACK!" TO THE CROWD. THE SHOTS COULD NOT HAVE BEEN FIRED FROM MORE THAN 10 OR 15 FEET FROM THE PRESIDENT. THEY WERE FIRED IN RAPID SUCCESSION. THE LIMOUSINE PULLED AWAY SECONDS AFTER THE PRESIDENT WAS PUSHED INSIDE. A SCUFFLE TO THE RIGHT OF THE LIMOUSINE THEN CAUGHT MY ATTENTION. R YOUNG BLOND MAN WAS BEING SUBDUED ON HIS BACK BY SEVERAL AGENTS AND POLICEMEN. ABOUT ALL I COULD SEE WAS A MOB OF LAWMEN ON THE GROUND AND THE TOPS OF TWO LEGS, CLAD IN DARK TROUSERS, STICKING OUT FROM THE PILE. I SAW NO ONE HIT AND LEARNED ONLY LATER THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN WOUNDED ALONG WITH WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JIM BRADY, A POLICEMEN AND A SECRET SERVICE AGENT. THE GUNMAN HAD BEEN ON THE SIDEWALK, STANDING CLOSE TO THE HOTEL WALL. REPORTERS WERE ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE LIMOUSINE. IT WAS LIKE BEING IN A VACUUM, WITH EVERYTHING IN SLOW MOTION. IT TOOK A SECOND OR TWO BEFORE ANYTHING REGISTERED BUT WHEN I SAW THE LOOKS OF ENORMOUS STRESS AND THE BARED TEETH OF THE SECRET SERVICE AGENTS, I KNEW IT WAS MORE THAN FIRE CRACKERS. I TOOK OFF INTO THE HOTEL TO FIND A TELEPHONE, KNOCKING DOWN MAYBE EIGHT PERSONS WHO HAD JUST HEARD THE PRESIDENT SPEAK. THERE DIDN'T SEEM TO BE A PAY PHONE IN THE PLACE, AND I FINALLY FOUND AN OPEN TELEPHONE IN AN OFFICE. WHEN 1 GOT OUTSIDE AGAIN, BLOOD WAS MINGLING WITH THE RAIN ON THE SIDEWALK. POLICE ROPED OFF THE AREA TO HOLD BACK HUNDREDS OF CURIOUS PEDESTRIANS. ACROSS THE STREET, I COULD SEE OFFICE WORKERS WATCHING ON TELEVISION THE SCENE THAT HAD OCCURRED JUST OUTSIDE THEIR WINDOWS. UPI 03-30-81 04:27 PES UP118 R H ADD REAGAN-SHOT POLICE IDENTIFIED THE D.C. POLICE OFFICER WHO WAS HOUNDED AS THOMAS DELAHANTY, IN CRITICAL CONDITION. UPI 03-30-81 04:29 PES UP119 R I RDD REAGAN-SHOT SHORTLY AFTER 4 P.M., THE WHITE HOUSE ESTABLISHED A PRESS CENTER IN AN AUDITORIUM AT THE NEARBY GEO. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER, AFTER A GROWING CROWD OF SEVERAL HUNDRED REPORTERS, SPECTATORS AND STUDENTS HAD BEEN STANDING IN A STEADY RAIN OUTSIDE THE HOSPITAL ENTRANCE. ONE ERRANT STUDENT WALKED INTO THE MOB SCENE AT THE AUDITORIUM AND ASKED, "WHAT CLASS IS THIS?" AS SECURITY GUARDS BEGAN EJECTING PEOPLE FROM THE JAMMED AUDITORIUM, SHOUTING MATCHES AND AT LEAST ONE SHOVING MATCH ERUPTED BETWEEN REPORTERS AND TECHNICIANS AND SECURITY PERSONNEL. UPI 03-30-81 04:31 PES UP120 R W ADD REAGAN-SHOT'''' HAIG SAID ONE ROUND WAS SHOT INTO THE LEFT SIDE AND WHEN HE WENT INTO SURGERY REAGAN WAS CONSCIOUS. "AS OF NOW, I AM IN CONTROL AT THE WHITE HOUSE," HAIG SAID. DEPUTY WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY LARRY SPEAKES SAID BUSH WAS DUE IN AT ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE AT 8 P.M. TONIGHT. HAIG SAID HE THOUGHT THE TIME WAS "EARLY EVENING." HAIG SAID THE ADMINISTRATION HAD INFORMED ITS "FRIENDS" ABROAD OF REAGAN'S CONDITION. "THERE ARE NO ALERT MEASURES THAT ARE NECESSARY OR CONTEMPLATED." "SHOULD THE PRESIDENT DECIDE HE WANTS TO TRANSFER THE HELM TO THE VICE PRESIDENT, HE WILL DO SO." HAIG'S VOICE WAS SHAKY THROUGHOUT. HE WAS OBVIOUSLY EMOTIONALLY UPSET. UPI 03-30-81 04:33 PES UP122 U F 1111 NEW YORK (UPI) -- THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE AND AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE STOPPED TRADING THIS AFTERNOON FOLLOWING REPORTS THAT PRESIDENT REAGAN HAD BEEN SHOT IN THE CHEST. PRICES WERE IN A TAILSPIN AT THE TIME. TRADING DIMINISHED RAPIDLY FOLLOWING THE SHOOTING INCIDENT IN WHICH PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY AND TWO OTHER MEN ALSO WERE WOUNDED. THE DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE, WHICH HAD RISEN MORE THAN 6 POINTS OVER THE 1,000 LEVEL IN THE EARLY AFTERNOON, WAS OFF 2.88 POINTS TO 991.89 WHEN TRADING WAS HALTED AT 3:22 P.M. EST. UPI 03-30-81 04:40 PES UP123 U F (STOCKS) .... NEW YORK (UPI) -- THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE AND AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE STOPPED TRADING THIS AFTERNOON FOLLOWING REPORTS THAT PRESIDENT REAGAN HAD BEEN SHOT IN THE CHEST. PRICES HERE IN A TRILSPIN AT THE TIME. TRADING DIMINISHED RAPIDLY FOLLOWING THE SHOOTING INCIDENT IN WHICH PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY AND TWO OTHER MEN ALSO WERE WOUNDED. THE DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE, WHICH HAD RISEN MORE THAN 6 POINTS OVER THE 1,000 LEVEL IN THE EARLY AFTERNOON, WAS OFF 2.88 POINTS TO 991.89 WHEN TRADING WAS HALTED AT 3:22 P.M. EST. UPI 03-30-81 04:42 PES UP126 U U (HINKLEY-DALLAS DALLAS (UPI) -- THE MAN IN CUSTODY FOR FIRING SHOTS AT PRESIDENT REAGAN ATTENDED ELEMENTARY AND HIGH SCHOOLS IN AFFLUENT HIGHLAND PARK BEFORE HIS FAMILY MOVED TO EVERGREEN, COLO. JOHN WARNOCK HINKLEY JR. ATTENDED JOHN S. ARMSTRONG ELEMENTARY SCHOOL AND WAS A 1973 GRADUATE OF HIGHLAND PARK HIGH SCHOOL. HINKLEY LIVED WITH HIS FAMILY ON BEVERLY STREET IN HIGHLAND PARK, A STREET OF LARGE, FINE HOMES. AT LEAST ONE WOMAN WHO KNEW THE FAMILY, HOWEVER, SAID THE HINKLEYS WERE NOT WEALTHY. THE WOMAN, WHO ASKED NOT TO BE IDENTIFIED, SAID HINKLEY'S FATHER WAS "IN THE OIL BUSINESS" BUT WAS NOT RICH. HIGHLAND PARK POLICE SAID HINKLEY WAS NOT A KNOWN CHARACTER TO THEM AND HAD NO KNOWN ARREST RECORD. UPI 03-30-81 04:49 PES UP129 R U (REAGAN-SON) LINCOLN, NEB. (UPI) -- RONALD PRESCOTT REAGAN, THE PRESIDENT'S 23-YEAR-OLD SON, WAS WHISKED OUT OF LINCOLN'S HILTON HOTEL SHORTLY AFTER 3 P.M. MONDAY AND BOARDED A CHARTERED FLIGHT HEADED FOR WASHINGTON NATIONAL AIRPORT. YOUNG REAGAN WAS TO HAVE DANCED MONDAY NIGHT WITH THE JOFFREY II DANCERS, WHO ARE PERFORMING THIS WEEK AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA IN LINCOLN. REAGAN LEFT THE HILTON ACCOMPANIED BY HIS WIFE, THE FORMER DORIA PALMIERI, AND AN UNDETERMINED NUMBER OF SECRET SERVICE AGENTS. HE WAS DRIVEN IN A MOTORCADE, LED BY LINCOLN POLICE, TO THE LINCOLN MUNICIPAL AIRPORT. REAGAN, DRESSED IN BLUE JEAMS AND A RED T-SHIRT WITH THE LETTERS USA EMBLAZONED IN WHITE, IGNORED REPORTERS' QUESTIONS ABOUT HIS FATHER BEING SHOT IN WASHINGTON. UPI 03-30-81 05:15 PES UP130 R P (BRADY) WASHINGTON (UPI) -- WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JAMES S. BRADY, AMIABLE SPOKESMAN FOR PRESIDENT REAGAN, WAS SHOT IN THE FOREHEAD TODAY IN THE PRESIDENTIAL ASSASINATION ATTEMPT OUTSIDE A DOWNTOWN WASHINGTON HOTEL. BRADY'S CONDITION WAS DESCRIBED AT THE HOSPTIAL AS "VERY CRITICAL. II HIS HERD WAS BLEEDING PROFUSELY AS HE WAS LIFTED TO THE AMBULANCE AND TAKEN TO GEORGE WASHINGTON HOSPITAL. MORE MORE UPI 03-30-81 05:16 PES UP131 R V (BRADY)''''' WASHINGTON (UPI) -- WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JIM BRADY, SHOT IN THE HEAD BY A GUNMAN WHO ALSO WOUNDED PRESIDENT REAGAN, A SECRET SERVICE AGENT, AND A WASHINGTON, D. C., POLICEMAN, IS DEAD, ACCORDING TO CBS AND ABC REPORTS. UPI 03-30-81 05:17 PES UP132 R P (BRADY) 1ST ADD UP130 BRADY WAS WHEELED AT 3:05 INTO A CAT-SCANNING ROOM. HIS HEAD HAD BEEN BANDAGED, AND HE DID NOT APPEAR TO BE MOVING. THE 40-YEAR-OLD BRADY WAS FLANKING REAGAN AS THEY EMERGED FROM THE HOTEL, WHERE THE PRESIDENT HAD ADDRESSED A CONVENTION OF THE BUILDING AND CONSTRUCTION TRADES DEPARTMENT, AFL-CIO. MORE MORE UPI 03-30-81 05:19 PES UP133 R H (REAGAN-OPERATE WASHINGTON (UPI) -- PRESIDENT REAGAN UNDERMENT AN OPEN CHEST SURGERY TECHNIQUE KNOWN AS R THORACOTOMY TODAY AFTER BEING SHOT OUTSIDE A DOWNTOWN WASHINGTON HOTEL, IT WAS REPORTED. ROSS SIMPSON OF MUTUAL BROADCASTING QUOTED A SOURCE ON THE STAFF OF THE GEORGE WASHINGTON MEDICAL CENTER AS SAYING REAGAN WAS WHEELED INTO THE OPERATING ROOM AT ABOUT 4 P.M. EST FOR A THORACOTOMY -- OPEN-CHEST SURGERY THAT COULD TAKE ANYWHERE FROM ONE TO FOUR HOURS. SIMPSON ALSO REPORTED THAT 30 UNITS OF 0-NEGATIVE BLOOD HAD BEEN RUSHED TO THE OPERATING ROOM AND QUOTED A MEMBER OF THE STAFF ATTENDING THE PRESIDENT AS SAYING THE BULLET MISSED REAGAN'S HEART BY RN INCH. SIMPSON ALSO SAID HE WAS TOLD THE PRESIDENT WAS ON A RESPIRATOR. UPI 03-30-81 05:21 PES UP133 R W ADD REAGAN-SHOTS WASHINGTN (UPI) -- AT ABOUT 4:00 P.M. FBI AGENT THOMAS J. BAKER TOLD REPORTERS THAT THE FBI HAD TAKEN OVER JURISTICTION IN THE INVESTIGATION SINCE IT HAD OCCURED IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AND SAID THE FBI WAS INTERVIEWING SIX SECRET SERVICE AGENTS WHO WERE AT THE SCENE. BAKER SAID A "SMALL CALIBER HANDGUN" WAS RECOVERED AS WELL AS OTHER EVIDENCE AT THE SCENE. "THE SUSPECT IS IN CUSTODY,' ADDING THAT ONLY ONE PERSON IS BELIEVED TO BE INVOLVED "FROM THE INFORMATION WE HAVE DEVELOPED SO FAR." BAKER SAID THAT THE SUSPECT, WHO HE DID NOT IDENTIFY, WOULD RECEIVE A HEARING BEFORE A U.S. MAGISTRATE IN WASHINGTON AND THAT CHARLES RUFF, U.S. ATTORNEY FOR THE DISTRICT, WOULD DETERMINE THE CHARGES. MORE MORE UPI 03-30-81 05:25 PES UP134 B W ADD BRADY ALL THREE NETWORKS REPORTED MONDAY THAT WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY DIED FROM BULLET WOUNDS SUFFERED IN AN ATTEMPT ON PRESIDENT REAGAN'S LIFE. BUT WHITE HOUSE AIDE LYN NOFZIGER "EMPHATICALLY" DENIED THE REPORT. UPI 03-30-81 05:25 PES UP135 R W ADD REAGAN-SHOTS 1ST ADD UP133 BAKER SAID IT WAS LIKELY THAT THE PRINCIPLE CHARGE WOULD BE "ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES." "AS SOON AS POSSIBLE, HE'LL BE AFFORDED A HEARING," BAKER SAID. "HE'S IN CUSTODY," BAKER SAID. "WE'VE RECOVERED THE GUN AND OTHER EVIDENCE." BAKER SAID THE OTHER EVIDENCE INCLUDED THE CLOTHING OF SOME OF THE VICTIMS, WHICH HE SAID TOTALED FOUR IN ALL. BAKER PRAISED WHAT HE SAID WAS "EXCELLENT, OUTSTANDING COOPERATION" FROM THE D.C. POLICE. UPI 03-30-81 05:26 PES UP136 R A (REAGAN-CARTER) ATLANTA (UPI) -- FORMER PRESIDENT CARTER WITHHELD IMMEDIATE COMMENT TODAY ON THE SHOOTING OF PRESIDENT REAGAN AND THREE OTHERS IN WASHINGTON BUT AIDES SAID HE WAS "AWAITING FURTHER WORD." THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT WAS ISSUED BY HIS OFFICE IN ATLANTA: "PRESIDENT CARTER IS ANXIOUSLY AWAITING FURTHER WORD ON PRESIDENT REAGAN'S CONDITION AND THAT OF THE OTHERS WOUNDED. HE AND MRS. CARTER JOIN THE ENTIRE NATION IN PRAYER FOR THE WELL BEING OF ALL THOSE WOUNDED AND FOR THEIR FAMILIES." UPI 03-30-81 05:28 PES UP137 20 (REAGAN-SUCCESSION) WASHINGTON (UPI) -- IF PRESIDENT REAGAN SHOULD BECOME DISABLED, VICE PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH COULD TEMPORARILY TAKE OVER THE OFFICE UNDER A CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT THAT GREW OUT OF THE ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT JOHN KENNEDY. THE TRADITIONAL LINE OF SUCCESSION TO THE PRESIDENCY REMAINS UNCHANGED. AFTER THE VICE PRESIDENT THE NEXT IN LINE TO TAKE OVER THE OFFICE WOULD BE HOUSE SPEAKER THOMAS O'NEILL, SENATE PRESIDENT PRO TEM STROM THURMOND, R-S.C., AND THEN SECRETARY OF STATE ALEXANDER HRIG AND VARIOUS OTHER CABINET OFFICERS. O'NEILL REMAINED IN HIS CAPITOL OFFICE WITH ONLY THE USUAL POLICE SECURITY, WATCHING DEVELOPMENTS ON TELEVISION. HAIG MISTAKENLY TOLD REPORTERS AT THE WHITE HOUSE THAT HE WAS NEXT IN LINE BEHIND BUSH. HOWEVER, THE 25TH AMENDMENT TO THE CONSTITUTION MAKES IT UNLIKELY THAT THERE WOULD EVER BE A NEED TO GO BEYOND THE VICE PRESIDENT IN LINE OF SUCCESSION. UNDER THE FIRST TWO PARAGRAPHS OF THAT FOUR-PARAGRAPH AMENDMENT, IF THE VICE PRESIDENT SHOULD TAKE OVER THE OFFICE FOLLOWING THE DEATH CR RESIGNATION OF A PRESIDENT, HE WOULD APPOINT A NEW VICE PRESIDENT WHO WOULD ASSUME OFFICE FOLLOWING CONFIRMATION BY A MAJORITY VOTE OF BOTH THE HOUSE AND SENATE. THIS SECTION OF THE AMENDMEND HAS BEEN USED THICE -- ONCE BEGINNING ON OCT. 13, 1973, WHEN GERALD FORD REPLACED SPIRO AGNEW, WHO RESIGNED AS VICE PRESIDENT -- THE OTHER BEGINNING ON AUG. 9, 1974, WHEN NIXON RESIGNED AND FORD NOMINATED NELSON ROCKEFELLER TO BE VICE PRESIDENT. HOWEVER, THE MAIN REASON FOR THE AMENDMENT WAS THE QUESTION OF WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF A PRESIDENT WAS UNABLE MENTALLY OR PHYSICALLY TO CONTINUE IN OFFICE BUT WAS NOT DEAD OR COULD NOT OR WOULD NOT RESIGN. "THE SPECULATION WAS WHAT WOULD WE HAVE DONE IF HE (KENNEDY) HAD LIVED BUT HAD BECOME A VEGETABLE," SAID A STAFF MEMBER OF THE HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE WHO ASSISTED IN THE DRAFTING OF THE AMENDMENT. UNDER THAT SECTION OF THE AMENDMENT, PARAGRAPHS THREE AND FOUR, THIS WOULD BE THE PROCEDURE: -THE PRESIDENT HIMSELF COULD DECLARE TO CONGRESS THAT HE WAS UNABLE TO DISCHARGE HIS DUTIES AND THE VICE PRESIDENT WOULD ASSUME OFFICE. IF THE PRESIDENT COULD NOT OR WOULD NOT DECLARE HIMSELF UNABLE TO CONTINUE IN OFFICE, THE VICE PRESIDENT COULD TAKE OVER IF HE AND A MAJORITY OF THE "PRINCIPAL OFFICERS OF THE EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENTS" DECLARED THAT THE PRESIDENT WAS UNABLE TO CONTINUE IN OFFICE. THE PRESIDENT COULD CHALLENGE THE VICE PRESIDENT AND THE CABINET BY TELLING CONGRESS HE COULD INDEED CONTINUE TO ASSUME HIS DUTIES. IN THAT CASE, HE WOULD CONTINUE IN OFFICE. -- IF THE VICE PRESIDENT AND THE CABINET INSISTED TO CONGRESS WITHIN FOUR DAYS THAT THE PRESIDENT COULD NOT SERVE, NOTWITHSTANDING HIS ASSERTIONS TO THE CONTRARY, THEN CONGRESS WOULD HAVE TO ASSEMBLE WITHIN 48 HOURS TO DECIDE THE ISSUE. A DECISION WOULD HAVE TO BE HANDED DOWN WITHIN 21 DAYS. A TWO-THIRDS VOTE HOULD BE REQUIRED TO REMOVE THE PRESIDENT FROM OFFICE. UPI 03-30-81 05:38 PES UP138 ? V ADD REAGAN-SHOT AS REAGAN WAS BEING WHEELED INTO THE OPERATING ROOM, HE TOLD NANCY REAGAN, ""HONEY, I FORGOT TO DUCK." HE ALSO TOLD SEN. PAUL LAXALT, R-NEV., "DON'T WORRY ABOUT ME. I'LL MAKE IT," ACCORDING TO LYN NOFSIGER. UPI 03-30-81 05:39 PES UP139 R V ADD BRADY'''' A SPOKESMAN FOR THE HOSPITAL ALSO DENIED BRADY HAD DIED. UPI 03-30-81 05:41 PES UP141 R W ADD REAGAN-SHOT'''' METROPOLITAN POLICE SPOKESMAN JOSEPH GENTILE TOLD REPORTERS IN LATE AFTERNOON THAT HINKLEY WAS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE FBI, CHARGED WITH THE ATTEMPED ASSASSINATION OF THE PRESIDENT, AND WITH ASSAULT WITH INTENT TO KILL A POLICE OFFICER. OTHER CHARGES ARE PENDING, HE SAID. "WE DID RECOVER A HANDGUN," GENTILE SAID, BUT HE WOULD NOT ELABORATE. THE SUSPECT WAS MOVED OUT OF THE WASHINGTON POLICE HEADQUARTERS IN THE CUSTODY OF THE FBI, AND GENTILE WOULD NOT SAY WHERE HE WAS BEING TAKEN. GENTILE SAID HINKLEY WAS 25, AND GAVE HIS ADDRESS AT 31340 BROOKLINE, EVERGREEN, COLO. UPI 03-30-81 05:44 PES UP144 U F (STOCKS) NEW YORK (UPI) -- THE NATION'S STOCK EXCHANGES CLOSED EARLY TODAY WITH PRICES DROPPING IN HEAVY TRADING FOLLOWING NEWS THAT PRESIDENT REAGAN HAD BEEN SHOT IN THE LEFT SIDE BY A GUNMAN AFTER A SPEECH IN WASHINGTON. TRADING ON THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE WAS HALTED AT 3:17 P.M. EST. OTHER EXCHANGES AND THE NASDAQ OVER-THE-COUNTER MARKET QUICKLY FOLLOWED SUIT. REAGAN UNDERMENT SURGERY A SHORT TIME AFTER THE MARKETS CLOSED AND BROKERS SAID THEY DID NOT KNOW HOW THE MARKET WOULD REACT UNTIL IT COULD BE DETERMINED HOW SERIOUSLY REAGAN WAS HURT. THERE WAS NO INDICATION WHETHER EXCHANGES WOULD OPEN AT THE USUAL TIME TUESDAY. MORE MORE UPI 03-30-81 05:58 PES UP145 R W ADD BRADY'''' THREE HOURS AFTER BEING SHOT IN THE HEAD DURING A PRESIDENTIAL RSSASSINATION ATTEMPT TODAY, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JIM BRADY CLUNG TO LIFE BUT HIS OUTLOOK WAS REPORTED TO BE "NOT GOOD." BRADY WAS STANDING BESIDE PRESIDENT REAGAN WHEN WOULD-BE ASSASSIN JOHN HINKLEY OPENED FIRE AND WOUNDED THE PRESIDENT, THE PRESS SECRETARY, A SECRET SERVICE AGENT AND A WASHINGTON POLICEMAN. BRADY WAS SHOT IN THE FOREHEAD AND BLED PROFUSELY AS HE WAS BEING LIFTED INTO AN AMBULANCE FOR A TRIP TO THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER. MUTUAL BROADCASTING REPORTER ROSS SIMPSON SAID HE HAD BEEN ON THE THIRD FLOOR AND HAD TALKED TO A FRIEND OF THE SENIOR MEDICAL OFFICER IN CHARGE, WHO SAID THE BULLET "ENTERED BRADY'S BRAIN ABOVE THE EYE AND DID EXTENSIVE DAMAGE TO THE BRAIN. THE PROGNOSIS (OUTLOOK FOR RECOVERY) IS NOT GOOD." HE SAID THE SOURCE TOLD HIM "FEW PEOPLE SURVIVE SUCH A WOUND.' MEDICAL OFFICIALS WERE GIVING MRS. BRADY A REPORT, AND SIMPSON SAID, "SHE BEGAN CRYING VERY LIGHTLY." THE HOSPITAL WAS STILL DESCRIBING HIS CONDITION AS "VERY CRITICAL." EARLIER, THE THREE TELEVISION NETWORKS QUOTED WHITE HOUSE OFFICIAL DAVID PROSPERI AS SAYING BRADY WAS DEAD. SHORTLY THEREAFTER, SPOKESMAN LARRY SPEAKES TOLD REPORTERS THAT REPORT WAS WRONG. "IT IS NOT TRUE," HE SAID. "HE IS IN SERIOUS CONDITION." UPI 03-30-81 06:04 PES P146 F (STOCKS) 1ST RDD UP144 THE MARKETS CLOSED EARLY ON NOV. 22, 1963, A FRIDAY, WHEN PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY WAS SHOT AND KILLED IN DALLAS. BUT BEFORE IT CLOSED THAT DAY, THE DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE HAD LOST 21.16 POINTS. THE 1963 MARKET REMAINED CLOSED THE FOLLOWING MONDAY, A NATIONAL DAY OF MOURNING, AND REOPENED THE NEXT DAY -- NOV. 16 -- WITH A BIG RALLY THAT SAW THE DOW INDUSTRIALS SOAR 32.03 POINTS IN SUPPORT OF NEW PRESIDENT JOHNSON. THE DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE, WHICH HAD RISEN MORE THAN 6 POINTS OVER THE 1,000 LEVEL IN EARLY AFTERNOON, WAS OFF 2.62 POINTS TO 992.16 WHEN TRADING WAS HALTED. THE CLOSELY WATCHED DOW, WHICH MANAGED TO GAIN 1.98 POINTS OVERALL LAST WEEK, HAD SKIDDED 20.44 POINTS IN THE LAST TWO SESSIONS OF LAST WEEK, INCLUDING 10.98 FRIDAY, AFTER REACHING AN EIGHT-YEAR HIGH. THE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE INDEX LOST 0.23 TO 77.36 AND THE PRICE OF AN AVERAGE SHARE DECREASED 10 CENTS. DECLINES TOPPED ADVANCES 817-683 AMONG THE 1,890 ISSUES TRADED. BIG BOARD VOLUME TOTALED 33,500,000 SHARES, COMPARED WITH 46,930,000 TRADED FRIDAY. COMPOSITE VOLUME OF NYSE ISSUES LISTED ON ALL U.S. EXCHANGES AND OVER THE COUNTER TOTALED 37,554,100 SHARES, COMPARED WITH 53,093,100 FRIDAY. PRIOR TO THE REAGAN SHOOTING, THE MARKET APPEARED TO BE STAGING A RALLY AND ANALYSTS WERE WATCHING TO SEE IF IT COULD MOUNT ENOUGH STRENGTH TO KEEP THE DOW ABOVE THE 1,000 MARK. THE CLOSELY WATCHED INDICATOR SOARED TO ITS HIGHEST LEVEL IN EIGHT YEARS LAST WEEK, BUT FAILED TO HOLD ABOVE THE FOUR-DIGIT MARK BECAUSE MANY INVESTORS CASHED IN ON PROFITS. THE MARKET HAS BEEN HURT THE PAST SEVERAL SESSIONS BY A RISE IN SOME INTEREST RATES AFTER SEVERAL WEEKS OF DECLINES BECAUSE THE FEDERAL RESERVE APPARENTLY TIGHTENED CREDIT A BIT AFTER THE NATION'S MONEY SUPPLY ROSE. A NUMBER OF BANKS LIFTED THE RATE THEY CHARGE BROKERS FOR LOANS AND SECURITY PACIFIC BANK OF LOS ANGELES BOOSTED ITS PRIME LENDING RATE TO 17 1/2 PERCENT FROM 17 PERCENT. SEVERAL ANALYSTS HAVE WRITTEN THAT THEY THOUGHT THE FED HAD ACTED TOO QUICKLY IN EASING CREDIT THE PAST COUPLE OF MONTHS AND KNOCKING DOWN INTEREST RATES. THEY CHARGED THESE ACTIONS WERE INFLATIONARY. HOWEVER, MANY OBSERVERS STILL BELIEVE RATES WILL DECLINE BECAUSE THE ECONOMY APPEARS TO BE SLOWING. MEANWHILE, INVESTORS WERE ENCOURAGED BY NEWS THAT SOLIDARITY UNION WORKERS IN POLAND HAD SUSPENDED INDEFINITELY A NATIONWIDE STRIKE THREATENED FOR TUESDAY. SOVIET BLOC NATIONS ARE CONDUCTING MILITARY MANUEVERS IN THE COUNTRY. THE AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE INDEX DROPPED 1.22 TO 356.65 AND THE PRICE OF A SHARE SHED 7 CENTS. UPI 03-30-81 06:12 PES UP147 R y BC-CORRESPONDENTS 3-30 ABC REPORTS THAT THE ACADEMY AWARDS HAVE BEEN POSTPONED FOR AT LEAST 24 HOURS. UP148 R U (REAGAN-HINCKLEY)'" EVERGREEN, COLO. (UPI) -- JOHN M. "JACK" HINCKLEY JR., 22, THE SUSPECT IN THE ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT REAGAN, WAS DESCRIBED BY ACQUAINTANCES TODAY AS QUIET, FRIENDLY AND SPORTS-MINDED, BUT WITHOUT ANY PARTICULAR POLITICAL LEANINGS. SECRET SERVICE AGENTS AND LOCAL LAW OFFICERS QUICKLY SEALED OFF THE HOME OF HINCKLEY'S PARENTS IN EVERGREEN, A WELL-TO-DO COMMUNITY IN THE PINE-COVERED FOOTHILLS OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS ABOUT 25 MILES SOUTHWEST OF DENVER. HINCKLEY'S FATHER, JOHN HINCKLEY SR., WHO IS PRESIDENT OF VANDERBILT ENERGY CO. OF DENVER, CLOSED HIS OFFICE SHORTLY AFTER HE LEARNED HIS SON HAD BEEN ARRESTED IN WASHINGTON. HE WENT TO HIS SPLIT-LEVEL HOME, BUILT OF ROCK AND WOOD, WHERE HE AND HIS WIFE WERE INTERVIEWED BY SECRET SERVICE AGENTS. THE FAMILY LIVES AT 31340 BROOKLINE IN THE HIWAN COUNTRY CLUB AREA OF EVERGREEN, A TREE-LINED COMMUNITY ALONG THE COUNTRY CLUB GOLF COURSE. MOST HOMES IN THE AREA, WHICH IS SEPARATED FROM THE DENVER AREA BY RED ROCK FOOTHILLS, ARE VALUED AT MORE THAN $200,000. LITTLE WAS KNOWN INITIALLY ABOUT HINCKLEY, EXCEPT THAT HE AND HIS FAMILY APPARENTLY MOVED TO EVERGREEN IN 1974 AND HE APPARENTLY GRADUATED FROM EVERGREEN HIGH SCHOOL IN 1977. THE OFFICE OF GOV. RICHARD D. LAMM SAID HINCKLEY HAD NO COLORADO DRIVER'S LICENSE, NO POLICE RECORD IN COLORADO AND NO RECORD OF COMMITMENT TO A MENTAL INSTITUTION IN THE STATE. NEIGHBORS OF THE HINCKLEYS SAID THEY KNEW LITTLE ABOUT THE FAMILY, BUT ACQUAINTANCES FROM EVERGREEN HIGH SCHOOL SAID HINCKLEY WAS QUIET AND FRIENDLY. NADINE BURKEY, 19, SAID SHE WAS A SOPHOMORE IN HIGH SCHOOL WHEN HINCKLEY WAS A SENIOR. "HE WAS NICE LOOKING," SHE SAID. "HE HAD A REAL GOOD PERSONALITY -- HE WAS REAL FRIENDLY AND POPULAR. I THINK HE PLAYED FOOTBALL BECAUSE HE WAS KIND OF INVOLVED IN SPORTS." SHE ADDED: "HE WAS REALLY KIND OF QUIET, AND CERTAINLY WASN'T A TROUBLEMAKER. I DON'T THINK HE HAD ANY POLITICAL LEANINGS." UPI 03-30-81 06:20 PES UP151 RW ADD REAGAN-SHOT AN FBI SPOKESMAN SAID HINKLEY WAS BEING INTERVIEWED AND HIS ARRAIGNMENT MIGHT BE DELAYED UNTIL TUESDAY. "ALL THE INFORMATION WE HAVE NOW POINTS TO THE FACT THAT HE WAS THE ONLY ONE," THE FBI SPOKESMAN SAID. THE SPOKESMAN SAID FIVE OR SIX SHOTS WERE FIRED IN THE INCIDENT. UPI 03-30-81 06:31 PES UP155 R V BC-PRESIDENT 3-30 THE PRESIDENT'S ANNOUNCED APPOINTMENTS FOR TUESDAY: NONE. HE'S AT GWU HOSPITAL. UPI 03-30-81 06:39 PES UP156 R W (REAGAN-YOUNG) WASHINGTON (UPI) -- A FLORIDA CONGRESSMAN LEARNED THAT PRESIDENT REAGAN HAD BEEN SHOT TODAY EVEN BEFORE THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS OFFICE FOUND OUT THAT HE WAS WOUNDED. REP. C.W. "BILL" YOUNG, R-FLA., SAID A "FRIEND", WHO HE WOULD NOT NAME, CALLED HIM FROM GEORGE WASHINGTON HOSPITAL THIS AFTERNOON TO TELL HIM THAT "PRESIDENT REAGAN HAD COME IN (TO THE HOSPITAL) WITH SOME TYPE OF MEDICAL PROBLEM IN THE AREA OF THE LEFT CHEST." INITIAL WHITE HOUSE ANNOUNCEMENTS AND PRESS REPORTS INDICATED THE PRESIDENT WAS NOT HURT, ALTHOUGH THREE OTHER PEOPLE -- INCLUDING WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JIM BRADY -- WERE SHOT OUTSIDE THE WASHINGTON HILTON HOTEL. YOUNG SAID HIS SOURCE WAS NOT SURE WHETHER THE PROBLEM INVOLVED A HEART ATTACK OR AN "INJURY" TO THE LEFT CHEST. "I PLACED A CALL TO THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS OFFICE," HE SAID, TO CONFIRM THE REPORT. YOUNG WAS TOLD ABOUT THE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT, BUT AT THAT POINT THE WHITE HOUSE WAS NOT REPORTING THAT THE PRESIDENT WAS SHOT. "THEY CONFIRMED AN INCIDENT HAD HAPPENED AND THAT THE DETAILS WERE SKETCHY," YOUNG SAID. "THEY DID NOT SEEM AWARE" THAT THE PRESIDENT WAS WOUNDED, HE ADDED. THE FLORIDA CONGRESSMAN SAID WHILE WAS STILL ON THE PHONE WITH THE WHITE HOUSE, "NEW BULLETINS WERE COMING OVER THE RADIO AND TELEVISION" ANNOUNCING THAT REAGAN HAD BEEN SHOT. UPI 03-30-81 06:44 PES UP157 R W (REAGAN-KNIGHT) WASHINGTON (UPI) -- SECRET SERVICE DIRECTOR H. STUART KNIGHT SAID ONLY LAST WEEK THAT SINCE PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY WAS ASSINATED IN 1963 IMPROVEMENTS HAVE BEEN MADE IN PRESIDENTIAL PROTECTION MAKING SUCH AN OCCURANCE LESS LIKELY. IN AN INTERVIEW WITH UPI REPORTER CLAY F. RICHARDS, KNIGHT SAID ALL RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE WARREN COMMISSION PROBE OF KENNEDY'S ASSASSINATION WERE CARRIED OUT. KNIGHT DECLINED IN THE INTERVIEW TO GO INTO DETAIL ABOUT ALL THE CHANGES MADE. BUT HE SAID IMPROVED SECRET SERVICE PROCEDURES MADE IT MUCH LESS LIKELY A SNIPER COULD GET CLEAR SHOT AT A PRESIDENT AS KENNEDY'S ASSASSIN DID IN DALLAS. KNIGHT ALSO SAID THE AGENCY NOW WAS MORE LIKELY TO KNOW ABOUT A LEE HARVEY OSWALD IN ADVANCE OF A PRESIDENTIAL VISIT. THE SECRET SERVICE SAYS A PRESIDENT IS HARDEST TO PROTECT WHEN HE IS MAKING A WELL PUBLICIZED VISIT TO A LARGE ARENA WHERE HE IS EXPOSED TO THE PUBLIC. "THERE WAS A LOT OF TALK THAT PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S HABIT OF STOPPING AND JUMPING INTO CAMPAIGN CROWDS CAUSED US A LOT OF CONCERN, KNIGHT SAID IN THE INTERVIEW. "BUT ACTUALLY THEY CRUSED US LESS CONCERN BECAUSE THEY WEREN'T ANNOUNCED." BOTH BY DIRECT LETTERS AND THREATS, AND FROM INFORMATION RECEIVED FROM OTHER LAW ENFORCEMENT AND GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, THE SECRET SERVICE RECEIVES ABOUT 5,000 COMMUNICATIONS EACH MONTH THAT COULD BE INTERPRETED AS DANGEROUS TO AN INCUMBENT PRESIDENT. FROM THESE, IT KEEPS A GENERAL LIST OF ABOUT 20,000 PERSONS -- WHOSE THREAT MAY HAVE BEEN SOMETHING AS CASUAL AS AN OVERHEARD BARROOM OATH AGAINST THE PRESIDENT. THOSE NAMES ARE KEPT FOR FIVE YEARS AND IF NOTHING DEVELOPS, THE NAMES ARE EXPUNGED. MORE MORE UPI 03-30-81 06:50 PES UP158 R W (BUSH-ARRIVE)" WASHINGTON (UPI) -- VICE PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH ARRIVED AT ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE AT 6:30 P.M. EST WITH JIM WRIGHT, D-TEXAS, THE HOUSE DEMOCRATIC LEADER WHO SPENT THE DAY WITH HIM IN TEXAS BEFORE THEIR TRIP WAS CUT SHORT BY THE TRAGEDY. THE PLANE WAS GUIDED INTO A HANGAR, WHERE THOSE ABOARD WERE USHERED OFF AND WITHIN SIX MINUTES BUSH WAS HUSTLED ABOARD A HELICOPTER AND WHISKED TO THE WHITE HOUSE. "THIS IF THE FIRST TIME I'VE EVER SEEN HIM TAXI INTO A HANGAR,' # SAID ONE ONLOOKER, AIR FORCE SGT. KEVIN CONNALLY, NOTING THE EXTREME SECURITY PRECAUTIONS. "NORMALLY YOU CAN'T EVEN RUN AN ENGINE IN HERE. # UPI 03-30-81 06:51 PES UP159 R IN (REAGAN-KNIGHT) 1ST ADD UP157 INDIVIDUALS ARE PUT ON THIS LIST BECAUSE "AT ONE TIME OR ANOTHER THEY HAVE EXHIBITED AN INTEREST IN PEOPLE WE PROTECT THAT MIGHT BE REGARDED AS A THREAT," KNIGHT SAID. THERE IS A MORE SERIOUS LIST OF 400 NAMES -- PEOPLE THE SECRET SERVICE BELIEVESRRE A VERY SERIOUS THREAT TO THE PRESIDENT. THE SECRET SERVICE OR OTHER LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES KEEP TRACK OF THEM WHEN THE PRESIDENT TRAVELS, SOMETIMES EVEN DETAINING THEM. THOSE ON THE LIST OF 400 GET THERE BY A NUMBER OF FACTORS IN ADDITION TO THREATENING THE PRESIDENT, INCLUDING ACCESS TO WEAPONS AND A HISTORY OF MENTAL ILLNESS, KNIGHT SAID. "THE BEST WEAPON I HAVE IS TO KNOW WHAT SOMEONE IS GOING TO DO BEFOREHAND," SAID KNIGHT, ADDING: "ALTHOUGH THAT INVOLVES A NASTY WORD IN THIS TOWN -- INTELLIGENCE." PROPHETICALLY, KNIGHT SAID IN THE INTERVIEW THERE IS NO WAY THE SECRET SERVICE CAN GUARANTEE THE PRESIDENT'S SAFETY. BUT HE EXPRESSED CONFIDENCE HE HAD THE MONEY AND THE TOOLS TO DO THE JOB. WITH A BUDGET OF $175 MILLION H YEAR, THE SECRET SERVICE HAS ABOUT 3,600 EMPLOYES INCLUDING 1,550 SPECIAL AGENTS ASSIGNED TO PROTECTION. AN ADDITIONAL 800 UNIFORMED OFFICERS ARE AT THE WHITE HOUSE AND AT EMBASSIES AROUND WASHINGTON. IN ADDITION TO PROTECTING PRESIDENTS, THEIR FAMILES AND FAMILIES OF FORMER PRESIDENTS, THE SERVICE STILL HAS ITS ORIGINAL FUNCTION OF SEARCHING OUT COUNTERFEITERS. "NO BUREAUCRAT HAS AS BIG A BUDGET AS HE NEEDS," KNIGHT SAID IN THE INTERVIEW. "I FEEL FAIRLY CONFIDENT WE HAVE WHAT WE NEED, CONSIDERING THE BUDGET LIMITATIONS AND THE RIGHTS WE ALL ENJOY AS CITIZENS THAT WE DON'T WANT TO GIVE UP." UPI 03-30-81 06:57 PES = TO (REAGAN-STREET) KEY CAIL COLLINS) NEW YORK (UPI) -- THE EARLY-EVENING PAPERS, WITH HEADLINES ABOUT A SUBWAY HOMICIDE AND THE FATAL SHOOTING OF AN EAST SIDE DOORMAN, HAD JUST MADE WAY FOR THE "REAGAN SHOT" EDITIONS RS COMMUTERS HEADED TOWARD GRAND CENTRAL TERMINAL AND HOME TONIGHT. THE SHOOTING WAS CERTAINLY DISTURBING, THE HOMEWARD-BOUND WORKERS AGREED. BUT FEW PEOPLE IN NEW YORK EXPRESSED MUCH SHOCK AT THE NEWS THAT SOMEONE, EVEN THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN SHOT. "JUST ANOTHER DAILY OCCURRENCE," SAID JERRY DATTOLICO, 29, AS HE SAT ON R PILE OF SUITCASES. "WE'RE LIVING IN A SOCIETY THAT'S SO LAWLESS, IT'S JUST NO SURPRISE," SAID A 64-YEAR-OLD BUSINESSMAN. "WE HAVE A WHOLE GENERATION NOW THAT DOESN'T KNOW WHAT IT IS TO HAVE A PERCEABLE COUNTRY. VIOLENCE IS EXPECTED. "I REMEMBER WHEN IT WASN'T," HE SIGHED, AS BOARDING BEGAN FOR THE EXPRESS TRAIN TO BREWSTER. KAREN BROOKS WAS SHOWING A NEW LINE OF CLOTHING AT THE DESIGNERS COLLECTIVE WHEN SOMEONE CAME IN TO ANNOUNCE THAT REAGAN HAD BEEN SHOT. "SHE SAID IT VERY CASUALLY," MRS. BROOKS SAID, AS SHE AND HER HUSBAND WAITED FOR A TRAIN TO SCARSDALE. "IT'S BECOME VERY CASUAL.' TO MRS. BROOKS, HOWEVER, "SOMEHOW THE FASHIONS DIDN'T SEEM ALL THAT IMPORTANT" AFTER THE NEWS. HER HUSBAND STEPHEN, AN INSURANCE BROKER, WAS AT WORK WHEN HE HEARD THE NEWS. "INITIALLY, IT DIDN'T FAZE ME AT ALL," HE SAID. "I JUST WENT ON MY WAY -- I WAS WORKING ON THIS BIG CASE." A POLICE OFFICER STOOD EATING PEANUTS NEAR THE MAIN LOBBY, WRIGGLING UNCOMFORTABLY UNDER HIS BULLETPROOF VEST. THE OFFICER, WHO DECLINED TO GIVE HIS NAME, LEARNED OF THE SHOOTING AFTER HE LEFT COURT, WHERE THE TRIAL OF A MAN ACCUSED OF BREAKING HIS PARTNER'S HAND HAD JUST BEEN POSTPONED FOR THE THIRD TIME. "HE'LL BE BACK ON THE STREET BEFORE MY PARTNER WILL," THE OFFICER PREDICTED. "I'VE GOT TWO OF THESE VESTS NOW, AND TOMORROW I'M GETTING ONE FOR MY HEAD." WILLIAM RAFTER, 30, WAS LAID OFF AT WORK LAST WEEK, AND HEARD THE NEWS AS HE LEFT A JOB INTERVIEW. "THERE'S A THEORY THAT EVERY 20 YEARS A PRESIDENT DIES IN OFFICE," HE SAID. "I THOUGHT IF CARTER GOT BACK IN SOMETHING WOULD DEFINITELY HAPPEN. BUT REAGAN WAS SO POPULAR -- IT'S JUST WEIRD." JOHN DOYLE, A 21-YEAR-OLD COLLEGE STUDENT FROM QUEENS, CANCELED HIS MID-AFTERNOON TRAIN RESERVATION TO STAY IN FRONT OF THE TELEVISION, SWITCHING CHANNELS TO CATCH THE LATEST NEWS. "I WAS APPALLED, THIS REALLY BOTHERS ME," HE SAID. "AS USUAL, A LOT OF INNOCENT PEOPLE GOT HURT." BACK AT THE MAIN LOBBY, THE POLICE OFFICER SHIFTED UNDER THE WEIGHT OF HIS VEST AND WONDERED ABOUT THE MAN BEING HELD FOR REAGAN'S SHOOTING. "WE GOT SOME SICK PEOPLE HERE," # HE SAID. "A YOUNG GUY LIKE THAT OUGHT TO BE OUT ENTERTAINING HIMSELF WITH SOME WOMEN. AND HE'S GOT TO 30 AROUND SHOOTING SOMEBODY -- MESSING THIS COUNTRY UP." UPI 03-30-81 07:07 PES B W ADD REAGAN-SHOT WASHINGTON (UPI) -- PRESIDENT REAGAN IS OUT OF SURGERY AND HOSPITAL OFFICIALS SAID AT NO TIME WAS HE IN SERIOUS DANGER. UPI 03-30-81 07:40 PES UP162 20 (REAGAN-THOMAS) PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI) -- HELEN THOMAS, UPI WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT, CANCELED A SPEECH TO THREE RHODE ISLAND MEDIA GROUPS TODAY AND QUICKLY FLEW BACK TO WASHINGTON AFTER PRESIDENT REAGAN'S SHOOTING. MISS THOMAS ARRIVED IN IN PROVIDENCE JUST AS REAGAN'S SHOOTING WAS ANNOUNCED. SHE PLANNED TO SPEAK ABOUT THE REAGAN PRESIDENCY AT THE FORUM SPONSORED BY THE RHODE ISLAND PRESS CLUB, THE RHODE ISLAND PRESS WOMEN AND THE RHODE ISLAND NEWS PHOTOGRAPHERS. THE EVENT WAS POSTPONED. MISS THOMAS' PREPARED SPEECH, SCHEDULED FOR DELIVERY AT BRYANT COLLEGE, BEGAN: "I'M PLEASED TO BE HERE TONIGHT, BUT I ALWAYS LEAVE WASHINGTON WITH SOME TREPIDATION." AFTER CHECKING IN FOR HER RETURN FLIGHT AT T.F. GREEN STATE AIRPORT, MISS THOMAS SPENT 20 MINUTES ON THE PHONE WITH HER WASHINGTON OFFICE. SHE DICTATED LENGTHY MATERIAL ON THE PERSONALITY AND LIFESTYLE OF PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY AND THE HIGH ESTEEM IN WHICH THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS CORPS HELD HIM. UPI 03-30-81 07:28 PES UP168 U W ADD REAGAN-SHOT DOCTORS REMOVED A BULLET FROM REAGAN'S LEFT LUNG AND SAID THE OUTLOOK WAS "EXCELLENT." "HE AT NO TIME WAS IN ANY SERIOUS DANGER," SAID DR. DENNIS O'LEARY, HEAD OF CLINICAL SURGERY AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY AFTER A TEAM OF DOCTORS OPERATED ON THE PRESIDENT FOR TWO HOURS. HE DESCRIBED REMOVING THE BULLET AS A "RELATIVELY SIMPLE PROCEDURE." LEARY SAID A SINGLE BULLET ENTERED REAGAN'S LEFT CHEST, HIT A RIB AND "RICOCHETED" INTO HIS LEFT LUNG, WHICH COLLAPSED. THE DOCTOR SAID THE BULLET CAME WITHIN "SEVERAL INCHES" OF REAGAN'S HEART BUT WAS NOT REALLY NEAR ANY VITAL ORGAN. "HE IS IN STABLE CONDITION AND AWAKE," FOLLOWING THE. SURGERY, O'LEARY SAID. "HE WAS AT NO TIME IN ANY SERIOUS DANGER." HOSPITAL. BUT HE SAID HE DID NOT KNOW HOW LONG REAGAN WOULD BE IN THE BRADY, O'LEARY SAID, WAS IN "VERY CRITICAL CONDITION" FROM A HEAD WOUND THAT CAUSED "SUBSTANTIAL" BRAIN DAMAGE. UPI 03-30-81 07:54 PES UP169 R W WASHINGTON (DELAHANTY) (UPI) -- WASHINGTON POLICE TONIGHT SAID THAT OOFFICER THOMAS K. DELAHANTY, SHOT WHILE GUARDING PRESIDENT REAGAN, IS A 17-YEAR VETERAN OF THE FORCE AND A K-9 OFFICER ATTACHED TO DEPARTMENT'S THIRD DISTRICT IN NORTHWEST WASHINGTON. "HE IS NOW AT THE WASHINGTON HOSPITAL CENTER AND LISTED IN SERIOUS CONDITION," SAID DEPARTMENT SPOKESMAN JOSEPH GENTILE. "WE DO NOT KNOW THE EXACT EXTENT OF THE INJURY," HE SAID. UPI 03-30-81 07:56 PES UP170 U W ADD REAGAN-SHOT HE SAID THE BULLET PENETRATED THREE OR FOUR INCHES INTO THE CHEST AND WOULD NOT HAVE ENTERED THE LUNG IF IT HAD NOT HIT THE RIB FIRST "I THINK HE KNEW HE HAD BEEN SHOT," O'LEARY SAID. "I GATHER HE FELT A LITTLE LIGHT HEADED, BUT I GATHER HE WAS CRACKING JOKES AND WAS IN GOOD SPIRITS AT THE TIME." O'LEARY SAID THE BULLET WHICH ENTERED BRADY'S HEAD OVER THE RIGHT EYE PASSED THROUGH HIS BRAIN, AND ADDED THAT IF THE PRESS SECRETARY SURVIVES HIS WOUNDS IT IS LIKELY HE WILL SUFFER BRAIN DAMAGE. UPI 03-30-81 07:58 PES UP174 R W AM-REAGAN-HANDGUNS 3-30 BY ED ROGERS WASHINGTON (UPI) -- A SPOKESMAN FOR A PRO-GUN GROUP SAID MONDAY THE SHOOTING OF PRESIDENT REAGAN IS A "VERY SAD" INDICATION THAT GUN CONTROLS DO NOT WORK. BUT OTHERS CALLED FOR TOUGHER HANDGUN LAWS. "WE DEPLORE THIS ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT," SAID JOHN M. SNYDER, CHIEF LOBBYIST FOR THE CITIZENS COMMITTEE FOR THE RIGHT TO KEEP AND BEAR ARMS. "I HASTEN TO POINT OUT THAT IT OCCURRED IN THE JURISDICTION (WASHINGTON) WHICH HAS THE MOST RESTRICTIVE HANDGUN CONTROL LAWS IN THE UNITED STATES," HE SAID IN A STATEMENT. ON CAPITOL HILL, REP. PETER RODINO, D-N.J., CHAIRMAN OF THE HOUSE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE, SAID MONDAY HE WILL PUSH FOR A BAN ON "SATURDAY NIGHT SPECIALS" AND REQUIRE MORE DETAILED REPORTING OF GUN SALES. "IT IS SHOCKING THAT THE VIOLENCE THAT TERRORIZES OUR CITY DAILY HAS MADE ONE OF ITS VICTIMS OUR PRESIDENT, IN BROAD DAYLIGHT IN THE STREETS OF OUR CAPITAL," RODINO SAID. DONALD FRAHER, LEGISLATIVE DIRECTOR OF HANDGUN CONTROL INC., WHICH LOBBIES CONGRESS FOR GUN CONTROL LEGISLATION, SAID IN A STATEMENT, "WE DEPLORE THE ATTEMPT ON THE PRESIDENT'S LIFE AND BELIEVE IT POINTS OUT ONCE AGAIN THE NEED FOR HANDGUN CONTROL IN OUR COUNTRY." NELSON SHIELDS, CHAIRMAN OF HANDGUN CONTROL, SAID, "IT IS VIRTURLLY IMPOSSIBLE TO PROTECT THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES WITH 60 MILLION HANDGUNS IN CIRCULATION AND ANOTHER 2 MILLION FLOODING THE MARKET EVERY YEAR." SNYDER, WHOSE GROUP CHAMPIONS THE RIGHT TO CARRY HANDGUNS FOR SELF DEFENSE, SAID THAT IN THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, A PRIVATE CITIZEN CANNOT OBTAIN SUCH WEAPONS LEGALLY. "THE FACT THAT THIS HEINOUS ATTEMPT WAS MADE HERE UNDER THIS LAW IS A CLEAR, ALTHOUGH VERY SAD, INDICATION THAT SUCH LAWS DO NOT ACHIEVE A REDUCTION IN CRIMINAL VIOLENCE," SNYDER SAID. "RONALD REAGAN IS THE MOST PRO-GUN PRESIDENT IN MY LIFETIME,' HE ADDED. "SO 1, IN PARTICULAR, FEEL GREAT SADNESS THAT THIS ATTACK SHOULD HAVE OCCURRED." UPI 03-30-81 08:22 PES UP184 R W AM-NANCY 3-30 2ND ADD UP180 THE PRESS SECRETARY SAID MRS. REAGAN FIRST HEARD "THERE WAS A SHOOTING" FROM HER SECRET SERVICE AGENT, BUT DID NOT IMMEDIATELY KNOW HER HUSBAND HAD BEEN HIT. "SHE HAD JUST RETURNED TO THE WHITE HOUSE FROM A LUNCHEON," MS. PATTON SAID. "SHE LEARNED THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN SHOT AFTER SHE ARRIVED AT THE HOSPITAL." MRS. REAGAN LEFT THE WHITE HOUSE ABOUT 2:35 P.M. EST, MS. PATTON SAID, AND ARRIVED AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER FIVE MINUTES LATER. SHE ALSO SAID THE FIRST LADY TALKED WITH THE WIVES OF THE OTHER TWO VICTIMS TAKEN TO GEORGE WASHINGTON: PRESS SECRETARY JIM BRADY AND SECRET SERVICE AGENT TIMOTHY J. MCCARTHY, BOTH OF WHOM WERE WOUNDED. THE THIRD VICTIM, A WASHINGTON POLICE OFFICER, WAS TAKEN TO ANOTHER HOSPITAL. "SHE HAS SEEN BOTH MRS. BRADY AND MRS. MCCARTHY,' THE PRESS SECRETARY SAID. "IT WAS A PRIVATE MEETING IN AN OFFICE NEAR THE EMERGENCY ROOM." THE REAGANS' SON, RONALD PRESCOTT REAGAN, FLEW TO WASHINGTON AND IS WITH HIS MOTHER AT THE HOSPTIAL. MRS. REAGAN'S CHIEF OF STAFF, PETER MCCOY, IS KEEPING THE OTHER REAGAN CHILDREN INFORMED OF DEVELOPMENTS. UPI 03-30-81 09:05 PES UP185 U W AM-REAGAN CORRECT 3RDGRAF-PICKUP4THGRAF-4THLD 3-30 (ADDING JR. AND AGE) X X X WOUNDS. THE GUNMAN WHO FIRED SIX SHOTS AT THE PRESIDENT AND HIS PARTY WAS IDENTIFIED AS JOHN WARNOCK HINCKLEY JR., 25, OF EVERGREEN, COLO. HE WAS WRESTLED TO THE GROUND AND ARRESTED. HIS MOTIVES WERE UNKNOWN, BUT HE APPEARED TO HAVE ACTED ALONE ACCORDING TO THE SECRET SERVICE. PICKUP 4THGRAF: "I CAN UPI 03-30-81 09:06 PES UP186 U W AM-HINCKLEY 1STLD-2NDADD 3-30 X X X OCT. 7. JIM ROBINSON, AN ATTORNEY FOR HINCKLEY'S FATHER, JOHN W. HINCKLEY SR. OF EVERGREEN, COLO., ISSUED A STATEMENT FROM THE FAMILY THAT THE YOUNGER HINCKLEY "HAD BEEN UNDER PSYCHIATRIC CARE. HOWEVER, THE EVALUATIONS DID NOT ALERT ANYONE TO THE SERIOUSNESS OF HIS CONDITION." ROBINSON REFUSED TO ANSWER ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT THE NATURE OF HINCKLEY'S PRESENT OR PAST CONDITION, OR HIS TREATMENT. MORE UPI 03-30-81 09:08 PES AM-HINCKLEY 1STLD-3RDADD 3-30 X X TREATMENT. THE FBI SAID IT COULD NOT IMMEDIATELY CONFIRM OR DENY THAT HINCKLEY HAD BEEN ARRESTED IN NASHVILLE LAST FALL. BUT AIRPORT OFFICIALS SAID HE HAD BEEN ARRESTED TRYING TO BOARD AN AMERICAN BIRLINES FLIGHT, AND THE METAL DETECTOR WARNED AUTHORITIES OF THE GUNS IN THE SUITCASE. AIRPORT SECURITY POLICE SAID THERE WERE TWO 22-CALIBER REVOLVERS AND A .38-CALIBER HANDGUN IN THE SUITCASE. THE DESTINATION OF HIS INTENDED FLIGHT WAS NOT KNOWN. MORE UPI 03-30-81 09:10 PES UP188 UN AM-REAGAN 5THLD-PICKUP4THGRAF 3-30 (DETAILS ON REAGAN SHOOTING SUSPECT) BY DEAN REYNOLDS WASHINGTON (UPI) -- PRESIDENT REAGAN WAS SHOT AT CLOSE RANGE IN AN ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT MONDAY AND UNDERWENT SURGERY TO REMOVE A BULLET FROM HIS LEFT LUNG "SEVERAL INCHES" FROM HIS HEART. DOCTORS SAID HIS LIFE WAS NEVER IN DANGER AND THE OUTLOOK WAS "EXCELLENT." REAGAN'S PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY, CAUGHT IN THE GUNFIRE, WAS FIGHTING FOR HIS LIFE AND WAS IN "EXTREMELY CRITICAL" CONDITION AFTER SUFFERING SERIOUS BRAIN DAMAGE FROM A HEAD WOUND. A SECRET SERVICE AGENT AND A WASHINGTON POLICE OFFICER ALSO SUFFERED SERIOUS GUNSHOT WOUNDS. THE SECRET SERVICE IDENTIFIED THE GUNMAN WHO FIRED SIX SHOTS AT THE PRESIDENT AND HIS PARTY AS JOHN W. "JACK" HINCKLEY JR., 25, OF EVERGREEN, COLO. HE WAS CHARGED WITH TRYING TO ASSASSINATE A PRESIDENT. HIS MOTIVES WERE UNKNOWN, BUT HE APPEARED TO HAVE ACTED ALONE ACCORDING TO THE SECRET SERVICE. AN ATTORNEY FOR HINCKLEY'S FAMILY SAID HE HAD A HISTORY OF PSYCHIATRIC CARE AND FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS SAID HE WAS ARRESTED IN NASHVILLE LAST FALL FOR CARRYING FIREARMS NEAR THE TIME BOTH PRESIDENT CARTER AND REAGAN WERE TO MAKE CAMPAIGN APPEARANCES IN TENNESSEE. WILLIAM BRISSEY, CAPTAIN OF THE NASHVILLE, TENN., AIRPORT SECURITY POLICE, SAID HINCKLEY HAD BEEN ARRESTED LAST OCT. 9 FOR TRYING TO BOARD AN AIRLINE WITH TWO .22 CALIBER AND ONE .38 CALIBER HANDGUN AND 50 ROUNDS OF AMMUNITION IN A SUITCASE. PRESIDENT CARTER WAS IN NASHVILLE THAT DAY, AND REAGAN HAD BEEN SCHEDULED TO BE THERE TWO DAYS EARLIER, BUT CANCELLED HIS APPEARANCE. PICKUP 4THGRAF: "I CAN UPI 03-30-81 09:21 PES UP189 U W RM-HINCKLEY 1STLD-4THADD 3-30 X X X NOT KNOWN. HINCKLEY WAS FINED, TURNED LOOSE AND THE GUNS WERE CONFISCATED. IT COULD NOT BE LEARNED WHETHER HIS IDENTITY WAS PLACED IN THE SECRET SERVICE'S SPECIAL FILE OF INDIVIDUALS BELIEVED TO BE THREATS TO THE SAFETY OF THE PRESIDENT. METROPOLITAN POLICE SPOKESMAN JOSEPH GENTILE SAID HINCKLEY WAS CHARGED MONDAY WITH ATTEMPTING TO ASSASSINATE A PRESIDENT AND ASSAULT WITH INTENT TO KILL A POLICE OFFICER. OTHER CHARGES WERE PENDING, HE SAID. IF CONVICTED, HE COULD BE SENTENCED TO LIFE IN PRISON. AN FBI SPOKESMAN SAID HINCKLEY WAS INTERVIEWED AT THE FBI'S WASHINGTON FIELD OFFICE LATE MONDAY AFTERNOON AND HIS ARRAIGNMENT MIGHT BE DELAYED UNTIL TUESDAY. "ALL THE INFORMATION WE HAVE NOW POINTS TO THE FACT THAT HE WAS THE ONLY ONE," THE FBI SPOKESMAN SAID. FIVE OR SIX SHOTS WERE FIRED AT REAGAN, AS HE WALKED OUT OF THE WASHINGTON HILTON HOTEL, BY A WHITE MALE IN HIS 20S, AUTHORITIES SAID. THE ASSAILANT HIT REAGAN IN THE CHEST, WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JIM BRADY IN THE HEAD, AND ALSO WOUNDED A SECRET SERVICE AGENT AND A POLICE OFFICER. A MAN LATER IDENTIFIED AS HINCKLEY WAS WRESTLED TO THE GROUND BY SECRET SERVICE AGENTS AND POLICE OFFICERS AND INITIALLY TAKEN TO METROPOLITAN POLICE HEADQUARTERS FOR QUESTIONING, BEFORE BEING TRANSFERRED TO THE FBI FIELD OFFICE. THE ASSAILANT'S WEAPON WAS A .22-CALIBER REVOLVER, WHICH WAS RECOVERED AT THE SCENE AND TURNED OVER TO THE FBI, AUTHORITIES SAID. SECRET SERVICE AGENTS AND LOCAL LAW OFFICERS QUICKLY SEALED OFF THE PLUSH HOME OF HINCKLEY'S PARENTS IN EVERGREEN, A WELL-TO-DO COMMUNITY IN THE PINE-COVERED FOOTHILLS OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS ABOUT 25 MILES SOUTHWEST OF DENVER. MORE UPI 03-30-81 09:27 PES UP190 R VAM-REAGAN-ADVISORY 3-30 EDITORS: WE ARE PREPARING A 6TH LEAD AM-REAGAN THAT WILL WRAP UP THE DAY'S EVENTS: IT WILL RUN ABOUT 2,000 IN THREE TAKES AND WILL BEGIN MOVING ON THIS WIRE IN ABOUT A HALF HOUR. UPI WASHINGTON UPI 03-30-81 09:28 PES AM-REAGAN 6THLD-WRITETHRU 3TAKES 3-30"" (WRAPPING UP DAY'S EVENTS) URGENT BY DEAN REYNOLDS WASHINGTON (UPI) -- A YOUNG GUNMAN AMBUSHED PRESIDENT REAGAN AT CLOSE RANGE MONDAY AND FIRED HALF-DOZEN SHOTS -- ONE OF THEM PIERCING THE PRESIDENT'S LUNG INCHES FROM HIS HEART. DOCTORS REMOVED THE BULLET IN A TWO-HOUR OPERATION AND SAID REAGAN WOULD RECOVER. THE WOULD-BE ASSASSIN, IDENTIFIED AS JOHN WARNOCK HINCKLEY JR., 25, OF EVERGREEN, COLO., WAS TACKLED AND PINNED TO THE PAVEMENT, WHISKED AWAY IN A SQUAD CAR AND CHARGED WITH ATTEMPTED MURDER. OFFICIALS SAID THAT LAST FALL DURING THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN HINCKLEY HAD BEEN ARRESTED FOR CARRYING THREE GUNS. THE SHOTS OUTSIDE A WASHINGTON HOTEL, CRACKLING THROUGH A DISMAL RAINFALL LIKE BALLOONS BURSTING AT A CHILD'S BIRTHDAY PARTY, GRAVELY WOUNDED PRESIDENTIAL PRESS SECRETARY JAMES BRADY AND LEFT A SECRET SERVICE AGENT AND A POLICE OFFICER IN SERIOUS CONDITION. THE SHOOTING STUNNED THE WORLD AND A NATION WHOSE CITIZENS SEEM UNABLE TO SHAKE THE STIGMA OF SEEMINGLY MINDLESS MURDER OF PUBLIC FIGURES. SEN. EDWARD M. KENNEDY, WHO BURIED TWO ASSASSINATED BROTHERS INCLUDING THE LAST PRESIDENT SHOT, DEPLORED THE INCIDENT: "VIOLENCE AND HATRED ARE ALIEN TO EVERYTHING THIS COUNTRY IS ABOUT. WITH OUR PRAYERS MUST GO OUR RESOLUTION TO RID OUR SOCIETY OF VIOLENCE AND ITS CAUSE." BUT REAGAN HIMSELF TOOK THE EVENT IN STRIDE, JOKING WITH BYSTANDERS AS HE WALKED INTO THE HOSPITAL UNDER HIS OWN POWER. AT 8:50 P.M. HE HANDED DOCTORS IN THE RECOVERY ROOM A HAND WRITTEN NOTE PARAPHRASING W.C. FIELDS: "ALL IN ALL, I'D RATHER BE IN PHILADELPHIA." DOCTORS AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL SAID THE 70-YEAR-OLD REAGAN IS AN EXCELLENT PHYSICAL SPECIMEN WITH THE BODY OF A YOUNG MAN AND HIS SURVIVAL NEVER WAS IN DOUBT. THE PROGNOSIS FOR COMPLETE RECOVERY IS "EXCELLENT," AND REAGAN SHOULD BE ABLE TO RESUME PRESIDENTIAL DUTIES TUESDAY MORNING FROM HIS HOSPITAL BED. AND VICE PRESIDENT GEORGE BUSH, ORDERED BACK TO WASHINGTON FROM TEXAS, SAID "I CAN REASSURE THIS NATION AND A WATCHING WORLD THAT THIS NATION IS FUNCTIONING FULLY AND NORMALLY." THE STUNNING MURDER ATTEMPT OCCURRED OUTSIDE THE SPRAWLING WASHINGTON HILTON HOTEL, ONE MILE FROM THE WHITE HOUSE, WHERE REAGAN HAD JUST DELIVERED A SPEECH TO A UNION CONVENTION. WAVING AND SMILING, REAGAN NEARED THE BULLETPROOF PRESIDENTIAL LIMOUSINE WHEN THE GUNFIRE CRACKLED. THE GRIN ON REAGAN'S FACE TURNED TO FROZEN HORROR AS A SECRET SERVICE AGENT SHOVED HIM INTO THE CAR. PANDEMONIUM ERUPTED. BYSTANDERS SCREAMED IN HORROR. GUNS WERE DRAWN IN AN INSTANT. HINCKLEY WAS BURIED IMMEDIATELY UNDER A MASS OF AGENTS. AND THE BLOODY BODIES OF BRADY, SECRET SERVICE AGENT TIMOTHY MCCARTHY AND DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA POLICE OFFICER THOMAS DELAHANTY WERE SPRAWLED ON THE RAINSWEPT PAVEMENT. AN ATTORNEY FOR HIS FAMILY SAID HINCKLEY HAD A HISTORY OF PSYCHIATRIC CARE. FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICIALS SAID HE WAS BRRESTED IN NASHVILLE FOR CARRYING FIREARMS NEAR THE TIME BOTH THEN-PRESIDENT CARTER AND REAGAN WERE TO MAKE CAMPAIGN APPEARANCES IN TENNESSEE. WILLIAM BRISSEY, CAPTAIN OF THE NASHVILLE, TENN., AIRPORT SECURITY POLICE, SAID HINCKLEY HAD BEEN ARRESTED OCT. 9 FOR TRYING TO BOARD AN BIRLINER WITH THREE HANDGUNS AND 50 ROUNDS OF AMMUNITION IN A SUITCASE. THERE WAS NO IMMEDIATE INDICATION HOW A PERSON ONCE SO DETAINED BY AUTHORITIES COULD HAVE PLACED HIMSELF -- WITHOUT DETECTION AND CARRYING A .22 CALIBER HANDGUN -- 10 FEET FROM REAGAN. BRADY'S PROGNOSIS WAS GRIM. DOCTORS SAID THE BULLET HAD ENTERED HIS SKULL OVER HIS RIGHT EYE AND PASSED THROUGH HIS BRAIN, AND DR. DENNIS O'LEARY SAID EVEN IF THE 40-YEAR-OLD PRESS SECRETARY LIVES, PERMANENT BRAIN DAMAGE IS LIKELY. MORE UPI 03-30-81 10:03 PES UP197 R A AM-REAGAN-BUSH 1STLD-WRITETHRU 3-30 1ST ADD UP 195 "OBVIOUSLY, HE WAS STUNNED. BUT HE WAS TOTALLY IN CONTROL OF HIMSELF AND COMPLETELY CALM THROUGHOUT ALL OF IT," SAID WRIGHT. "THE VICE PRESIDENT DEMONSTRATED COMPLETE COMMAND OF HIS EMOTIONS. THERE WAS NO LACK OF CONTROL, THERE WAS NO INDECISION AT ALL." SHIRLEY GREEN, BUSH'S DEPUTY PRESS SECRETARY, SAID THE VICE PRESIDENT HEARD THE NEWS OF THE SHOOTINGS WHEN HIS PLANE WAS ON THE RUNWAY AT FORT WORTH, TEXAS, AFTER HE HAD GIVEN A SPEECH TO THE SOUTHWESTERN CATTLEMEN'S ASSOCIATION. HE WAS ON HIS WAY TO AUSTIN TO ADDRESS THE TEXAS LEGISLATURE WHEN THE NEWS CAME THAT SHOTS HAD BEEN FIRED AT THE PRESIDENT. HIS PLANE LANDED IN AUSTIN BRIEFLY FOR REFUELING AND THEN HEADED FOR WASHINGTON. THE AIR FORCE JET WAS GUIDED INTO A HANGAR AND THOSE ABOARD WERE USHERED OFF. WITHIN SIX MINUTES, BUSH WAS HUSTLED ABOARD A HELICOPTER AND ARRIVED AT THE WHITE HOUSE ABOUT 7 P.M. EST. "THIS IS THE FIRST TIME I'VE EVER SEEN HIM TAXI INTO A HANGAR,' SAID ONE ONLOOKER, AIR FORCE SGT. KEVIN CONNALLY, NOTING THE EXTREME SECURITY PRECAUTIONS. "NORMALLY YOU CAN'T EVEN RUN AN ENGINE IN HERE." LAST WEEK, BUSH WAS DESIGNATED BY REAGAN TO HEAD THE ADMINISTRATION'S "CRISIS MANAGEMENT" TEAM IN THE EVENT OF A CRISIS, A DECISION THAT INITIALLY UPSET SECRETARY OF STATE ALEXANDER HAIG. HAIG TOLD REPORTERS MONDAY, "CRISIS MANAGEMENT IS IN EFFECT," WITH HIM IN CHARGE IN BUSH'S ABSENCE. WRIGHT SAID HE UNDERSTOOD BUSH SPOKE WITH HAIG BY TELEPHONE FROM ABOARD THE PLANE. IN WASHINGTON, HAIG TOLD REPORTERS THAT IN THE RBSENCE OF BUSH, HE HAD TAKEN CONTROL OF THE ADMINISTRATION. "AS OF NOW, I AM IN CONTROL HERE IN THE WHITE HOUSE PENDING RETURN OF THE VICE PRESIDENT, AND IN CLOSE TOUCH WITH HIM. IF SOMETHING CAME UP, I WOULD CHECK WITH HIM, OF COURSE," HRIG SAID. UPI 03-30-81 10:09 PES "P198 R W AM-REAGAN-JOKE 3-30 WASHINGTON (UPI) -- PRESIDENT REAGAN, IN THE RECOVERY ROOM FOLLOWING SURGERY TO REMOVE A BULLET IN HIS LUNG LATE WEDNESDAY, COULD NOT RESIST MAKING A JOKE. AS HE EMERGED FROM THE ANESTHESIA HE COULD NOT SPEAK BECAUSE OF THE TUBES IN HIS MOUTH. SO HE GAVE THE ATTENDANTS A HANDWRITTEN NOTE. IT SAID: "ALL IN ALL, I'D RATHER BE IN PHILADELPHIA. ii UPI 03-30-81 10:10 PES -Nancy learns how to live with peril In a compelling article excerpted from her kidnap me and send Ronnie my head if he autobiography, Nancy Reagan remembers an- wouldn't agree to release certain individuals other assassination attempt on her husband's from prison. life and how she has come to terms with the Later, in 1976, right after Ronnie an- danger she and her family face in the public nounced his intention to run for president in eye. She also comments on today's morality Washington, we flew to Miami. We were on a and why she and the president firmly advo- platform, and a man called out "Hi, Dutch- cate the death penalty. glad to see you." Anytime anyone says By Nancy Reagan with Bill Libby "Dutch" we know he's from the Midwest, Los Angeles Times Special where Ronnie was once a sports announcer The families of men in power live in a and used that nickname. Ronnie recognized fishbowl. Some of the pressures placed on him and said, "Hi, I'll be down to see you your man press you, too, and you have to be afterward." strong to stand them. I had to learn to live AS A CANDIDATE, Ronnie had just been with the thought and possibility of danger. joined by the Secret Service men. They had But you take all the precautions you can, and told him to turn left when he came down then put faith in God and go about your daily from the platform. Instead, he turned right to life. If you don't, you can't function. see his old friend. I followed behind "Tom- During the time in 1968 when Ronnie was my" Thomas, our Florida chairman. We had a favorite-son candidate, Secret Service gone only a few steps when I heard Tommy agents had been assigned to us as they had to yell, "What the hell do you think you're several others after the tragic assassination of doing?" And he plunged into the crowd. It turned out that he had spotted a young Chicago Sun-Times, Wednesday, April 1, 1981 Robert Kennedy. They were wonderful men, and we became close friends with them. man with a gun. Tommy is a tall, large man, One night we were in bed when we heard but he was very courageous to act as he did. a sound that Ronnie said was a shot. He got The Secret Service moved in quickly, but it up, put on a robe, and went out in the hall. A took a lot of effort to subdue this 20-year-old, young Secret Service man carrying a shotgun who was very strong. was on the stairs and said very politely, When they took the gun away from the "Governor, would you mind not getting In young man, it turned out to be a toy. But it front of any windows." certainly looked real, and our emotions were IT SEEMS THAT one of the agents saw certainly real. Isn't it a shame what two men trying to light a Molotov cocktail we've come to this in our country, or in the- beneath our windows. The agent got off one world for that matter? shot-the one we'd heard-but didn't dare For a long time I've thought about the fire again as the men ran to a car and took absence of courage, the decline of standards, off. They left the unlighted firebomb behind. the loss of values, and the disappearance of Ronnie, in discussing the incident with the quality that seem to be afflicting our country. press, described the shot that was fired as a WHEN ALEXANDER Solzhenitsyn won the warning shot. Later, the agent told him, Nobel Prize, he said, "One word of truth shall "Governor, we don't fire warning shots. I just outweigh the whole world." One word of missed, and I couldn't fire again because of all truth that remains constant despite efforts to the houses around here." erase it from the language is morality-and I I've never asked about threats on our lives. mean It in the broadest sense. Morality is a I don't know how many there have been and word whose meaning can provide us an I don't want to know. I always knew some- anchor in the worst storms and one I believe thing was brewing, though, because there we should try to instill in our children. would suddenly be more security men around Human beings need moral standards to than usual. The only incident I was made guide them. Society needs them to keep it aware of-accidentally-was one Lheard from flying apart. Moral standards evolve, of about on TV. It was a threat against me course. They're not fixed in the stars. We - personally, and I must say that it rattled me. It rattled Ronnie even more. The plot was to need such standards because they encourage the most important asset of civilized people- resident wielding a toy gun. The incident convinced Mrs. Reagan of the need to EARLY IN THE 1976 CAMPAIGN, the Reagons encountered a prankster follow Secret Service security procedures. In this photo, a cro surrounds the Reagans while they compaigned in New Hampshire. (A 7-D Saturday, March 6, 1982 Philadelphia Inquirer Associated Press Actor Don Williams will portray President Reagan in some scenes of the re-enacted assassination attempt Reagan shooting is dramatized The President will play himself in a brief TV spot Associated Press drama - in which the cast in- hospital. cludes the same doctors and blood donation is. WASHINGTON - President The television show is co-pro- Reagan has resumed his acting nurses who treated Reagan and duced by the hospital and televi- A spokesman for WJLA said its career, appearing briefly as him- the three others who were sion station WJLA. The station show was unprecedented in that self im a television show about wounded in the assassination said there were no plans to air it is the first time a major nation- the assassination attempt in attempt. the show elsewhere. al event has been recreated using which he was shot and wounded. An actor portrays Reagan in many of the actual participants. The program will air in Washing- various hospital scenes, but in During the filming of the The film will be followed by a 30- ton on March 30, the first anni- one segment, three of the-George White House passage, Reagan minute discussion led by David versary of the event. Washington University Hospital expressed deep thanks to the Schoumacher, a news anchor- surgeons talk with the real Presi- surgeons who worked on him, man at the station, with George The program, "The Saving of dent at the real White House. It is Drs. Ben Aaron, David Gens and Reedy, press secretary to former the President," is being de- a re-enactment of the "house Paul Columbani. He remarks that President Lyndon B. Johnson, scribed as a "docudrama" - a call" the doctors made after the he now has "firsthand knowl- and Sam Donaldson, ABC's White combination of documentary and President's 12-day stay at the edge of what a lifesaving thing" a House correspondent. N070 RW REAGAN ACTS AGAIN WASHINGTON (AP) -- PRESIDENT REAGAN HAS RESUMED HIS ACTING CAREER, APPEARING BRIEFLY AS HIMSELF IN A TELEVISION SHOW ABOUT THE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT IN WHICH HE WAS SHOT AND WOUNDED. THE PROGRAM WILL AIR IN WASHINGTON MARCH 30, THE FIRST ANNIVERSARY OF THE EVENT. THE PROGRAM, ''THE SAVING OF THE PRESIDENT,'' IS BILLED AS R DOCU-DRAMA IN WHICH THE CAST INCLUDES THE SAME DOCTORS AND NURSES RESPONSIBLE FOR SAVING THE LIVES OF THE PRESIDENT AND THE THREE OTHER WOUNDED. AN ACTOR PORTRAYS REAGAN IN VARIOUS HOSPITAL SCENES, BUT IN ONE SEGMENT, THREE OF THE GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL SURGEONS TALK WITH THE REAL PRESIDENT AT THE REAL WHITE HOUSE. IT IS A RE-ENACTMENT OF THE ''HOUSE CALL'' THE DOCTORS MADE AFTER THE PRESIDENT'S 12-DAY STAY AT THE HOSPITAL, THE TELEVISON SHOW IS CO-PRODUCED BY THE HOSPITAL AND TELEVISION STATION WJLA. THE STATION SAID THERE WERE NO PLANS TO AIR THE SHOW ELSEWHERE. DURING FILMING OF THE WHITE HOUSE PASSAGE, REAGAN EXPRESSED DEEP THANKS TO THE SURGEONS WHO WORKED ON HIM, DRS. BEN AARON, DAVID GENS AND PAUL COLUMBANI. HE REMARKS THAT HE NOW HAS ''FIRST-HAND KNOWLEDGE OF WHAT R LIFE-SAVING THING'' A BLOOD DONATION IS. WJLA SAYS ITS SHOW IS UNPRECEDENTED IN THAT IT IS THE FIRST TIME A MAJOR NATIONAL EVENT HAS BEEN RECREATED USING LARGE NUMBERS OF THE ACTUAL PARTICIPANTS. THE HALF-HOUR FILM WILL BE FOLLOWED BY A 30-MINUTE DISCUSSION LED BY DAVID SCHOUMACHER, A NEWS ANCHORMAN AT THE STATION, WITH GEORGE REEDY, PRESS SECRETARY TO FORMER PRESIDENT LYNDON B. JOHNSON, AND SAM DONALDSON, ABC'S WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT. AP-WX-03-05-82 1403EST N158 RA REAGAN-CALIF LOS ANGELES (AP) PRESIDENT REAGAN'S FAMILY SECLUDED THEMSELVES MONDAY AMID TIGHT SECRET SERVICE SECURITY AS FRIENDS SAID THEY WERE SHOCKED BY THE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT OUTSIDE R WASHINGTON, D.C., HOTEL. "I FELT COMPLETE DISBELIEF AND SHOCK,'' THE PRESIDENT'S 72-YEAR-OLD BROTHER, NEIL, SAID OUTSIDE HIS HOME IN RANCHO SANTA FE, NEAR SAN DIEGO. THE PRESIDENT'S 39-YEAR-OLD ACTRESS-DAUGHTER- MAUREEN, WAS "IN A COMPLETE STATE OF SHOCK, SAID A SPOKESMAN FOR KABC RADIO IN LOS ANGELES, WHEN SHE CO-HOSTS R TALK SHOW. BUT KABC SAID SHE WAS 'CONFIDENT AND HOPEFUL' HER FATHER WOULD RECOVER. "WE HAVE TALKED TO MAUREEN'S SECRETARY, AND SHE WILL BE HEADING OUT VERY SHORTLY FOR WASHINGTON,' THE SPOKESMAN SAID. MICHAEL REAGAN, 35, THE PRESIDENT'S ELDEST SON, WAS SECLUDED IN HIS SUBURBAN SHERMAN OAKS HOME, WHICH WAS CORDONED OFF BY SECRET SERVICE AGENTS. IN LINCOLN, NEB., REAGAN'S YOUNGEST SON, RON, LEFT A DANCE TOUR WITH THE JOFFREY II BALLET AND, WITH HIS WIFE, DORIA, BOARDED A PRIVATE JET FOR WASHINGTON. RON REAGAN, 23, DIDN'T REPLY TO REPORTERS' QUESTIONS AS HE AND HIS WIFE RUSHED FROM THEIR HOTEL TO A WRITING CAR. IN SACRAMENTO, GOV. EDMUND BROWN JR. SAID THE SHOOTING ''IS AN OUTRAGE. IT'S JUST ANOTHER SYMPTOM OF THINGS THAT HAVE TO BE STOPPED IN THIS SOCIETY. " "MY HEART GOES OUT TO MRS. REAGAN. I JUST HOPE EVERYTHING IS ALL RIGHT,' SAID BROWN, WHO MADE A FALTERING RUN FOR THE DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINATION LAST YEAR. ACTOR BOB HOPE, WHO APPEARED IN A NUMBER OF MOVIES WITH REAGAN AND ACTIVELY CAMPAIGNED FOR HIM, SAID FROM HIS HOME IN THE LOS ANGELES SUBURB OF TOLUCA LAKE, ''THE FIRST I KNEW, A FRIEND CALLED ME UP AND SAID 'TURN ON TELEVISION. THE PRESIDENT HAS BEEN SHOT AT.' SINGER FRANK SINATRA SAID HE WAS ''TOO OVERCOME BY THE SHOCKING SITUATION TO TALK ABOUT IT,'' SAID SINATRA PUBLICIST LEE SOLTERS. SINATRA HAS BEEN PERFORMING AT CAESARS PALACE IN LAS VEGAS. NEIL REAGAN SAID HE WAS HAVING LUNCH AT A CLUB WHEN "A PERSON CAME IN AND SAID SOMEONE HAD SHOT AT THE PRESIDENT. ... A FEW MINUTES LATER, ANOTHER PERSON SAID THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN HIT. AT THAT POINT I BROKE DOWN AND BEGAN TO CRY. "I EXPECTED SOMETHING LIKE THIS TO COME,' HE ADDED. ''IT'S THE WAY SOCIETY IS TODAY.' BUT HE ADDED: "MY BROTHER IS A PRETTY TOUGH FELLA. I EXPECT HE WILL GET UP FROM THIS AND GO BACK TO WORK. " AP-WX-03-30-81 1940EST N072 RA REAGAN-RANCH SANTA BARBARA, CALIF. (AP) -- LEE CLEARWATER, RANCH FOREMAN AND WOODCUTTING COMPANION TO PRESIDENT REAGAN, SAYS HE PLANS TO TELL HIS BOSS TO ''COME BACK WHERE YOU BELONG, ;; TO THE SECLUSION AND SAFETY OF THE RANCH. ''COME BACK HERE. WE LOVE YOU. WE'RE NOT GOING TO SHOOT YOU,'' CLEARWATER SAID HE WOULD TELL REAGAN AS SO ON AS HE HAS RECOVERED ENOUGH FROM MONDAY'S ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT TO ACCEPT TELEPHONE CALLS. CLEARWATER WAS REACHED BY TELEPHONE LATE MONDAY NIGHT AT REAGAN'S RANCHO DEL CIELO, 30 MILES NORTHWEST OF SANTA BARBARA. THE FOREMAN SAID HE WAS NOT SURPRISED THAT DOCTORS FELT THE 70-YEAR-OLD REAGAN'S EXCELLENT PHYSICAL CONDITION WAS A FACTOR IN HIS SURVIVING THE BULLET WOUND AND TWO HOURS OF CHEST AND LUNG SURGERY. "I COULD HAVE TOLD THEM THAT. HE'S JUST A KID COMPARED TO YOU AND ME, ; SAID CLEARWATER, WHO IS IN HIS 60S. THE FOREMAN SAID HE HAD LAST TALKED TO REAGAN ABOUT 10 DAYS AGO, AND THE PRESIDENT SAID HE HAD HEARD FROM THE SECRET SERVICE THAT R STRONG STORM BROUGHT AN 8- TO 9-INCH SNOWFALL TO THE MOUNTAINTOP RANCH. ''LORD, LEE, I SURE DO MISS IT," CLEARWATER SAID REAGAN TOLD HIM. THE STORM ALSO BROUGHT DOWN MANY OAK TREES AT THE RANCH. "I'M GOING TO TELL HIM I'M SAVING ALL THE WOOD FOR HIM, CLEARWATER SAID. "AND WHEN WE GO OUT AND CUT WOOD, WE'LL NEVER GET IT CUT IN OUR LIFETIME. " AP-WX-03-31-81 1345EST N126 RV R VBX RD99 R VBX ADVISORY THE NATIONAL SHRINE OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION WILL HAVE A SPECIAL MASS TO PRAY FOR THE RECOVERY OF PRESIDENT REAGAN AND THE OTHERS SHOT IN MONDAY'S ATTACK ON TUESDAY, MARCH 31. TIME: 12 NOON AP-WX-03-30-81 1717EST N127 BW BRADY, BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AP) -- R SPOKESMAN FOR THE SENATE REPUBLICAN LEADER SAID TODAY THAT WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY JAMES S. BRADY HAD DIED OF R BULLET WOUND SUFFERED IN AN ABORTIVE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT AIMED AT PRESIDENT REAGAN. AP-WX-03-30-81 1719EST N128 UA REAGAN-GUNSHOTS REACTION BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS SHOCK, SADNESS AND ANGER GREETED THE SHOOTING MONDAY OF PRESIDENT REAGAN. ''TODAY'S EVENTS ARE A CHILLING REMINDER THAT IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO ASSURE THE SAFETY OF A PUBLIC FIGURE,' SAID DETROIT MAYOR COLEMAN YOUNG. IN OHIO, GOV. JAMES A. RHODES SAID THE REPORTS OF THE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT IN WASHINGTON IN WHICH REAGAN AND THREE OTHERS WERE WOUNDED ''SHOCKED ME AS I KNOW THEY HAVE SHOCKED EVERY AMERICAN BUST IT AP-WX-03-30-81 1720EST N132 RW REAGAN-SENATE REAX WASHINGTON (AP) THE SENATE HALTED LEGISLATIVE BUSINESS MONDAY AS SHOCKED LEGISLATORS RECEIVED NEWS THAT PRESIDENT REAGAN HAD BEEN WOUNDED. SEN. CLAIBORNE PELL, D-R.I.: SAID THE ''GENERAL ATMOSPHERE OF ALL OF US IS ONE OF SHOCK AND HORROR.'' HE SAID NEWS OF THE 1963 ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT JOHN F. KENNEDY SEEMED ''LIKE ONLY A MONTH AGO.'' SHORTLY AFTER NEWS ORGANIZATIONS REPORTED THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN WOUNDED, SENATE MAJORITY LEADER HOWARD H. BAKER JR. RECESSED THE SENATE, CITING THE ''GRAVITY'' OF THE SITUATION. THE HOUSE HAD ALREADY FINISHED ITS BUSINESS FOR THE DAY BEFORE THE PRESIDENT WAS SHOT. HOUSE SPEAKER THOMAS P. O'NEILL, D-MASS., WHO IS IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL LINE OF SUCCESSION TO THE PRESIDENT IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE VICE PRESIDENT, WAS IN A MEETING IN HIS OFFICE WHEN NOTIFIED OF THE SHOOTING. BAKER TOLD A HUSHED CHAMBER THAT REAGAN HAD BEEN WOUNDED. SEN. ALAN CRANSTON, D-CALIF., THE ASSISTANT DEMOCRATIC LEADER OF THE SENATE, SAID HE WAS CHATTING WITH SEN. S.I. HAYAKAWA, R-CALIF., WHEN SEN. J. JAMES EXON, D-NEB., WALKED BY AND SAID THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN SHOT AT BUT APPARENTLY NOT HIT. "IT IS DEEPLY TRAGIC FOR PRESIDENT REAGAN, FOR (PRESS SECRETARY) JIM BRADY AND FOR THE OTHER TWO WHO SUSTAINED WOUNDS THAT THIS TERRIBLE EVENT OCCURRED,' CRANSTON SAID. "IT IS ALSO PROFOUNDLY TRAGIC FOR OUR COUNTRY THAT THESE EVENTS OCCUR: THAT THEY CAN EFFECT THE HIGHEST PEOPLE IN THE LAND, TO THE LOWEST, PEOPLE SIMPLY WALKING THE STREETS. WE MUST FIND A WAY TO STEM THE VIOLENCE THAT SWEEPS OUR NATION AND THAT AFFECTS T00 MUCH OF THE WORLD.'' CRANSTON SAID HE ASSUMED THE SHOOTING WOULD LEAD TO RENEWED CALLS FOR GUN CONTROL, BUT HE DID NOT KNOW IF THEY WOULD BE MORE SUCCESSFUL THAN BEFORE BECAUSE OF WHAT HE DESCRIBED AS LEGITIMATE DIFFERENCES OF OPINION ON THE ISSUE. THE DEMOCRATIC WHIP SAID SEN. EDWARD N. KENNEDY, D-MASS., WHO LOST TWO BROTHERS TO ASSASSINS, AND SEN. RUSSELL LONG, D-LA., WHOSE FATHER, FORMER SEN. HUEY LONG, WAS GUNNED DOWN BY AN ASSASSIN, WERE AMONG THOSE WATCHING IN THE CLOAKROOM. HE SAID NEITHER MADE ANY COMMENT, ALTHOUGH KENNEDY MADE A SPEECH ON THE FLOOR. CRANSTON SAID THE SENATORS WERE 'SHOCKED AND STARTLED WHEN THE STORY CHANGED' AND IT TURNED OUT THE PRESIDENT HAD BEEN WOUNDED. HE SAID THERE WERE ABOUT 20 SENATORS IN THE GROUP. A SHAKEN SEN. DANIEL PATRICK MOYNIHAN, D-N.Y., SAID SOFTLY: ''HOW MUCH SHOOTING IS GOING TO HAVE TO HAPPEN BEFORE WE GET RID OF THOSE GUNS.'' SEN. HENRY M. JACKSON, D-WASH., A FORMER PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE HIMSELF, SAID, ''WE'RE REMINDED ONCE AGAIN OF HOW DANGEROUS THIS WORLD IS.'' AGAIN, OUR HOPES ARE DASHED "THAT VIOLENCE ONCE AGAIN WOULD NOT VISIT AN AMERICAN PRESIDENT, JACKSON SAID. 'WHAT CAN ONE SAY?'' ''OBVIOUSLY THE MAN (THE SHOOTING SUSPECT) HAD TO BE A FANATIC,'' JACKSON ADDED. BEFORE THE SENATE RECESSED, KENNEDY SPOKE BRIEFLY ON THE FLOOR, SAVING, "WITH OUR PRAYERS FOR THOSE WHO HAVE BEEN WOUNDED I THINK MUST GO OUR RESOLUTION TO RID OUR SOCIETY OF HATRED.'' ''VIOLENCE AND HATRED ARE ALIEN TO EVERYTHING THIS COUNTRY IS ABOUT,' KENNEDY SAID. AP-WX-03-30-81 1739EST N134 DI THATCHER-REAGAN LONDON (AP) -- PRIME MINISTER MARGARET THATCHER HEARD OF THE ATTEMPTED ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT REAGAN MONDAY AT HER OFFICIAL RESIDENCE AND IMMEDIATELY SENT R PERSONAL MESSAGE TO THE PRESIDENT SAYING SHE WAS ''PRAYING'' HE WAS NOT SERIOUSLY WOUNDED. HER DEPUTY PRESS SECRETARY, NEVILLE GAFFIN, SAID MRS. THATCHER, IN THE MESSAGE FROM HER 10 DOWNING STREET RESIDENCE, EXPRESSED SHOCK AND SAID SHE WAS ''VERY DISTRESSED.'' MRS. THATCHER ALSO SAID HER SYMPATHY WENT OUT TO MEMBERS OF THE PRESIDENT'S STAFF WHO WERE WOUNDED AND THAT HER THOUGHTS WERE WITH MRS. REAGAN AND OTHER MEMBERS OF THE REAGAN FAMILY. MRS. THATCHER BECAME THE FIRST EUROPEAN LEADER TO MEET WITH REAGAN AFTER HIS JANUARY INAUGURATION WHEN SHE VISITED WASHINGTON IN LATE FEBRUARY. AP-WX-03-30-81 1742EST N140 UI FORD-REAGAN TOKYO (AP) -- FORMER PRESIDENT GERALD R. FORD, WHO WAS HIMSELF THE TARGET OF TWO ASSASSINATION ATTEMPTS, WAS ASLEEP IN R TOKYO HOTEL ROOM EARLY TUESDAY WHEN AN ATTEMPT WAS MADE ON THE LIFE OF PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN. FORD SPOKESMAN BOB BARRETT SAID THE FORMER CHIEF EXECUTIVE WAS INFORMED OF THE SHOOTING AT 5:45 A.M. (3:45 P.M. EST) IN A TELEPHONE CALL FROM WHITE HOUSE SPOKESMAN DAVE GERGEN. BARRETT SAID FORD ''EXPRESSED GRAVE CONCERN FOR THE PRESIDENT AND HIS PERSONAL SUPPORT FOR MRS. REGAN, AND WILL CONTINUE TO MONITOR THE SITUATION.'' FORD MET SOON AFTERWARD WITH U.S. AMBASSADOR MIKE MANSFIELD, WHO CAME FROM HIS EMBASSY RESIDENCE DIRECTLY ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE OKURA HOTEL WHERE FORD IS STAYING. THE FORMER PRESIDENT WAS IN THE LAST DAY OF A FIVE-DAY VISIT TO JAPAN, CLOSING OUT AN 11-NATION TOUR IN WHICH HE HAS CARRIED PRIVATE MESSAGES FROM REAGAN TO A NUMBER OF FOREIGN LEADERS. HE WAS SCHEDULED TO SPEAK ON DEFENSE ISSUES AT A LUNCHEON AND HOLD A NEWS CONFERENCE IN THE AFTERNOLON BEFORE DEPARTING FOR PALM SPRINGS, CALIF., ABOARD A PRIVATELY OWNED JET AIRCRAFT. AP-WX-03-30-81 1805EST N142 UA OSCARS URGENT HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- ORGANIZERS OF THE ACADEMY AWARDS CEREMONY DECIDED MONDAY TO POSTPONE THE NATIONALLY TELEVISED PROGRAM 24 HOURS BECAUSE OF THE ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT ON PRESIDENT REAGAN. CHARLIE FRANK, R SPOKESMAN FOR ABC TELEVISION IN NEW YORK, SAID THE DECISION HAD BEEN MADE TO DELAY THE PROGRAM UNTIL TUESDAY NIGHT AT 10 P.M. EST. EARLIER, NORMAN JEWISON, PRODUCER OF THE SHOW, FAY KANIN, PRESIDENT OF THE ACADEMY OF MOTION PICTURE ARTS AND SCENCES, AND JOHNNY CARSON, THE SHOW'S HOST, HAD MET WITH ABC TELEVISION OFFICIALS AT THE LOS ANGELES MUSIC CENTER TO DISCUSS THEIR OPTIONS. FANS HAD STARTED ARRIVING BEFORE DAWN FOR FRONT-ROW SEATS OUTSIDE THE MUSIC CENTER AND A CHANCE TO VIEW THE WINNERS AND LOSERS AT THE EVENINGS'S EXTRAVAGANZA. THE SPECTATORS SAT IN THE WARM CALIFORNIA SUN THROUGHOUT THE DAY, AS THEY AWAITED THE LIMOUSINES THAT WOULD BRING THE GLAMOROUS PARTICIPANTS TO HOLLYWOOD'S BIGGEST BASH. BUT THE WAIT WAS WELL WORTH IT FOR THE DEVOUT FANS, WHO COULD LOOK FORWARD TO SEEING ROBERT REDFORD, ROBERT DENIRO AND OTHERS WHO RARELY APPEAR AT PUBLIC EVENTS. STARTING TIME FOR THE CEREMONIES, TELECAST BY ABC, WAS 7 P.M. (PST), AND JEWISON HOPED TO BRING DOWN THE CURTAIN WITHIN THREE HOURS. AP-WX-03-30-81 1815EST N143 UA REAGAN-OSCARS HERE IS A TEXT OF THE REMARKS PRESIDENT REAGAN, A FORMER FILM ACTOR, HAD TAPED IN ADVANCE FOR MONDAY NIGHT'S TELECAST OF THE ACADEMY AWARDS. ABC CANCELED PLANS TO BROADCAST THE SEGMENT AFTER REAGAN WAS SHOT AND WOUNDED IN AN ASSASSINATION ATTEMPT MONDAY. ''GOOD EVENING TO MY FELLOW AMERICANS EAGERLY AWAITING THE PRESENTATION OF THE 53RD ACADEMY AWARDS. IT'S SURELY NO STATE SECRET THAT NANCY AND I SHARE YOUR INTEREST IN THE RESULTS OF THIS YEAR'S BALLOTING. ''WE'RE NOT ALONE. THE MIRACLE OF AMERICAN TECHNOLOGY LINKS US WITH MILLIONS OF MOVIEGOERS AROUND THE WORLD. IT IS THE MOTION PICTURE THAT SHOWS US ALL, NOT ONLY HOW WE LOOK AND SOUND, BUT MORE IMPORTANT, HOW WE FEEL. WHEN IT ACHIEVES ITS MOST NOBLE INTENT, FILM REVEALS THAT PEOPLE EVERYWHERE SHARE COMMON DREAMS AND EMOTIONS. TONIGHT I APPLAUD ALL WHO CREATE, MAKE, DISTRIBUTE, EXHIBIT AND ATTEND MOVIES. I SALUTE THE ACADEMY FOR THE INFLUENCE ITS WORK HAS HAD ON THE WORLD'S MOST ENDURING ART FORM. FILM IS FOREVER. I'VE BEEN TRAPPED IN SOME FILM FOREVER MYSELF, AND AS A FORMER MEMBER OF THE ACADEMY, I ASK YOU NOW TO JOIN NANCY AND ME IN ENJOYING THIS YEAR'S CEREMONIES. " AP-WX-03-30-81 1818EST N151 XW PRIME MINISTER WASHINGTON (AP) -- PRIME MINISTER ANDREAS VAN AGT OF THE NETHERLANDS ARRIVED IN WASHINGTON FOR A TWO-DAY VISIT SHORTLY AFTER THE ATTEMPT TO KILL PRESIDENT RONALD REAGAN. A SPOKESMAN FOR THE DUTCH EMBASSY SAID THE PRIME MINISTER HEARD THE NEWS ABOARD HIS PLANE, AND ISSUED THIS STATEMENT ON ARRIVING AT ANDREWS AIR FORCE BASE, JUST OUTSIDE WASHINGTON: "I HAVE JUST BEEN INFORMED OF THE ATTEMPT ON THE PREIDENT'S LIFE AND I EXPRESS MY FEELINGS OF DEEP SHOCK AND ABHORRENCE THAT THIS HAS HAPPENED. WE HOPE AND PRAY THAT HE MAY NOT HAVE BEEN HURT SEIOUSLY AND THAT ALSO THE LIVES OF THE SECRET SERVICE MEN AND PRESS SECRETARY BRADY MAY BE SAFE.'' HE SENT THIS MESSAGE TO REAGAN, WITH WHOM HE HAD BEEN DUE TO HAVE TALKS AND LUNCH ON TUESDAY: ''WE PRAY FOR YOUR SPEEDY RECOVERY. YOU MAY REST ASSURED THAT THE VISIT OF THE FOREIGN MINISTER AND MYSELF TO WASHINGTON WILL IN THESE CIRCUMSTANCES EVEN MORE EXPRESS THE STRONG TIES OF FRIENDSHIP BETWEEN OUR TWO COUNTRIES AND PEOPLES. " VAN AGT WAS LODGED AT BLAIR HOUSE, THE OFFICIAL RESIDENCE FOR DISTINGUISHED VISITORS, ACROSS THE STREET FROM THE WHITE HOUSE. THE PRESIDENT WAS AT GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL, A LITTLE MORE THAN A KILOMETER AWAY. AP-WX-03-30-81 1900EST THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Monday, April 6, 1981 23 OPINION AND COMMENTARY The good-humored Ronald Reagan By Godfrey Sperling Jr. the Gridiron's annual banquet. Here Mr. Rea- Stockman Impersonator continued: President) beseeched Ronald Reagan to the gan displayed a sheer delight at the satire tune of "Cold Cold Heart": Washington that was often directed at him. Oh, what fun to swing the ax while In the 1960s the Washington Gridiron Club, "I was watching him, and he was in easing up the Income tax, I tried so hard, my President, made up of veteran reporters who are very stitches." another head-table guest. Miss Gin- For you folks just to get Inside your dream. sparing of their accolades, sang of President ger Rogers, reported. And It was obvious to Gather round the gulllotine and But you' afraid each thing I do is Kennedy: "His wild Irish prose. It sparkles as the Gridiron reporter-actors who looked right watch me being really mean, just some evil scheme It glows." out at the President that he was enjoying the To po' folks. The memories of my famous past Now. after 20 years, another truly witty humor immensely. If I had Aladdin's lamp for only a day. keep us so far apart, President, also with Irish-American creden- One song that the President seemed to love I'd make a wish and here's what I'd How can I free your doubtful mind tials, has stepped upon the stage. and which might well have caused other say: and melt your cold, cold heart? Mr. Reagan's quips at the hospital helped presidents to frown or keep a sober face was Freeze my heart to zero so I'll be my the ditty from the Gridiron Club member cast Ronnie's hero The President got his turn later In the' as David A. Stockman, the President's chief Every morning. evening. He received a good laugh with his Washington letter budget shaper and spending cutter. "Stock- opening line: "Fellow communicators - and man" entered to a drum roll and, to the muslc The President himself was the target in should I say, fellow thespians?" Then came of "Carollnn In the Morning," sang: the opening number, which sounded the one quick one-llner after another. buby the nation at an anxious time. It was his theme of the show - the triumph of Holly- For Instance, he admitted to occasional courageous way of reassuring his fellow Nothing cases tensions quite like cutting wood in the election. Sung to the tune of "Any- breakdowns in communications In his admin- Americans that all was well - that he was widows' pensions in the morning. thing Goes." one verse went: Istration, saying "sometimes our right hand going to make It. Nothing could be sweeter than to beat doesn't know what our far-right hand is It was truly an exhibition of grace under a welfare cheater as a warning. That old cowpoke has won the battle doing." pressure. But, beyond that, Mr. Reagan was For the hungry children knocking on And Hollywood's In the saddle Guests afterward did not say that the very, very funny. especially his "All things my door. And that just shows President had been hilarlously funny. But considered, I'd rather be In Philadelphia" I'll have a balanced dlet ready by Anything goes. they applauded his keen wit. And more than one-liner and his joking to doctors and nurses Eighty-four. anything else they liked his ability to laugh at that "If I'd gotten this much attention In Hol- Mr. Reagan was said to have liked the himself - and his constant good humor. lywood. I would have stayed." Members of the Gridiron cast searched "Henry Kissinger" song the best. Here a On the Saturday night before the tragic 00: Mr. Reagan's face to see how he was taking it. petulant "Henry Kissinger" (Mr. Kissinger Godfrey Sperling Jr. is chief of the currences of Monday the President attended He was laughing, obviously loving it. The was at the head table, too, not far from the Monitor's Washington bureau. WASHINGTON POST 4/5/81 Vernon E. Jordan Jr. My President, Too From an address April 3 to the National Urban League, by its president, Vernon E. Jordan Jr.: Why is it that Americans seem able to be united only in times of tragedy or crisis? An experience like the terrible attempt on the life of President Reagan brings all people together in prayers for his recovery and outrage at the vicious attack on his life. And that feeling cuts across the political spectrum. Even the most outspoken opponents of his economic program, including myself, like him as a human being, respect the office he holds, and abhor violence of any kind, especially violence of the sort we witnessed in Washington. I want to back him when I think he is right. And I want to op- pose him when I think he is wrong. I want the opportunity to educate him to my way of thinking and, if I fail, want to know that I must respect his views with the same tolerance with which he must respect mine. And in a democracy, I do not' want a man with a gun to deprive me of my president, for, right or wrong, he is my president and the symbol of my nation's authority and leadership. America chose Ronald Reagan to be its president, and all Americans want him to serve his term in the White House for the next four years. The president is president of all of the people, and all of the peo- ple have a stake in his ability to discharge the functions of his office. We all have a stake in the stability of the government. We all realize that our freedoms are endangered when dangerous weapons in the hands of people with twisted minds replace the political process. As one who has been the victim of a similar attack, I know what the president is going through, and he has my prayers and hopes for a complete recovery. WASHINGTON STAR 4/4/81 A-9. HUGH SIDEY Attack Shows a Leader Who is Something Special Even with his new six-inch scar, "heroic dreams" and the people who cracked seventh rib and his dam- assured themselves he would not aged left lung. Ronald Reagan is es- stick to his course once the going sentially the same man he was 10 got tough may now have to recal- years ago and maybe even 20 years culate the future. Men who yield ago. Harry Truman's measure of their beliefs do it in their private mortals is as good today as when he worlds long before the public may decreed it: Men don't change much find out. It may be another irony in character and courage after about of this strange age of make-believe 50. that the man who first acted heroics But the perception of Reagan this in fact came to believe them and in- week is dramatically more focused, corporate them into hislife. Courage the understanding of what brought may be nothing so much as an act him to the White House has been that masks the daily uncertainties revealed in one of those rare flashes and becomes in the forge of events of truth tragedy sometimes unveils. reality itself. We have witnessed with a singu- Those who have assured us that lar clarity the raw ingredients of this last week's events may mean a leadership, the most vital element certain bubble of new esteem for in presidential success, the thing in Reagan and his programs but pro- the human adventure that most of- vide little lasting improvement for ten defies analysis and frustrates the his cause may have missed the-intan- statistical handicappers and finally gibles of leadership. mocks the ideologues and the critics We have been reminded again of the daily political drama. The na- how perishable are our aspirations ture of the man is paramount. and how they cluster around the The selfish millionaire, the un- man in the Oval Office, nurtured or feeling and relentless conservative not by his vision and determination. who could take school lunches from We have been reminded again that hungry children and medicine from the destruction of that person or the the sick. turns out never to have fracturing of his will can plunge us been. Reagan had a higher cause. into confusion. Not that it was necessarily right. But For too long now we have debated Reagan's zealous detractors failed to whether Reagan's IQ was sufficient see that this small-town romantic for White House duty, whether he really believed the way back to more read the right books or knew enough human dignity and less want and of the details of the world's prob- injustice lay in a larger effort that lems. Those things are not unimpor- could not finally be calculated in the tant but they always have been less mathematics of poverty and wealth. meaningful than the difficult calcu- Reagan had a-mission beyond him- lations of heart and mind. The self, although some of his advocates world's most successful leaders did not and some of his programs erred constantly and often appeared to be self-rewarding. grievously in specific policies but al- most never in resolve and purpose. A Man Well Armored Perhaps we make too much of this A few minutes of terror disclosed episode, grasping for any sign in a a man familiar with life's fragile na- nervous season that we are begin- ture and its absurdities, a man appar- ning to recover our spirit. Yet, such ently well armored against self-pity small omens have opened our eyes and determined to cling to some- before and helped us surmount trou- thing more than just his person, ble. With grace and a few well- something we call duty. God knows chosen sentences, John Kennedy if he even understood it, but the built a trust that somehow endured world witnessed a courage rarely through months of technical bun- glimpsed in those who lead. In more gles in 1961. That kind of fierce elo- precise terms for these days, it is quence is not the-mark of Ronald the stuff that makes devoted follow- Reagan but we have seen something ers. That may be more important else that could be just as important. than all the speeches Reagan has giv- History is biography, special peo- en, than all the quiet hours of per- ple form the guideposts of sonal persuasion for his measures civilization. It is too early to judge on Capitol Hill. how Ronald Reagan will measure up We have seen in this 70-year-old throughout his time. But the stuff former actor the sudden glint of the of successful leadership is finally an American people we have been and accumulation of adversities bluntly which we think we still may be. That confronted and firmly mastered. quality often weighs more heavily Nothing that Ronald Reagan has in the balance of a country's affairs done so far has meant so much to than party platforms and promises. his presidency as the stark but sim- The critics of "simple virtues" and ple test last Monday that showed us those who smiled when Reagan something special behind the good brought up his corny lines about guy smile. U.S.NeWS &WORLDREPORT APRIL 13, 1981 $1.50 WHAT IMPACT? MICHAEL EVANS-WHITE HOUSE A recovering President Reagan, his wife beside him, takes a hospital stroll. U.S.NeWS & WORLD REPORT MICHAEL EVANS-WHITE HOUSE WHAT MPACT? Repercussions of the assassination attempt will ripple Taped by television crews, the attack on Reagan was later witnessed by mil- for months-in domestic and foreign policy alike. lions-the second time in a generation For now, the U.S. is happy to have a hero for President. that the nation was stunned by the sight of a President shot in the streets A gunman's attack on President Rea- Reagan team and potentially a power- during a public appearance. gan touched off shock waves that ful political force in 1984 or beyond. But by the end of the week, doctors promised lasting effects on a fledgling Top White House aides, thrown reported Reagan was in "satisfactory" administration and the nation. into a state of confusion in early stages condition and was expected to recover Ramifications go beyond the ques- of the emergency, embarked on a cam- speedily, barring unexpected complica- tion of how quickly Reagan-felled by a paign to reassure the nation that the tions such as bleeding or infection. bullet in the chest on March 30-will be administration is in firm control. The 70-year-old Reagan, by all ac- able to return to the Oval Office. In the Reagan, having suffered a severe counts, exhibited the recuperative aftermath of the assassination attempt: injury, will come under increasing pres- powers of a much younger man. Asso- Polls showed Reagan is widely re- sure from staff and family not to over- ciates added that he also laid to rest garded as a hero, admired for showing tax himself. This could force a change in lingering concerns that he was too old courage and humor during a painful a freewheeling style that has made him to handle the rigorous demands of the ordeal. The boost in popularity already especially vulnerable to attack. Presidency. is muting opponents and may even The Secret Service, one of whose Boost for Reagan. "It's clear proof prolong his honeymoon with Congress. agents was wounded in the assassina- of his physical stamina," said Presiden- Secretary of State Alexander Haig tion attempt, will undergo a full-scale tial Counselor Edwin Meese. "The way shapes up as a casualty, attacked by review of the measures it takes to pro- he reacted and all that will further en- White House aides who felt the former tect the Chief Executive. hance people's view of him." general behaved erratically during the Advocates of gun control, led by The President was wounded by a lone tumultuous hours after the shooting. Senator Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), assailant about 2:30 on a rainy Monday Vice President George Bush, un- will press anew for çurbs on the sale of afternoon as he walked to his limousine flappable throughout the crisis, handguns like the one used to shoot after addressing a labor meeting at the emerges as the real No. 2 man on the Reagan-but probably will not succeed. Washington Hilton Hotel. James Brady, 22 U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 tempt did not take long to become evi- dent on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers suddenly became reluctant to attack the fallen President's proposals to cut taxes and federal spending. Said Richard Wirthlin, Reagan's poll- ster: "The most avid readers of pub- lished polls are the 435 members of the House and 100 members of the Senate. The economic program is not going to get a free ride, but some of the closer Idn votes may tilt our way." Confirmation of that view came from Senator Gary Hart (D-Colo.), who noted: "Just before the assassination at- tempt, a number of Democrats were getting ready to release critiques or blasts. Now they won't do that. The day after the shooting, on March 31, the GOP-dominated Senate beat back half a dozen attempts to soften the President's budget cuts. While the outcome was assured even before the attack, the Republicans picked up sur- prising Democratic support. "There will be a positive reaction in Congress," predicted Max Frieders- dorf, Reagan's chief lobbyist. "Any time a leader is harmed in any way, there is TIMOTHY UPI always a natural sympathy. It will en- In the burst of gunfire, three others took bullets as well as Reagan-White House press hance his relations with Congress. I aide James Brady, left, Secret Service Agent Timothy J. McCarthy, top right, and think it will increase his popularity." Washington policeman Thomas K. Delahanty. All were expected to survive. White House aides made it clear that the administration would fully exploit tive Bill Alexander (D-Ark.). "But will House over who would be the adminis- Reagan's condition in order to get its Congress pass his tax cut because the tration's official "crisis manager," a job programs through Congress. President was shot? The answer is no." Haig wanted but which went to Bush. Some lawmakers disputed the notion If Reagan gained stature from the The incidents led some Reagan advis- that an outpouring of sympathy would attempt to kill him, his White House ers to press for the Secretary's ouster, smooth the way for Reagan's proposals, team, and Secretary of State Alexander and such pressures are bound to grow. particularly the one for a 30 percent Haig in particular, were clear losers. By contrast, Bush's low-key conduct tax cut spread over three years. "Serious flaws." A series of mislead- after the shooting won applause from "He will be stronger politically be- ing announcements about whether the members of the White House inner cir- cause now he is a national hero on top President had been wounded, and who cle, who praised his steady perfor- of being President," said Representa- was in charge in the interim, exposed mance and deference to Reagan. what many analysts termed serious Bush filled in at nearly every official Nancy Reagan, arriving at hospital, was flaws in the executive branch. function at which the President would described as exhausted, unable to eat. Confusion peaked when Haig went before television cameras soon after the shooting and declared he was con- stitutionally third in line for the Presi- dency and "in control" of the White House pending the return of Vice Pres- ident Bush from a Texas trip. As Haig spoke, his voice quavered, his face perspired and his arms trembled. His abrupt comments and shaky man- ner drew harsh private criticism from senior Reagan aides, who questioned the propriety of the statements. His announcement also triggered a behind- the-scenes dispute with Defense Secre- tary Caspar Weinberger over who was in control of U.S. armed forces. By executive order, military author- ity in times of extraordinary emergency passes from the President to the Vice President to the Defense Secretary. The flare-up came just a week after a Secretary of State Alexander Haig, right, flap between Haig and the White angered White House staffers. U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 Looking for a motive, authorities found evidence that Hinckley wanted to win the love of young actress Jodie Foster. cal way. The kid with a gentle gaze and engaging smile gradually changed into a lumpish young man with glassy eyes and a glower. The manager of his col- lege-town apartment building, Mark Swafford, while unstopping Hinckley's sink once, found "there were junk-food bags and empty ice-cream cartons sit- ting around all over the cabinets." His parents, meantime, moved to an- John Hinckley- As a high-school pupil, Hinckley was other plush home on the edge of a golf an "average student, neither the type course in the exclusive Denver suburb to be in the National Merit Scholarship of Evergreen. His mother played ten- A Misfit Who program nor at the bottom of the nis and did volunteer work. His father class," said a classmate, Thomas Black- joined a Bible-study class. They ar- Craved Fame well. "He was noticeable, but he was ranged psychiatric help for their son not the outstanding type." but seldom talked of him to others. So obscure was Hinckley at Highland Early warning? There had been one Estranged from family and Park High School that Principal E.A. earlier brush with the law. Last Octo- Sigler says: "When this came up, I had ber, Hinckley was arrested in Nashville friends, in love with a movie to look back to verify that he was a and fined $50 after trying to board an actress he never met, the man graduate." airliner with three handguns. Presi- accused of shooting Reagan Sigler and others who knew Hinck- dent Carter was in town that day. is one of society's losers. ley speculate that his emotional prob- The Hinckley family-described as lems may stem from feelings of failure "just destroyed" by the shootings-has Behind the gun that shot the Presi- to measure up to expectations. A friend gone into seclusion and sent condo- dent was but a shadow of a man, a asserts: "There are pressures in the lences to those wounded. They have figure both strange and too familiar. family to achieve." hired the firm of Edward Bennett Wil- John Warnock Hinckley, Jr., didn't Hinckley's father took a $120,000 in- liams, one of the nation's best-known fit into society-but he fit the pattern. vestment in 1970 and built an oil-and- trial lawyers, to defend their son. A loner. A drifter. Jobless. Soft look- gas-exploration company that had reve- Authorities looking for clues to ing. Barely known by those whose lives nues of 4.87 million dollars last year. His Hinckley's behavior focused on letters he touched, his passage marked by clut- older brother, Scott, is vice president of he wrote to actress Jodie Foster, best ter and grime and confused scribblings. his father's firm. Ironically, Scott is a known for playing a teen-age prostitute "If you don't love me, I'm going to casual friend of Neil Bush, the Vice in "Taxi Driver," a film about a dement- kill the President," he reportedly President'sson, and family members are ed loser who stalks a political figure. wrote to an actress he had never met. known as staunch Reagan supporters. An unmailed letter Hinckley wrote In many of these aspects, Hinckley The youth's older sister; Diane, is the to Foster reportedly said: "I would was of a kind with the losers who stalk wife of a Dallas insurance underwriter abandon this idea of getting Reagan in the leaders-like Lee Harvey Oswald and mother of two small children. a second if I could only win your heart who shot John Kennedy, like Sirhan "Everything fits perfectly except and live out the rest of my life with Sirhan who shot Robert Kennedy, like John," observes a family friend. you, whether it be in total obscurity or Arthur Bremer who shot George Wal- Hinckley, now 25, did try to succeed. whatever. I will admit to you that the lace. In fact, a photograph of Oswald He enrolled at Texas Tech University reason I'm going ahead with this at- and a newspaper clipping about John in 1973, studying business administra- tempt now is because I just cannot wait Lennon, former Beatles' rock musician tion. He made the dean's honor list in any longer to impress you. shot to death on Dec. 8, 1980, were 1977, but he couldn't keep up the "Jodie," the letter closes, "I'm asking found in his Washington hotel room. pace. He went to college for seven you to please look into your heart and at Yet the man who is linked this time years, off and on, never graduating. least give me the chance with this his- to the smoking gun had some unusual One professor, Otto Nelson, recalls torical deed to gain your respect and characteristics. Hinckley because the student chose to love. I love you forever, John Hinckley." John Hinckley was a child of wealth, do a report on Hitler's autobiography, Hinckley failed in that attack, as in so privilege and influence. The son of an Mein Kampf. Says Nelson: "He made much else. Now the boy brought up in oilman, he was reared in a $300,000 an A minus. I have to conclude that a mansion is at a federal correctional home in Highland Park, an old-money he read the material' carefully and facility in North Carolina, in a room enclave of Dallas with huge oak trees, thought about it effectively." Another with sink, toilet, single bed, one bullet- azaleas, pools and fountains. teacher recalls: "There were usually proof window-and no TV or radio. He played junior-high basketball. In empty chairs around him, as if he con- Meanwhile, a shaken society tries to the seventh and ninth grades, he was sciously chose to sit apart." figure out what to do with someone homeroom president. It wasn't noted Unnoticed figure. One measure of who thought that the killing of a Presi- then, but his life had peaked already. Hinckley's isolation: About two dozen dent could win him the love of a Hinckley became less active in bas- high-school classmates were on the stranger. ketball by the ninth grade, recalls child- Texas Tech campus with him, and not hood friend Kirk Dooley, because "some one can recall having seen him. By JOHN S. LANG with bureaus in Houston, Denver, of the other guys began to be quicker." Hinckley's decline showed in a physi- Chicago and Lós Angeles 26 0 U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 have appeared. One day included an early morning White House staff meet- Line of succession as set ing and a national-security briefing. Who's in Charge by the Presidential Succession Act of 1947- Later there were sessions with labor When a President leaders, cabinet officers, members of Is Out of Action? Vice Congress and, finally, talks with envoys President from Poland and Turkey. Once the President leaves the hospi- Events of March 30 raised troubling ques- tal, Bush and others are believed likely tions about who runs the government when a House to retain control over many of the du- President dies, becomes disabled or loses Speaker ties they inherited. For the Vice Presi- touch with the White House. dent, this new eminence could pay big Despite past efforts to set up an orderly dividends if his boss decides against transfer of power that would cover all contin- Senate seeking a second term in 1984. gencies, the shooting of President Reagan un- President Meanwhile, the White House covered several murky areas in the law. Pro Tem strained to project an image of business This much is clear: as usual-a campaign credited by many If Reagan had died-Vice President George Secretary with helping defuse public panic. Bush would have become President. Under the 25th Amend- of State Everything possible was done to de- ment, ratified in 1967, Bush then could have named a new pict Reagan as rapidly shaking off the Vice President, subject to confirmation by a majority of effects of his wound, and also to convey members of the House and Senate. Secretary of the the impression of a White House func- Simultaneous vacancies in both the Presidency and Vice Presidency would have triggered a 1947 law, illustrated in Treasury tioning smoothly and calmly. No pictures of Reagan were allowed the accompanying chart, that puts Speaker of the House until he could present a relatively robust Thomas P. "Tip" 'Neill, Jr., (D-Mass.) third in the order of Secretary appearance free of drainage tubes. On succession, followed by Senate President Pro Tem Strom of Defense the morning after his operation, he Thurmond (R-S.C.) and members of the cabinet in the order made a point of signing a bill scrubbing their departments were created. If a President is incapacitated-A Chief Executive unable Attorney an increase in federal milk-price sup- General ports. A day later, he conducted a staff to discharge his duties may, under the 25th Amendment, meeting, and on the next he was receiv- step aside by informing the Speaker of the House and presi- ing full national-security briefings. dent pro tem of the Senate. The Vice President then would Secretary Command post. All the props of the become acting President until the President declared him- of Interior Presidency were assembled at the hos- self fit. pital. Rooms on Reagan's floor were If a President is disabled but unwilling or unable to step Secretary hastily transformed into a miniature aside voluntarily, succession becomes more complex-and of White House-a complete communica- potentially explosive. The Vice President, when backed by a Agriculture tions command post, filing cabinets, majority of cabinet members, may officially declare the Pres- desks, typewriters and other office ident unable "to discharge the powers and duties of his equipment. office" and may assume the role of acting President. Resis- Secretary of No one expects the shooting to make tance by the President would throw the matter into Con- Commerce Reagan a prisoner of the White House, gress, where within days the action must be affirmed by a shunning public appearances for fear two-thirds vote of both chambers or the President must be of another attempt on his life. restored to office. Secretary Reagan wore a bulletproof vest on If a crisis occurs-Who ran the country while Reagan lay in of Labor several occasions during the campaign surgery under anesthesia? It was during this period that the but apparently has not used one since. lines of authority apparently became tangled. Secretary He is expected to put one on again for Secretary of State Alexander Haig declared shortly after of Health occasions when he is deemed especially the assassination attempt that "constitutionally I am in and Human vulnerable. The Secret Service is con- control here in the White House, pending return of the Vice Services sidering additional agents for his guard President." Bush was then returning to Washington from detail and may keep more distance be- Texas but staying in touch with Haig and other officials at the Secretary tween the President and crowds. White House. of Housing and Urban But once Reagan has bounced back In fact, Haig was not in charge. If a domestic crisis had Develop- from his injury, aides predict, he will occurred that required a presidential decision, Bush would ment resume public appearances. He still have been in command despite his absence from Washing- plans a series of trips across the country ton. If Bush had been unavailable, the Speaker of the House Secretary to sell his economic program, plus an would have been next in the regular order of succession. of Trans- April 27-28 visit to Mexico to confer What Haig meant to convey, it was later explained, was portation with President José López Portillo. that as the senior cabinet official he had assumed control Whatever happens later, loyalists of over the White House Situation Room, a is-communica- Secretary both parties agreed on one thing: For- tions center of Energy mer actor Ronald Reagan on March 30 If both Reagan and Bush had been disabled or cut off from played in real life the role of hero more communication during a military crisis, responsibility over convincingly than in any movie he the nation's defenses would have devolved not to the Speak- Secretary ever made. er, or Haig, but to Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger of Education under a secret national command authority" directive that By WILLIAM L CHAZE with the magazine's White recent Presidents, including Reagan, have endorsed House and congressional staffs U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 25 Did Secret been typical. Reporters wait- ing to question Reagan as he left a speaking engagement inside were directed to stand Service Drop behind a rope stretched across the sidewalk. The public was also allowed into the area, and the gun- man moved up alongside reporters and Its Guard? cameramen close to the hotel exit used by the President. Agents insist that in these settings, RON EDMONDS-WIDE WORLD there is little they can do to keep by- As soon as the gunfire died President, as some onlookers claim to standers away. "We would like to move away, inquiries began. A have done? people back farther, but those we pro- Should the Secret Service have key question was whether the tect and the media would not allow it, known about Hinckley because of his and it's not realistic in a democracy," President's protectors had earlier arrest on a firearms charge in says John W. Warner, Jr., a Secret Ser- done everything they could. Nashville during a presidential visit? vice official. Has security become lax on rou- Several eyewitnesses reported after The shooting of Ronald Reagan only tine presidential travel in Washington? the shooting that they had seen Hinck- 1½ miles from the White House un- Whenever the President leaves the ley pacing nervously near the hotel derscores a truism of the times: It is not White House, agents scour his route exit-behavior that agents are trained possible to fully protect a President un- step by step in advance, checking to regard as suspicious. But no agent less he is willing to become a recluse. streets for danger points, securing spotted the man and moved in on him. Even so, the latest attack-the third building corridors and reviewing The Secret Service brands these re- attempt in six years to gun down a crowd-control procedures. ports as mistaken. Agency spokesman Chief Executive in a public place-is Still, there inevitably are gaps in the Warner declared that people saw not prompting a hard look at the Secret defensive measures because "politi- Hinckley but "someone else-a strange Service, the elite corps that guards the cians want to be near the people," says person who frequents the area. We had President. Congress, the Secret Ser- Richard Davis, a former assistant Trea- him under surveillance." vice's parent Treasury Department sury secretary who had authority over The danger list. Another question and the agency itself are asking these the Secret Service. Davis notes that ev- troubling some is why Hinckley was questions— ery President relishes contact with the not listed in a computerized Secret How was the man charged as the public, whether he stops to chat, Service file on about 25,000 persons, assailant, John W. Hinckley, Jr., able to shakes hands or merely waves. many of whom are mentally ill and get within 15 to 25 feet of Reagan as Hotel entrances, where crowds gath- have threatened public figures. About the Chief Executive left a Washington er to see a visiting Chief Executive, are 400 of those on the list are considered hotel? special points of vulnerability. The se- particularly dangerous. Their where- Why didn't agents spot Hinckley curity arrangements at the Washington abouts are checked periodically. on the scene as a potential threat to the Hilton on March 30 appear to have Hinckley was arrested last October 9 in the Nashville airport for pos- Agent Timothy McCarthy lies wounded on the sidewalk outside the Washington Hilton shortly sessing three handguns on the after he attempted to shield Reagan from gunfire with his own body. same day that President Jimmy Carter visited the city, but the Federal Bureau of Investigation did not inform the Secret Ser- vice of the case. Dr. Frank Och- berg, the state of Michigan's mental-health director and a Se- cret Service consultant, says that, had the agency known about the Nashville incident, "agents would have investigated and might have identified POLIC Hinckley as a 'stalker' who fol- lows Presidents." But Secret Service officials say that even if they had known about the firearms case, Hinck- ley probably would not have been put under surveillance and agents would not necessarily have learned that he had come to Washington in late March. As to whether agents uncon- sciously let down their guard in Washington, where presidential travel is routine, former Trea- sury official Davis believes that U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT 27 "it's possible." He adds: "Trips to the Washington Hilton are so repetitive it's like a milk run." 9 Others If Ronald Reagan's medical prognosis Despite the questioning of their is correct, he will be the first sitting work before the shooting, Secret Ser- vice agents are given high marks for Who Faced President to survive a gunshot wound. Nine of the 38 Presidents before him were attacked by armed assailants. Four their actions once bullets started to fly. They followed the book to the letter: Assassins Presidents died. For a look at earlier as- The agent closest to the President sassination attempts and the assailants: quickly shoved him into his limousine, while another agent, Timothy McCar- thy, stepped into the line of fire, stop- Andrew Jackson: Richard Lawrence, a psychotic who ping with his own body a bullet that thought himself King Richard III of England, aimed two might have hit Reagan. McCarthy is pistols at Jackson in the Capitol in Washington on Jan. 30, the first agent ever wounded while 1835. Both pistols misfired, and Jackson was unhurt. Ruled guarding a President. Other agents insane, Lawrence was committed to an asylum for life. forced the gunman to the ground. When the Secret Service men no- Abraham Lincoln: John Wilkes Booth, an actor who favored ticed that Reagan was coughing up the South in the Civil War, entered an unguarded box at a blood, they rushed him to a nearby Washington theater and shot Lincoln in the head. The hospital. The agents in the presidential President died the next day, April 15, 1865. Booth was limousine are being faulted by some, killed when soldiers attempted to arrest him 11 days later. however, for allowing the President to walk into the emergency room despite his injury. James Garfield: As Garfield strolled through a Washington, Protection experts say that although D.C., railroad station on July 2, 1881, he was shot by presidential security will always have Charles J. Guiteau, a radical member of the President's own its limits, more can be done. Republican Party. Garfield died more than two months For one thing, Chief Executives later. Guiteau was convicted of murder and hanged. could wear bulletproof garments in public. President Ford used such a vest William McKinley: Leon F. Czolgosz, an anarchist, shot after he faced gun-wielding women McKinley in the chest and stomach at the Pan-American twice within three weeks in 1975. But Exposition in Buffalo, N.Y., on Sept. 6, 1901. McKinley died he found the heavy clothing cumber- eight days later. Convicted of murder in a one-day trial, some and soon gave it up. Czolgosz was electrocuted at an Auburn, N.Y., state prison. Reagan wore a bulletproof jacket several times during the 1980 cam- Theodore Roosevelt: John IN. Schrank, who claimed he paign after threats were made against was instructed by the ghost off McKinley, shot Roosevelt in him, but he is not known to have done the chest on Oct. 14, 1912, as the ex-President was cam- so since taking office. Too much work? Secret Service paigning for another term. Roosevelt recovered. Schrank was ruled insane and died in a mental hospital in 1943. manpower could be increased, though the 1,550-member force has already grown substantially in recent years. Be- Franklin D. Roosevelt: Giuseppe Zangara, blaming capital- sides protecting Presidents and their ists for his stomach pains, fined a pistol at then President- families, agents guard ex-Presidents, elect Roosevelt in Miami, Fla., on Feb. 15, 1933. Roosevelt foreign embassies and visiting heads of escaped harm, but Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak was state, and are responsible for investi- killed. Zangara was tried and executed within days. gating counterfeiting and forgery. The catalog of potential President Harry S. Truman: On Nov. 1, 1950, two Puerto Rican na- killers is almost surely far from com- tionalists, Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola, tried to plete. Experts note that most of those shoot their way into Blair House, Truman's temporary resi- who have attempted to assassinate po- dence. The President was unharmed. Torresola and a guard litical figures in recent years did not died. Truman commuted Collazo's death sentence. appear on Secret Service lists. A scien- tific panel will complete a study this summer that is expected to lead to John F. Kennedy: Rifle fire mortally wounded Kennedy in some new Secret Service criteria for a Dallas, Tex., motorcade an Nov. 22, 1963. Lee Harvey identifying dangerous people. Oswald, a pro-Castro radical, was arrested, but he was later But most experts agree that no lists fatally shot by Jack Ruby, a saloon owner. There is still or added precautions can make Presi- dispute over whether Oswalld was the lone assassin. dents completely safe. John F. Kenne- dy, who was assassinated in 1963, once Gerald Ford: On Sept. 5, 1975, in Sacramento, Calif., drug- summed it up this way: "If anyone cult member Lynette Fromane pointed a pistol at Ford, but wants to do it, no amount of protection she was disarmed. Seventeen days later in San Francisco, is enough. All a man needs is a willing- Sara Jane Moore, a political activist, shot at the President ness to trade his life for mine." but missed. Both women are serving prison terms. By TED GEST 28 U.S.INEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 ROCKY'S POLICE EQUIPMEN SHOP DISCOUNT SALES John W. Hinckley, Jr., went to Rocky's of Dallas for a West German-designed .22- caliber pistol similar to the one below, ac- cording to police. about $45 each for it and a matching weapon. The gun now belonged to John Warnock Hinck- ley, Jr., who is accused of using it in the March 30 attack on President Rea- gan; his press secretary, DAVE James Brady, and two Saturday-Night Specials- lawmen in Washington. Four days before he bought the pistols in Dallas, Hinckley Plentiful and Easy to Get was arrested in Nashville, charged with carrying three guns, fined $50 plus court costs and released-a fact not recorded There's no trick to buying the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco on the Dallas gun form and not re- a cheap gun like the one that and Firearms-roughly 1 for every 3 quired. The charge was a misdemeanor. wounded Reagan. Despite an persons age 16 and older. Citizens from coast to coast can buy Some 20,000 Americans were mur- handguns just about as easily. import ban, they continue to dered or accidentally killed or commit- Virginia and Colorado, for example, flood in from abroad. ted suicide with handguns last year. follow the Texas practice of requiring Gun-control laws vary from place some apparent proof of identity and In many parts of America today, a to place. But many are based on the signature of the federal form. There's license to drive is a license to buy a federal Gun Control Act of 1968 re- no waiting period. California requires a pistol-few questions asked. quiring little more than proof of age 15-day wait so authorities can make That fact was illustrated once again and residence-usually, a driver's li- background checks-but Californians in the attempted assassination of Presi- cense-plus a seldom checked pledge can cross the state line to Arizona, dent Reagan. The gun fired at the that the buyer is not a felon, a mental where there is no wait. President was a 22-caliber revolver patient or a drug addict. Scoffing at the law. Localities that purchased over the counter in Dallas. Despite the 1968 federal law, the do have strict gun-control laws-New Around the U.S., a survey shows, components of small, cheap pistols York City; Washington, D.C.; Detroit; handguns are being purchased with known as Saturday-night specials are Cleveland, and Columbus, Ohio, ease, including cheap foreign-made pouring in from overseas. The law for- among them-often see their efforts models imported despite federal legis- bade the importation of such guns- frustrated for similar reasons. People lation intended to keep them out of the but it failed to cover weapons shipped travel to a suburb or nearby county country. to this country as disassembled parts. where the legal buying is easy or get Police records show that handguns Result: Gun merchants in West Germa- illegal firearms bootlegged in from are among the hottest-selling consum- ny, Belgium, Brazil, Italy, Finland, places such as Texas and Virginia. er items in the United States. The cus- France and Britain send the makings While opinion polls show that most tomer increasingly is the law-abiding to U.S. plants for assembly. Americans want tougher gun control, citizen, convinced that the police can The strands come together in the millions are acting otherwise. Even in no longer protect him or her from vio- saga of the gun believed to have been the aftermath of the Reagan attack, lent criminals. used to shoot the President, as outlined House and Senate leaders say there is Officials in the Miami area, for exam- by federal law-enforcement officials: no chance Congress will pass any ple, report a huge upsurge in firearms The parts of this pistol were manu- sweeping control law this year. registration-and 31 cases in which factured by Roehm Firearms Company The most that is likely to happen is armed victims struck back at assailants in Sontheim-Brenz, West Germany, that lawmakers may try to close some last year. "The sheep in the herd real- and shipped to R.G. Industries in the of the more glaring loopholes in the ize that the shepherd is sitting bound riot-scarred Liberty City area of Mi- 1968 law. One proposal getting men- and gagged on the hillside," says Dade ami. There, in a converted church sur- tion: Tighten rules on imports to cut off County Medical Examiner Joseph Da- rounded by barbed wire, the parts the trade in disassembled parts. Anoth- vis. "So the sheep are fighting back." were assembled into a weapon: A six- er possibility: Much stiffer federal pen- Says Fulton County, Ga., District At- shot 22-caliber model known as an alties for those who use guns in the torney Lewis Slaton: "Atlanta is an RG14, with a 1 /4-inch barrel and a re- commission of crime. But such propos- armed camp. We've got guns all over tail list price of $39.45. als are still in the talking stages, with the place." Adds Denver Detective An unidentified wholesaler bought no indication when action might come. John Mamuzich: "People are selling the weapon and sold it to Rocky's Pawn- Meantime, Americans are buying guns out of the trunks of their cars. It's shop in Dallas. There, say the records of guns with little more inconvenience as easy as selling a used lawn mower." proprietor Rocky Goldstein, it was than a trip to the grocer's. Nationwide, the situation is this: bought October 13 by a young man who Private citizens now own about 50 showed a Texas driver's license, filled By DAVID NAGY with the domestic bureaus of the million handguns, by the estimate of out the simple federal form and paid magazine U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 29 Although the operation is The President as Patient considered a major one, Rea- gan's surgery was neither ex- traordinary nor rare. -Behind the Scenes "It's a standard type of proce- dure," explains Dr. W. Gerald Austen, chief of surgery and cardiology at Massachusetts Luck helped, but it was the The bullet had bounced off a rib and General Hospital. "We see it all too Chief Executive himself who lodged in the lower left lobe of the left frequently." turned out to be a vital cog lung, causing significant bleeding and It was not an easy night, however. collapsing the lung. Concern mounted in the recovery in the race by doctors and Attendants moved fast. A tube was room. Reagan was breathing with the nurses to save him. quickly inserted in his chest to expand help of a respirator, but tests to moni- the lung and drain off blood pooling tor oxygen in his blood were disturb- Ronald Reagan emerged from a inside the chest cavity. ing. X-rays showed that blood clots week of ordeal with a gunshot wound Reagan never went into shock, but were obstructing his airways. in his lung, a 6-inch incision across his his blood loss was so great that emer- By 9 p.m., doctors decided to per- chest-and a reputation as a world- gency surgery was essential. He was form a bronchoscopy-a procedure in champion patient. given a transfusion of 2½ quarts of which a fiber-optic instrument is in- The President was expected to make blood-nearly half the normal volume serted in a tube already in the patient's a complete recovery. By April 3, he of blood in the body. Roughly 40 min- windpipe so that doctors can locate the had progressed to the point that White utes after arriving at the hospital, Rea- blood clots and remove them. House officials forecast he might re- gan was in the operating room. Slight setback. Reagan was on mor- turn to the Oval Office-at least part "The President was never in serious phine to relieve the pain. His head was time-within two weeks of being shot. danger," said O'Leary. "At no point in raised; he was alert and in good humor. For the next six to eight weeks, the time was he even remotely close to But the attempted bronchoscopy failed nation's First Patient is to increase his extremis"-a medical term for death. because of a kink in the tube. activities gradually to regain his physi- The 2-hour operation began with a Throughout the night, nurses took cal strength. If all goes well, doctors say 6-inch horizontal incision just below turns removing blood clots through a he will be able to ride horseback in two the left nipple. Two ribs were tube with a suction device. Fortunate- to three months. stretched apart to open up the chest. ly, Reagan's lungs began to improve. "The prognosis is excellent," said Dr. The team, headed by Dr. Benjamin By 2 a.m., X-rays showed that his lungs Dennis O'Leary, dean of clinical affairs Aaron, first made sure there was no were close to normal, and an hour later at George Washington University Hos- bleeding from other organs such as the he was taken off the respirator. pital soon after surgery. "He is physio- liver, kidneys, spleen, stomach. At 6:15 a.m., the patient was moved logically a very young man. There Then the doctors turned to the lung to the intensive-care unit, jammed should be no complications or perma- and removed the bullet. They looked with nurses in yellow uniforms and nent injuries." at the heart and examined major arter- banks of dials and TV screens that A bright side. Reagan is considered a ies. Finding everything in order, they monitor vital signs of the very sick. lucky case-lucky that the 22-caliber sewed up their patient and transferred Fifteen hours later, Reagan was bullet missed his heart by several inch- him to the recovery room. moved again-this time to a $234-a- es and lucky that he reached the hospi- tal emergency room quickly. Dr. Dennis O'Leary shows reporters how He was also lucky, doctors say, that bullet entered the President's body. at age 70, he had no underlying health problems that could have exacerbated STEFFAN his wound or slowed his recovery. More than luck pulled the President Bullet's through, however. Talks with the doc- Path tors and nurses on the surgical and in- tensive-care teams make that clear. They told the behind-the-scenes story of what happens when the President of Left the U.S. is rushed to a big-city hospital. Lung George Washington University Hos- pital, three fourths of a mile west of the White House, is an older teaching insti- tution with up-to-date facilities. At 2:35 p.m., on March 30, Reagan walked in the door of its emergency room with the aid of Secret Service men, then fell to one knee. He was Bullet pale, lightheaded. He was coughing up ricocheted blood and gasping for breath. Not until off seventh attendants stretched him out in the re- riband suscitation bay of the emergency room entered lower and cut away his clothes did everyone USN&WR.drawing leftlung. realize that he had been shot. 30 U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 from the White House without Se- cret Service men. He wondered if A President Who he now might wear a bulletproof vest whenever he is in crowds. Enjoys a Josh At one point, Reagan swapped old It was a stream of wisecracks rhymes with a doctor. He was con- cerned about the brand-new blue and jests from a wounded Ronald pin-striped suit he had been wear- Reagan that reassured Americans ing. He got a newspaper, skipped most in the wake of an attempted the assassination stories, noted the presidential assassination. THERE AINT NO REPUBLICANS OR finding of another black child's body Even with a bullet in his chest, DEMOCRATS NOW... WE ARE ALL FAMILY in Atlanta and turned to the comics. he was making such quips as The entertainer. Throughout the these- GET WELL QUICK RON President's stay in the hospital, his To his wife Nancy: "Honey, I WE NEED YOU! America sense of humor stood out. His one- forgot to duck." liners revealed the Hollywood per- To the surgeons who were P.S. WE CANT AFFORD TO LOSE A CUSTOMER former with a vaudevillian's heart. about to operate on him: "Please For all the humorous quips that tell me you're all Republicans." drew laughs, however, there were When tubes in his throat kept just as many that flopped, said the him from talking during the hours staff. that followed surgery, Reagan Doctors know that humor is im- turned to a pencil and pad. A firm that rents uniforms hung this banner portant in responding to stress and Told that a nurse would spend across street from Reagan's hospital. in speeding up the recovery pro- the night in his recovery room, he cess. In the recovery room, Reagan's wrote: "Does Nancy know?" day private room with beige walls, two one-liners-written on a pad-not only Said another note: "If I'd gotten blue easy chairs, a rust-colored sofa and showed that the patient was in good this much attention in Holly- a television set hung on the wall. spirits but reassured the medical team wood, I would not have left." Meanwhile, the White House took over as to his general condition. One of the President's notes a corridor for use of Reagan's secretary "It was a time of high anxiety," re- read: "As Winnie Churchill said, and the Secret Service. calls Dr. Jack E. Zimmerman. "The X- "There is no more exhilarating Despite those accommodations, the ray and oxygen studies were bother- feeling than being shot without hospital's guiding principle was to treat some. He knew we were worried, but results.' Reagan like any other patient so that it was hard to get overwhelmed when After undergoing a particularly no medical mistakes would be made in you have a patient putting out one- painful medical procedure, Rea- the tense atmosphere. liners. It gave everybody reassurance gan paraphrased the epitaph of To the hospital staff, Reagan was a that the patient was doing all right." comedian W. C. Fields: "All in all, model patient. "What impressed me According to a New York City inter- I'd rather be in Philadelphia." was that he was willing to do anything nist, Dr. William M. Hitzig, laughing When Reagan could talk again, that would make him get better fast- and joking have a metabolic effect on he rattled off these one-liners— er," says nurse Maureen McCann. the body. Humor, Hitzig explains, To daughter Maureen: "One of For instance, the key to recovery changes the salivary glands to produce my new suits is ruined." from lung surgery is physiotherapy to more juice. It stimulates hormones To his three highest White exercise the lungs. Every 4 hours, Rea- from the pituitary, hypothalamus and House aides: "Who's minding the gan had to turn over on his stomach. adrenal glands-even the sex glands. store?" and "Well, I guess I really The nurses clapped his back to vibrate For the medical staff, one of the screwed up the schedule today." his body and shake the secretions in his lightest moments came when nurse To an aide who told him that he lung in order to prevent pneumonia. McCann resolved a major mystery. She would be happy to know the gov- This was very important because Rea- was combing Reagan's hair, parting ernment was running normally in gan had been hospitalized for pneumo- first one side, then the other and quiet- his absence: "What makes you nia many years ago. "Someone like you ly examining the roots. "Now," the think I'd be happy about that?" saved my life," Reagan told McCann. President said, "you can tell the world To a nurse who told him to keep "She sat by my bedside and kept saying, I don't dye my hair." up the good work: "You mean this 'Breathe, breathe, breathe.' Vibrating Meanwhile, the business of the Presi- may happen several more times?" the back can be very painful over a fresh dency went on. The day after surgery, On learning that he would not surgical incision. "He never com- Reagan signed a bill limiting dairy sup- be well enough to throw out the plained," says McCann. ports. He worried about his signature, first ball to open the major-league Physiotherapy also includes forced made wobbly by intravenous tubes in baseball season on April 8: "I am a coughing to bring up sputum. In anoth- his arm. He met with aides. He read right-hander, and it is the left side er exercise, Reagan used a deep- memos. He made decisions. that hurts." breathing device which involved suck- When a question arose over whether Reagan cracked most of his ing on a tube to measure the strength Secretary of State Alexander Haig jokes before learning that his of his lungs. should cancel his trip to the Middle press secretary, James Brady, had In between exercises, medications East, it was the President who decided been critically wounded in the and examinations, Reagan talked and he should go. assassination attempt. Tears filled talked. He told nurse Debbie Augsbach "The world has not stopped just be- his eyes when he was told of Bra- about growing up in a small town and cause of this," said Reagan. dy's plight. "Oh, damn," the Pres- about his father. He reminisced about ident said. "Oh, damn." how President Truman could walk By ABIGAIL TRAFFORD U.S.NEWS & WORLD REPORT, April 13, 1981 U.S. 4/13/81 Thored 31 Report Why U.S. Lifestyle awareness that this is going to be a notorious and even historic event. Q Would the recent trend of closing mental hospitals be putting more potential Produces Assassins assassins on the streets? A I don't think there's clear evi- dence that assassination is a function of A new attempt on a President's life raises old questions: mental illness per se. Why do such attempts continue? What will it take to bring them Q What about the growing leniency in sentencing-does that raise the level of to a halt? For answers, the magazine went to a noted assassination risks? psychiatrist and consultant on violent crime. A The odds are that locking up peo- ple longer for crimes is no solution, Q Dr. Menninger, what accounts for since people who have made assassina- the string of assassination attempts tion attempts are people who have against national leaders in the last two never committed a crime for which decades? they would have been locked up. Any- A Every society produces its alienat- way, our whole philosophy does not ed persons who try to carry out their call for preventive detention. own agenda, but some characteristics Q Would the frequency of assassina- of ours increase the potential risk. tion attempts in recent years be due, in For one thing, more guns are avail- part at least, to the media-especially the able than ever before-and these are influence of television? the main weapons in assassination as A Not necessarily. Yet I think the well as violent crime, of which we have great expansion of the media has pro- more than any other Western industri- W. Walter Menninger, senior staff psychia- duced an overload of communications alized nation. trist at the Menninger Foundation. for some people-and television, which We also have a tradition of individual makes an event so immediately known, freedoms-and more resistance to lim- be loners and don't have effective so- can certainly be a factor. its on those freedoms. cial relations with other people, at least Q Do assassinations in this country of- Another thing is affluence. Potential currently. They are generally unmar- ten develop from political or economic assassins can easily go to where their ried or have had a very poor marital grievances? target is. In the John Lennon case, the relationship. They are people without a A More so in the last century, per- alleged assassin flew in from Hawaii. consistent work history, particularly in haps, assassins have had some kind of Q As a psychiatrist who has been in- the year or so before the assassination specific but distorted political reason to volved in studies of violence and presi- attempt is made. justify their action-but not as a mem- dential security, how did you react to the They are individuals who consistent- ber of an organized political move- attempt on President Reagan's life? ly use a handgun as their weapon and ment. They are personal zealots. A My initial response was that I select a moment when a well-known In the Reagan case, I don't think we wasn't surprised-in part, because I've figure is appearing in public. Until the really know the motivation of the ac- been reviewing some of the data on attempts by Lynette "Squeaky" cused assassin, despite press reports. assassinations and, in part, because of Fromme and Sara Jane Moore on then- Q Is it significant that, in this country, the tenor of the times. President Ford, they were all males. attacks on leaders come from loners, Moreover, this is a President of Q Do assassins share a particular fam- while Western Europe's problem is terror- strong and forceful character, who has ily background or class level? ist groups? expressed his opinions on public issues A In nearly all instances, there has A That's one of the striking con- that excite emotions and who is not been some hint of early disruption in trasts thus far: We have been less sub- viewed as a conciliator. This sets the family life. The list does cut across class ject to the terrorist approaches. That stage for making him a lightning rod— somewhat, but the striking thing is doesn't mean we may not be, and I'm a target for assassination. that, as yet, none have been black. well aware that the FBI and other Q Is a profile building up on persons Q Does the desire for attention or federal law-enforcement agencies are who try to carry out assassinations? fame play a strong role in a person's de- constantly concerned about that A Not a specific profile, but there sire to kill a prominent person? possibility. are common elements. A At some level, I would think, the Q Is there some way to greatly reduce Characteristically, assassins tend to would-be assassin must clearly have an the threat of assassination in the United States? Five Assailants and Their Targets A There's no simple answer. In democratic philosophy, the elected leader frequently performs ceremonial and political tasks in public. There is no perfect way to forestall attempted as- sassinations short of confining the Pres- ident to the White House and limiting his communication with the public to television broadcasts and other media. Other nations can, by totalitarian means, limit people's access to travel as Lee Oswald Sirhan Sirhan Arthur Bremer Lynette Fromme Sara Jane Moore well as to weapons. I don't think we're (John Kennedy) (Robert Kennedy) (George Wallace) (Geraid Ford) (Gerald Ford) about to go in that direction. 32 Copyright © 1981, U.S.News & World Report, Inc. NATIONAL REVIEW 4/17/81 Reagan's Finest Hour tonald Reagan has exorcised the national nightmare. He looked it in the eye and cracked some jokes. His 143 sanity was overwhelming, and the baggy. neurotic levils of self-hatred slunk back into the shadows. We re not. repeat not, a sick society, Reagan told us with :is jokes. His own behavior provided an exemplary netaphor. I'e cannot be defeated, at home or abroad, gan said in effect, "Cut it out, boys. Grow up.' f we refuse to be defeated. quipped that the shooting had ruined a favorite "Honey, forgot to duck," he said when he first saw Surrounded by squads of physicians, he said th his wife. Distraught. she was reassured. "Who's mind- he'd had this much attention in Hollywood he IT ng the store?" he asked his assembled aides, reassur- have stayed there. ing them too-and also reminding them that there is a Reagan did not have to say so directly, and in store which they must mind. As he went into the oper- he made his point more powerfully by making us ating room he quipped to the surgeons, "I hope you're it ourselves: The United States is the most stable all Republicans." (One of the physicians-as reported public in the history of the world. It was thus desig by the magnificent Dr. Dennis O'Leary, hospital by its founders. Four of its Presidents have been k spokesman-responded with answering style: "Today in office, and others have been the targets of assass everyone is a Republican.") And when Reagan came But all transitions have been remarkably peaceful out of surgery he once again reassured us with a joke: orderly. The great ship of the Republic sails "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadelphia." through all seas, however stormy. It cannot be $ Reagan knew with his utterly sure instinct that on by a .22 slug. Monday afternoon the nation itself had once again The day after surgery, the President signed a been wounded psychically. Suddenly, in a psychic ex- eliminating an increase in dairy price supports. plosion, all of those old images burst again into the Reagan revolution rolls forward, picking up mom national consciousness, magnified by television, turned tum. Runaway legal services to be cut back. Cr. into terrible metaphors. Kennedy in the open car. requirements for ramps and lifts for wheelchairs C Ruby and Oswald. King in Memphis. Funeral trains. celed. A more balanced policy toward southern A Bobby in Los Angeles. Squeaky Fromme. The Moore ca. A larger role for private initiative in park lan wornar. Hours and hours of TV coverage. Once again, A growing national consensus, now acknowledged this time, the idiot chorus began to warm up. Senator be irresistible, for across-the-board budget cuts. Bill Bradley of New Jersey, who seems intent these have the momentum, the President was telling us days on turning himself into a walking banality, in- his cool, steady behavior. Let us not be distracted. toned that we are a sick society. Dan Rather, who In a single afternoon, as we say, Ronald Reagan e might as well have been nude on CBS-TV, all but fan- orcised what might be called the "Kennedy nigh tasized a coup by Al Haig, blah, blah, blah. mare," the view that absurdity controls our destin With his jokes and his courage and his sanity Rea- He proved that a physical wound need not be a sp itual wound, and from his bed in the George Washin ton University Hospital he reminded America of wh it actually is. We cannot remember when an America statesman has so naturally exhibited the virtue of gra under pressure. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR 4/10/81 1981 23 DN AND COMMENTARY Richard L. Strout Closeness counts Washington York Times, as had his father before him. Ike left things "to White House press secretaries are a breed of their own Jim." Hagerty brought television into the press conferences. and have rarely been studied by political scientists. They are first with edited snatches and then with longer items (but live so close to the president that James Brady was tragically in coverage waited for Jack Kennedy by way of Pierre Salin- the line of fire at the attempt on President Reagan's life. In ger). the nature of things they must be in sympathy with the presi- Hagerty changed history at one point and it is this that I dent whose views they attempt to articulate. They stand associate him. The CIA had invented the U-2 spy plane. a close in at a great public gathering, listening to the way the floppy-winged glider built round a jet engine that could fly president utters the sentences written for him, buoyed by a right over Russia watching impotent Soviet attack planes be- hearty round of applause or cast down by the failure of a low, and equipped with a camera that could see a golf ball on supposedly electric phrase to strike a spark. Some of these a green at 50,000 feet. Suddenly it was knocked out of the air press secretaries have developed great power. by a new Soviet rocket as Ike prepared for the summit with The Brady-Reagan relationship gave promise of being one Khrushchev in Paris in May 1960. After the summit Ike was of the happiest. I watched a group of reporters at breakfast supposed to go to Russia, to return Khrushchev's visit to the the other morning pestering genial Jim Brady. He enjoyed it. US. His pleasant face in Russia might have tempered the He kept his affability and calm through eggs and bacon and I cold war - who knows? jotted down in my notes "a valuable man for the President!' The crucial question, though, was whether Ike would ac- Past White House secretaries, I thought, would welcome him knowledge that he had been spying on Russia, contrary to historically as their equal. Alas, I did not know the tragedy international protocol. or would issue a diplomatic plea of ahead. personal ignorance that would probably have preserved rela- Let me review some members of this unusual calling. tions. First the administration issued ambiguous cover sto- President Roosevelt's Stephen T. Early put the modern ries under Hagerty's directions, to the effect that pilot Glenn stamp on the White House-press relations. He was a witty, Powers was unfortunately "off course" when the Russians amiable expositor of the administration and served an knocked him down, presumably destroying him and his amazing 142 months. plane. Ike was in Gettysburg chuckling over golf scores with Harry Truman and Charlie Ross followed the Roosevelt George Allen. team: Charlie was one of the most gentlemanly men who ever held the job. He was in Truman's high school class in On May 7 Khrushchev sprang his surprise. He had cap- Independence. Mo., and it was he (not the bespectacled Tru- tured the US pilot and Powers was talking: Washington had man) that the class voted "most likely to succeed." Harry directed the overflights. Would Ike take responsibility? To and Charlie sat down one night at the White House and called admit participation might ruin the summit; to feign igno- up their old high school teacher and thanked her for what she rance would weaken him at home in a field in which he was had done for them. Charlie was former head of the Washing- sensitive. On a drive back to Washington Hagerty apparently ton bureau of the St. Louis Post Dispatch. The best White encouraged him to accept responsibility. House press secretaries, I think, are former newsmen. These events followed: On May 11 Ike said he knew of the The list comes down to modern presidents: the two Rons, flights; May 16 - Khrushchev in Paris for the summit can- for example, Ron Ziegler for Nixon and Ron Nessen for Ger- celed the invitation to Ike to visit Russia (they had even pre- ald Ford. There was Jody Powell for President Carter - who pared a golf course for him); Ike in Paris, grim, said no more was ideal in that he knew the President inside out and talked overflights but called Khrushchev's "ultimatum" unaccep- with him 30 minutes every morning. (The least satisfactory table. May 17 - the summit (attended by DeGaulle and Mac- press secretaries are the ones who don't know what is going millan) collapsed and so did Ike's hopes for détente and on.) But Jody had the limitations of most of the Carter group: world conciliation. it was too ingrown and would have been better off with Here was a case where a powerful press secretary. at a broader experience. critical juncture, apparently gave council that changed his- Of all press secretaries of modern times Jim Hagerty was tory. Ah, me - that is the business of White House press most influential. He had been a first-rate reporter on the New secretaries, to be very close to their presidents Regan's surprise It seems to be fashionable these days to ment. Our people are in here by 7:30 in the hurl darts at the federal government and its morning, certainly by 8. When I left last night burgeoning bureaucracy. To be sure, there is at twenty of eight, there were still people a lot of waste and redundancy in the system. around here working, which is a 13-hour day. Some bureaucrats don't work very hard; oth- Plus homework and weekends, you've got ers see government as a cushy job. But there people working 70. 80 and 90 hours a week for is more than one side to every question, and what I know are salaries that are less than a Americans should not be left with an impres- third they could command in the private sion that government employment is a sine- sector." cure. On the contrary, Washington has a Let's hope this doesn't provide justifica- goodly share of hard-working public servants. tion for seeking big federal salary increases Even the Reagan administration may at a time when most Americans have to have to revise its evaluation. Listen to what tighten their belts. But it does put a bit of per- Treasury Secretary Donald Regan replied spective on the problem of bloated bureauc- when asked by the National Journal about his racy. Heaven knows, government would im- greatest surprise since coming to the capital: prove by a judicious pruning of officials as "[It's) the long hours that people work for well as programs. But the devotion and dili- SO little money at the top levels of govern- gence of many should not go unrecognized. CHICAGO TRIBUNE 4/13/81 Section 1, page 9 some 25-year-old would-be murderer did not have the power to change the feelings Reagan had about his country. By making light of the shooting, Reagan was saying that it had no more importance that what it actually was: the irrational action of a dis- turbed young man. PRESIDENT REAGAN was not going to join in the handwringing over what the shooting meant about American society. He was not going to be part of the chorus bemoaning what has happened to our national life. He still believed that the soul of Ameri- ca was good, and he was refusing to allow someone Bob like John W. Hinckley Jr. to overrule his convictions. So while the rest of America was debating the Greene philsophical implications of the shooting, Reagan was inquiring of one of his assistants: "Does anybody know what that guy's beef was?" To the President, the murder attempt was no more than that: a man The Reagan vision with a beef, not a comment on the nation's health. And before long Reagan was wondering out loud whether he would be able to throw out the first survives shooting pitch of the new-baseball season - another graphic indication that he chose to linger on the sunshine of hopefulness, not the murkiness of despair. WEEK AGO today, a rather embittered A of American society, and the pessimism column appeared in this space concerning You didn't have to be a fan of Reagan's politics to the shooting of President Reagan. The understand what he was trying to tell the nation, point I was trying to make was about the even while he was still confined to a hospital room. And you didn't have to be a supporter of his policies meanness one must feel in trying to live in the midst of such to be affected by the convictions that were making him do it. Michael Kilian of The Tribune - a writer a society. who is often cynical about politicians, and has often readers agreed with my point of view. is, They been critical of Reagan - had this to say: called a sad country in which to live in 1981, was Many and wrote to say that the United States and "I AM AWED by the incomparable grace and indeed, that the assassination attempt on the President courage, the wit and toughness displayed by Ronald just another graphic example of that fact. Reagan and his wife in this, the worst moment of But it occurs to me that there is one person who his presidency and their lives. Like Andrew Jackson, would disagree most vehemently with such an he has the spit and callous of the common man, yet something nobler. He is one of nature's gentlemen, a outlook. splendid symbol of his country. Were the United That person is Ronald Reagan. States to have a constitutional monarch or a Presi- there is anything that President Reagan has dent who served only as chief of state, there would demonstrated If in the days following the attempt on his be no one more suitable." his vision life, of a better America, an American as it is that he is refusing to give up that on is All over America, people are drawing the same message from Reagan. He knows that be was fresh and as hopeful as it used to be. elected as President because most people trusted the DURING mocked Reagan for pursuing such a to the HIS campaign for the presidency, vision. many things he was saying about the nation and what it can be: And he wants his countrymen to know that critics critics said that there is no going back desire the actions of one gunman have not changed his The of yesteryear, and that Reagan's values was to mind about any of those things. He doesn't want America recapture old - some said outmoded - anyone else to change their minds, either. naive and misdirected. If Reagan recovers as fully às it is hoped he does, the public liked what It was hearing from the time will come when political criticism and par- But Many voters who disagreed with his specific on tisan debate over his policies are as fervid as they Reagan. plans cast their ballots for him anyway., ever were, And that is as it should be. policy strength of the hopeful message that lay just pub- be the neath the surface of his every speech, his every But one thing will not change. In the days fol- lowing the attempt on his life, by reaffirming his lic pronouncement. hopes for his country, Ronald Reagan has shown us after the assassination attempt, Reagan made vio- all - supporters and critics alike - something we And that this newest example of mupderous cast a are not likely to forget. We have here one remark- it clear against a President was not going to some- able man. lence shadow on the bright vision that he - and times When he first saw his wife in the corridor of the he alone - had for his country. room and said, "Honey, I forgot to emergency duck," it was more than a quip. It was a signal that If there is anything that President Reagan has demonstrated in the days following the attempt on his life, it is that he is refusing to give up on his vision of a better America. EDINBURGN EVENING NEWS 4/2/81 (SCOTLAND) CDINBURCH EVENING NEWS APRILLINE THEY'LL never again be able to snipe at Ronnie Reagan for making 54 B movies. Give the man Because n he's starred in a classic. Walking into hospital wounded, with a bullet this Paper. mornings near his heart, and real blood on the chest an Oscar! which was splattered for 25 years with ketchup, he's given the perfor- He deserves it for before the election. for fear he unwise-cracked away the mance of a lifetime. Presidency. In real life. But it was pure gold corn. What John Wayne did for has turned into true story grit. his style, his grace It was rich with courage, and America in celluloid, Reagan ripe with concern for America first. and if I fall, He bit his lip bravely on the guys, keep the flag flying." bullet. He actually fired all those final reel remarks they and just sheer guts Ronnie Reagan really is don't script-write like that any the man in the white hat, more. with the stars in his eyes "Honey, I forgot to duck", and stripes on his sleeve. So he told his anxious posse of stone - "all in all, I'd rather the lanky six footer grinned I no longer give a damn if he weakly. as his loving Nancy sidekicks, at the moment when be in Philadelphia." dyes his hair, or if he's rushed to gather him in her they usually stick a cigarette A youth within 22 shot of revelling in acting the part arms. "I hope you're all - or, in his case, a jelly bean what could have been he's been after for years. Republicans", drawled the - between the hero's pale lips. Reagan's sunset after only gunned-down man as the And, when he could no two months in the saddle. It was R helluva perform- doctors. grim-faced, probed said: You could see the ance. Pure Oscar. longer speak, he scrawled down him for lead. the famous last words W. C. feeling in the President's And there isn't an one who "Don't worry. I'll make it", Fields wanted on his tomb- eyes. He was in a state of could have done it with more shock or fear. It will be style. grace, and guts. etched on my eyes forever." We've seen that look in the Yes of them all, as the Elinburgh, Scattand clock hands touch High Noon. But it's a blue-steel man who remembers to ask, just before they put him under. who's minding the store ?" O.K., so it was corn. It was the stuff they tried to stop pouring from Reagan's lips, CHICAGO TRIBUNE 4/7/81 Reagan crisis: What we learned By Eugene Kennedy The Vice President's diffidence reflected, as wax does the ring whose seal it bears, that the source of power was surely REVELATIONS OFTEN confront us when we least expect outside himself. It was a strange completion of the aborted them. They come to us when we are not prepared to accept gesture of Alexander Haig earlier in the day. them as, for example, in a sudden glimpse of ourselves in a His was not a bold grasp for authority by a man with a store window. Even though the glass is shadowed and filled sense of command, but a quirky and halting statement by an with passing strangers, the truth of what we really look like outsider desperately unhappy that power lay elsewhere on is revealed to-us that rainy afternoon. The radar echoes of the day came back So it was on the day that Ronald Reagan was shot, on that from all of these events and personalities with the unre- long afternoon when truth and rumor bobbed like puppets for markable outline of the true power center of the government our attention, and when in the coalescense of images and in the offices of Meese and Baker events, we experienced a revelation about ourselves. President Reagan was the sturdy central figure, of course. ANOTHER UNEXPECTED revelation concerned profes- But we really learned more about his advisers - and their sionalism, a concept which has been under seige in the worries about his fragility and need for protection than United States for the last 15 years. about him Messrs Edwin Meese and James Baker, like dis- Professionals have been vigorously assailed not only by creet undertakers good at denying death, left a break as big as consumer groups checking up on their performances in a a gap in a Watergate tape in the continuity of the afternoon dur- variety of fields, but by hordes of others. Lawyers, especial- ing which the public was led to believe that Mr Reagan had ly, have been under attack, the charges against them not been injured focusing on their competence and privileged role in Ameri- Their next version, also to be revised later, projected a can life. President entering the hospital hardly more distressed than Few people have dorfe more to restore the image of the he had been by a thousand blank cartridges on the Warner professional than Dr. Dennis O'Leary, spokesman on televi- back lot This excessive re-arranging indicated their own sion for the medical center at which the President was the habitual concern about managing the President's image, as patient. With each precise sentence and careful explanation, though, were they not at his side to point to where to sign on O'Leary not only relieved the national anxiety but also the document or to hand him a schedule, he might not know restored a measure of confidence in medicine itself. For in what to do next. him we had a revelation of the knowledgeable professional The ironic revelation of the long afternoon lay in the fact physician and teacher in action. that the more his counselors insisted that the President was The swift and sure reactions of the Secret Service agents in complete control, the clearer became their need to keep and the other law enforcement officials provided more things under their own control. examples of well-trained professionals who know just how to THIS WAS reinforced by the return of the Vice President carry out their jobs. to Washington. His arrival was elaborately staged to demon- THE REVELATIONS abounded even more in the way the strate that the succession of government was secure but also great masses of us absorbed the shock of the shooting. to show that George Bush was certainly not the man in and carried on with our daily activities. We had been control of it. More hangdog than sprightly jogger, Bush through this before. We had heard dreadful bulletins and seemed, in his brief TV appearances, like a man who had watched similar horrors unfold. And although we were not been given explicit instructions by the President's staff. It numb to the shock, we were familiar with it and drew on our was all right for him to go into the White House, but he experiences in order to handle it. certainly wasn't supposed to touch anything. An event that might have sent mobs into the streets of the great cities of other countries saw us finish our day's work and go home without any serious disturbance: It was not a Eugene Kennedy, a Loyola University psychologist, is au- revelation of callousness but of how, through suffering the thor of "Father's Day." a novel about Chicago politics and public traumas of the last generation, we have learned to Notre Dame (Doubleday). cope with even the most awful possibilities. CHICAGO TRIDUNE 4/6/81 World press on Reagan shooting The assassination attempt on President Reagan was gripped by forces of disunity, the fear of an uncontrollable viewed with both sympathy and outrage in newspaper destiny. editorials throughout the world. Here are some excerpts: La Republica, Rome Can the President of the United States govern from a John Wayne would have been proud of him. In a B-movie, hospital bed with the international horizon so obscured by the President of the United States, 70 years old, with a bullet black clouds? in his lung, delivering laconic one-liners on his way to the Le Figaro, Rome operating room and after coming out of the anesthetic, may have sounded corny. In real life, it is true grit. It is paradoxical that Ronald Reagan, who publicly de- Ronald Reagan has guts and he has style. He is a man to fends uncontrolled possession of weapons, and who "sup- be admired. plemented" Carter's human rights propaganda with his When it comes to authority and popularity, this baptism by propaganda about the struggle against international terror- fire could be the President's real inauguration. ism, has himself almost fallen victim to the terrorism which Daily Mail, London so extensively mushrooms in his own country. Rude Pravo, Prague A calmer country might start from basics. The President of the United States is now, without question, the most The public will not be satisfied with affirmations that vulnerable target in the Western world. Every nut in the (the attack) was masterminded and executed by a supposed- land-tens of thousands fancies a potshot at him. ly imbalanced young man. In the background we have Why should this be so in America when, in Europe, with a the facts that Reagan stood for a toughening of American roughly equivalent population, the threat comes mostly from policy on domestic and international issues. organized red, green and purple brigades? Because the Camhuriyet, Ankara President is a symbol: Because he is now the man the All the security precautions in the world are not sufficient deranged exist to shoot. He seems, in part, a victim of the to safeguard the life and well-being of a President in a place mythology of office. Hail to the chief: death to the chief. where it is possible for a man who has been treated for He is the victim of the gun-slinging myths of America. He mental disturbance to buy and carry a weapon without is the victim of a social divide which, in its concentration of hindrance. ghetto violence based on the bitter divisions of rich and poor, The responsibility that rests on this greatest of powers, black and white, fuels the fear. Fear that so easily puts which only now is beginning to regain its function as leader revolvers into the hands of white, middle-class madmen. of the free world, demands a remedy for this affliction - The Guardian, London even if this entails restrictions on the exaggerated freedom There are 55 million handguns in America one for every that leaves society defenseless against the drawn guns of family. A gun is bought every 13 seconds. madmen. Most Americans, it seems to outsiders, would rather die by Maariv Daily, Tel Aviv the gun than live without one. Of this sort of thing, Lenin once said: "Crazy? Perhaps. How many more Presidents-and ordinary people-must But crazy in whose service?" After all, Reagan has a lot of be shot down before America hangs up its gun belt? enemies outside, and they have all sorts of ideas about him. While every crank has the right to be his own private And in conclusion: such a number of attacks on America's army, there will be more public tragedies - and more. A Presidents in so short a period adds nothing to its prestige. radio reporter commented that the television coverage of the Yediot Aharonot, Tel Aviv assassination attempt "was so good that it looked Te- (Mr. Reagan) has forgotten that the real terrorism that hearsed." But when the camera crews get so much experi- ought to be fought is American terrorism the terrorism in ence of the real thing, who needs practice? Washington itself. Daily Mirror, London Ash-Sharq, Beirut The United States was born out of the violence of conquest, The issue which the American nation must now face rebellion and civil war. Its myths are those of the squarely is whether to continue to allow individual states to frontier, where the fastest gun was king and every man had have a variety of conflicting gun laws. It is important his fate in his own hands. that the American people discuss this issue seriously and in The United States has risen to become a major industrial all its aspects, and military power claiming universality for its values while Any attempt on their President's life brings the rest of the seeming unable to shake off the darker elements in its world to the brink, because the activities of the U.S.A. are so tradition. entwined with the well-being of all the world's other peoples. The roots of the problem lie deep in American society The Nation, Nairobi Times of London General Haig set aside respect for the law and the 'Violence is as American as apple pie," runs a saying American Constitution, behaved literally in military terms, which is as dismissive as it is cynical. That sick minds have and crowned himself the medieval king of Washington. The used violence so often against the nation's highest represent- American Constitution is perhaps the most watertight instru- ative can be explained not least by a deification of the ment of government in the world that anyone would American President which is unique in the modern world. attempt to tamper with it is almost beyond belief. This offers the assassin the maximum return on his need for The Standard, Nairobi self-assertion even if he does not achieve his murderous The free selling of guns in the United States is supported goal. as in the case of Ronald Reagan. by the broad masses. That is why Congress has not been Sueddeutsche Zeitung, Bonn able to pass gun control legislation. Violence being used to Violence belongs to the American climate. As long as kill a President could naturally arouse popular indignation, the nation fails to draw the consequences from this finding, but it seems no one can do anything about it. America will remain the country of the quick-draw revolver Peoples Daily, Peking - as it likes to depict itself in its films and the results for The shooting was another stain on the political history of political life are bitter. the United States. We believe this violent act demonstrates a Allmegeine Zeitung, Frankfurt basic weakness in U.S. society, and that weakness is the In a country where guns are easy to obtain it's not frequency of violence. The U.S. government's laissez-faire surprising that history is at the mercy of accidents such as attitude toward the possession of firearms is a major cause the one Mr. Reagan just escaped. of American society's propensity for violence. Already known as a "9-to-5 President," what will his Yomiuri Shimbun, Tokyo schedule be like while recovering from the attack and There are more sick minds in the U.S. than the outside after? world realizes. Le Monde, Paris Indian Tribune, New Delhi The voilence which runs through the country like the What is ironic about the latest show of unrestrained rumbling of distant thunder is the same current which violence in the U.S. is that the latest victim is himself an renders America dynamic, vibrant, audacious, but also ardent and vigorous objector to any gun control law. brutal, dangerous and sometimes bloody. Societies so Manila Times Journal, the Philippines well policed that violence never cracks the surface are societies so weakened that storm or malady can sweep them Possibly the latest explosion of mindless violence, one away in no time. hopes, will persuade President Reagan to have second Journal de Geneve, Geneva thoughts about the gun lobby. Morning Post, Hong Kong Blood has always been a part of its history a secret violent component of America which, from time to time, With the ready availability of handguns, Americans explodes like the hidden crater of a volcano. become their own worst enemies. Australia If freedom is to remain, then freedom must pay the price. Corriere della Sera, Milan Is the pace of modern society provoking an increase is It is natural to ask whether that gunshot did not reawaken insanity? The News. Mexico City in everyone a sense of ungovernability. a feeling of a society Nation how miserable Bush is on television. He's Reagan Is Doing Fine got all the punch of Jerry Ford." Charismatic or not, Bush continued to acquire respect within the White House But he will have to ease back into full-time command as a consummate team player. Said one Reagan intimate: "He has enhanced him- T he President's fever was gone and his ments. Said Hospital Spokesman Dr. self. He didn't rub anybody the wrong lung unclogged. Slightly gaunt, but on Dennis O'Leary: "He likes visitors more way." Indeed, Bush has scrupulously the mend. he padded last week at half than his doctors do." Baker, Deaver and avoided filling in for Reagan when to do speed around. his hospital room. Then at Meese arrived together at 7:15 every so might smack of usurpation: for in- week's end Ronald Reagan was driven morning and spent 15 or 20 minutes sup- stance, he sits in his own chair-not the in a limousine from George Washington plying a distilled overview of the day's President's-at Cabinet meetings. None- University Hospital back home to the business. Nancy Reagan arrived in time theless, Bush has remained unusually well White House. Awaiting him there were for lunch, and remained at the hospital apprised of national security details since some 75,000 letters and telegrams, sev- until 9 at night, slipping in and out be- Reagan's shooting-more current, in fact, eral meadows' worth of flowers and an tween meetings and medical tests. In all, than the hospital-bound President. even ton of jelly beans. the President received about two dozen Reagan's fellow victims were also on The national surge of relief may have well-wishers last week, including Daugh- their separate roads to recovery. Secret raised too far and fast expectations about ter Maureen. Reagan will miss her wed- Service Agent Timothy McCarthy left the the speed of Reagan's recovery. For at ding if it is held as scheduled in Los An- hospital headed for a month's R. and R. least a month, his presidential duties will geles next week; meanwhile, he has in Acapulco. Washington Policeman remain pared to the minimum, and until postponed a state visit to Mexico set for Thomas Delahanty was not seriously well into summer the U.S. may have a a few days later. wounded in the shooting. But surgeons part-time Commander-in-Chief. Especially worrisome to Reagan's last week removed a bullet from his neck, Says a top aide of his boss: "He knows lieutenants, however, is his absence from necessitating a longer hospital stay. that he will have to slowly work to get his strength back." Nancy Reagan rushed WELCUME along the redecoration of the White House HOME solarium in anticipation of her husband's homebound days. The President will Mr. President DIRCK HALSTEAD probably not leave the family quarters this week, but the only medical care he now re- quires is penicillin pills, daily checks of his temperature and blood pressure and thrice-weekly chest X rays. His work load last week was limited to two hours a day. For the time being, Reagan's daily offi- cial meetings, outside of those with his staff, will be kept to one or two. Says Dep- uty Chief of Staff Michael Deaver: "We're going to take it easy." Fortunately, perhaps, Reagan has al- ways parceled out authority. Even before the shooting, three members of his staff -Presidential Counsellor Edwin Meese, Chief of Staff James Baker, and Deaver -had achieved a kind of supereminence. With restrictions on the President's time for months to come, this troika's power will grow more entrenched. It remains to The President arrives home from the hospital amid White House well-wishers be seen how well this apparatus would Rest in the solarium, delegated authority and minimum duties. serve if events called for a 24-hour-a-day President. the battle for the Administration's eco- Delahanty had his homecoming Saturday. Last week was generous to the conva- nomic program. The President was to Presidential Press Secretary James lescing President. There was no festering have gone on the hustings this spring, in Brady, the most gravely injured, was able political problem, no diplomatic crisis state legislatures and citizens' meetings, to sit up and converse last week, doctors -although Reagan did draft a message to rounding up popular support for his pro- said, but may require a year to recuper- Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev warn- posed budget and tax cuts. His convales- ate. His doctors hope that he will recover ing him against an invasion of Poland. cence has scrubbed what would have been the "majority" of his mental capacity and Even if Reagan had not lain wounded, his the campaign's canny opening salvo 90% of his physical. But they worry about official obligations would have been slight. -Reagan appealing on network televi- a "flattening" of his personality, since the One of those chores was rich with irony sion for the tax cut, just as taxes came bullet partly lobotomized Brady's brain. -Reagan formally proclaimed next Sun- due. Said one political adviser: "There is Said Dr. O'Leary: "It is possible he could day the beginning of Victims' Rights no question we are handicapped with the walk with a cane. We do not," he added, Week. Said the country's most prominent President laid up." The most prominent "expect miracles." criminal prey: "Only victims truly know surrogate campaigner available is Vice The President, thanks to his remark- the trauma crime can produce." President George Bush, who substituted able physical constitution, has apparently Reagan described his own victimiza- for Reagan in announcing a White House been spared complications. Besides the tion to a pair of FBI agents who were piec- plan to ease air-quality and safety reg- six-inch scar on his left side, Reagan's ing together an official picture of the as- ulations on automobiles (see ECONOMY & only hospital vestige will be a bill-to be sassination attempt. They were among a BUSINESS). But Bush is no match for his paid by insurance for federal employees stream of visitors who made Reagan's boss as a political salesman. Said one un- injured on the job. -By Kurt Andersen. schedule seem chockablock with appoint- charitable White House aide: "I forgot Reported by Douglas Brew/Washington TIME. APRIL 20. 1981 21 A President Who Enjoys a Josh It was a stream of wisecracks and jests from a wounded Ronald Reagan that reassured Americans most in the wake of an attempted presidential assassination. Even with a bullet in his chest, he was making such quips as these- To his wife Nancy: "Honey, I forgot to duck." To the surgeons who were about to operate on him: "Please tell me you're all Republicans." When tubes in his throat kept him from talking during the hours that followed surgery, Reagan turned to a pencil and pad. Told that a nurse would spend the night in his recovery room, he wrote: "Does Nancy know?" Said another note: "IfI'd gotten this much attention in Holly- wood, I would not have left." One of the President's notes read: "As Winnie Churchill said, There is no more exhilarating feeling than being shot without results.' After undergoing a particularly painful medical procedure, Rea- gan paraphrased the epitaph of comedian W. C. Fields: "All in all, I'd rather be in Philadelphia." When Reagan could talk again, he rattled off these one-liners- To daughter Maureen: "One of my new suits is ruined." To his three highest White House aides: "Who's minding the store?" and "Well, I guess I really screwed up the schedule today." To an aide who told him that he would be happy to know the gov- ernment was running normally in his absence: "What makes you think I'd be happy about that?" To a nurse who told him to keep up the good work: "You mean this may happen several more times?" On learning that he would not be well enough to throw out the first ball to open the major-league baseball season on April 8: "I am a right-hander, and it is the left side that hurts." Reagan cracked most of his jokes before learning that his press secretary, James Brady, had been critically wounded in the assassination attempt. Tears filled his eyes when he was told of Bra- dy's plight. "Oh, damn," the Pres- ident said. "Oh, damn." U.S. news+ 4/13/81 Thared 31 Report THE SUN Lowell, Massachusetts He played a part in this case bigger than he Founded by John H. Harrington ever did on the silver screen. He came through it, as somebody said, looking like John Wayne IN 1878 on Korseback. There is unlimited admiration for him today as a man of extraordinary cour- age and self control. Imagine wise cracking in the operating room after being shot! It's in- Vol. 103, Saturday, April. 4, 1981, No. 77 credible. His spirit is indomitable. Yes, we have an excellent man at the head of our government today, and all America knows A terrific guy - that better now than ever before. We are lucky to have him and lucky that God spared his life. President Ronald Reagan has revealed His popularity has risen immeasurably as peo- more of himself to the people of the United ple everywhere note, almost with incredulity, States - and the world - in the short time the magnificent response of Ronald Reagan to that has elapsed between the attempt on his this terrible crisis in his life and the life of the life on Monday and today than he could have nation. He is hero to us all today, a man to hoped to do in a lifetime of political campaign- emulate. His reaction to the crisis bodes well ing. He has come out of the ordeal he went for the country should it ever face a similar through so well that today his stock is higher showdown in the future. than ever in the eyes of all of us. Few men The President has proved that he knows could have taken what he did and still get off how to react in times of emergency. He did it one liners in a hospital emergency room! better than most of us could ever hope to do The man's character, his resolve, his physic- under the same circumstances. The guy has al and mental strength have aroused the the courage of a lion, the strength of a bull and admiration of all. Most other men, especially the kindness of a gentle man. What more could those 70 years of age, would have melted under the people of this country ask for in a Presi- the strain but the President kept his head ab- dent? out him, he kept up his courage, his morale There isn't an ounce of vindictiveness or and even his sense of humor. It's been a long bitterness in his bones. He is a person to time since we have seen a man in the White admire and emulate. No longer can there be House who could laugh and crack a joke the criticism of him as a third rate movie actor; he way President Reagan has been able to do. It's is a first rate man of extraordinary qualities. super That is the lesson that has emerged from this When he told his wife, Nancy, that "he for- harrowing week that tested the nerve of all got to duck," when he asked his pretty nurse if Americans. "Nancy knew about us?, "when he scribbled a Soon he will be back on his feet, in note to one of the physicians admitting that charge once again. Wherever he goes, all in all, I would rather be in Philadelphia," even in the halls of Congress (especially when he expressed the hope that the doctors there, perhaps), he will be cheered and who were surrounding him with their life or applauded as never before and with good death procedures were "all Republicans" - reason. He has been a tonic for this coun- and when his eyes filled with tears as he try. We now have a real life hero in the learned of the critical condition of Press President, and what more could we ask Secretary James Brady, after all of this and for in national government than that? more, the world began to understand that Ronald Reagan was truly a fine man. Out of this terrible incident has emerged a man we can all admire, regardless of political considerations. Somebody hung a sign on a building facing the hospital wishing the Presi- dent a speedy recovery. The sign said that at this time, there was no such thing as Republi- cans and Democrats but only Americans, all of them rooting for a quick recovery for the Presi- dent, one of theirs, one of us. The President would have liked that WASHINGTON POST 4/12/81 In Congress, the Democrats are grappling with a suddenly unknow- able task. MARY McGRORY House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr. came back from a hospital visit the other day and summed up the dilemma in his mellow Irish tones. Reagan "A beautiful person. I wish he agreed with me. O'Neill. the partisan Democrat, Re-emerges, finds Reagan infinitely more conge- nial than his Democratic predeces- sor. Jimmy Carter, who was mushy Admired on policy and cement-hard on peo- ple, was not his kind of guy. Carter didn't tell Irish stories. Reagan does. The Democrats' "alternative bud- Ronald Reagan comes out to a dif- ferent world. get," he said, was being put forward For one thing, he will see full "at an inopportune moment.' spring in Washington. He missed the So the president emerges stronger daffodils and the forsythia. But the politically and weaker physically. Admiration enfolds him, but so tulips, the azaleas and the dogwood does anxiety. His convalescence will have been coming on while he was in his hospital-room painfully rid- require the most delicate manage- ding himself of the "debris" in his ment. If he does little, people will be reminded that he is 70 years old injured lung. The White House, which was still and has had chest surgery. If he does strange to him after only 70 days too much, they will worry that he is pushing. himself to prove he is a of occupancy, has become "home," full-time president. by virtue of not being the hospital. He went in to George Washington If he is seen to tire quickly or speak thickly. hackles will be raised as a president of 70 days. He comes out as a hero. He demonstrated un- about the special vicious quality of the "Devastator" bullet, which we der harrowing circumstances that belatedly discovered from the FBI he has one of the greatest gifts a was the kind that John Hinckley Jr. president could have. He does not had somehow obtained. The "Devas- take things personally. tator" contains lead azide. After a run of chief executives The president will find the coun- (with the conspicuous exception of try curious about how his Gerald Ford) who seemed to believe experience has changed him. Has he that all happenings were the result changed his mind about guns? Or of. some special animus from an in- does he still think that the death dividual or a group bent on wreck- penalty will cure the epidemic vio- ing the Republic as personified in lence of which he is the most con- the White House, Reagan's detach- spicuous victim? Whatever he ment about a bullet from a demented wants, it seems safe to say, will be- stranger is reviving. Lyndon John; come the law. He has the kind of son and Jimmy Carter both saw credentials on guns that Nixon had themselves as Southern victims of on China. the implacable Northeast. Richard The country has been as philo- Nixon presented himself as a casu- sophical as he is about what almost alty of partisan plots. stopped the world on March 30. The Even before he was shot, Reagan other patients are prospering. The had been affably demonstrating that valiant Secret Service agent, Tim Mc-- he saw political differences as just Carthy, has gone off on vacation. Jim that. His relations with the press also Brady, the Lazarus of the horror - proved an ability to distinguish be- he was declared dead by three net- tween what people are and what works at one bad moment- is sitting they do: up and laughing. Officer Thomas Remarkable" and "ex- Delehanty, the "Devastator" bullet traordinary" to use two of the removed from his neck, is mending. words that were being flung around, The scene of the shooting has be- a bit indiscriminately, as things come a tourist site. The other day turned out, by Dr. Dennis O'Leary, outside the Washington Hilton, a our tour guide at the hospital - still young couple was smiling, into a apply to the president's gallant con- camera held by a friend. They were duct. The country responded with very particular about standing ex- torrents of flowers and letters. The actly on the grate in the sidewalk first lady became a woman with a where Brady fell with a bullet in sick husband, her daily visit to the his brain. hospital the object of aching sym- It has been an odd time. The next pathy there are so many pleasanter few weeks could be more so. The things to do on spring days in Wash- only certainty in Washington has ington. been the gorgeous and inexorable People who still think that Rea- advance of spring gan's social policies make the country's poor like the Jews at Masada waiting for the battering ram of imperial power. people who still think that Reagan's foreign poli- cy is dangerously wrong. think dif- ferently about Reagan as a human being. WASHINGTON STAR 4/10/81 JAMES J. KILPATRICK Reagan May Indeed Be An Indispensable Man Eleven days have passed since the Perhaps the Secret Service should attempted assassination of President have kept spectators at a greater dis- Reagan, and little by little the story tance from the presidential limou- drops out of the news. Let me try, if sine. Perhaps the limousine should I may, to take a reflective look at the have been parked eight feet from the man, the event, and the aftermath. door instead of 25 feet. These critical First the man, simply as a man. Er- conjectures are useless. nest Hemingway once defined cour- If an assassin is truly determined age as grace under pressure. Here to try for a president, only luck will was a 70-year-old man with a bullet prevent a mortal wound. We cannot in his chest, walking into the hospi- seal a president in a White House tal under his own steam, still able vault. Presidents must make public to reassure his anxious wife with a and social appearances; presidents grin and a feeble joke. "Honey," he must travel; they must take risks as said, "I guess I forgot to duck.' That part of the job. All the Secret Service is class. can do is sensibly to minimize the Mr. Reagan is a special man: presi- risks. dent of the United States. And one No system of data retrieval yet de- thing we-learned in the hours that vised could have protected Mr. Rea- followed the shooting and the sur- gery is that, politically speaking, he is an indispensable man. During "He will lose some fights these hours we heard almost inces- sant conjecture about a transfer of on particular budget power to the vice president. If Mr. items, but he will not Reagan had gone into a prolonged coma, what then? lose the war." The 25th Amendment, adopted in 1967, spells out the constitutional gan against his assailant 11 days ago.' process. It would have been up to No gun control law ever drafted Vice President Bush and a majority could have prevented John W. of the Cabinet to publish a written Hinckley Jr. from getting his hands declaration that "the president is un- on a gun. able to discharge the powers and du- Members of the Secret Service are ties of his office," whereupon Mr. rational men. Try as they may, they Bush would have become "acting cannot think themselves into the president." sick and irrational mind of a drifter who supposed crazily that he could No Historic Transfer win the "love and respect" of a young No such historic transfer of power actress by killing Mr. Reagan. He was undertaken on March 30, thanks wanted to impress her. to the common-sensical view that the Soviets were unlikely to launch What Lies Ahead? atomic war during the two hours the Assuming the president's contin- president was under anesthesia. ued smooth recovery, what lies Nevertheless, the grim possibility ahead? The public opinion polls al- served to focus attention on Mr. ready show a spurt in Mr. Reagan's Bush and to think of him in terms approval ratings. Class tells. He will of presidential command. The vice lose some fights on particular bud- president is an able, attractive, thor- get items, but he will not lose the oughly modest man with wide exper- war. ience in government. He has yet to To. survive danger, to walk tall, demonstrate that body of political to laugh in the face of death - this principles and convictions with is the stuff of which legend is fash- which Mr. Reagan has long been ioned. For a considerable time the Identified. The Reagan program de- cartoonists will have to direct their mands, in a word, Mr. Reagan. No malice somewhere else, probably to- surrogate could take his place. ward Secretary of State Alexander The event itself reminds us anew Haig. We are not likely to hear much not only of the peril of the talk in the future of Mr. Reagan as presidency but also of the impossi- nothing but an ex-actor. The role bility of protecting against that peril he played 11 days ago was for rèal, absolutely. and he played it superbly. Part 1/ Friday, April TO, 1981 "the President's best day yet" since was ended. REAGAN: Relaxed Style Helped in Crisis his office hours will be considerably he was wounded March 30. Rea- Speakes denied that doctors in- less than 9 to 5. "This will be deter- gan's temperature was down to nor- tend to limit Reagan to a two-hour mined day to day, based on consul- mal, he was taken off antibiotics, workday once he returns to the tation with the doctors and his own Continued from First Page calls "the big three": counselor to George Bush presiding. and physical therapy for his chest White House. But, initially at least, Another senior staff member cit- wishes," Speakes said. the President Edwin Meese III, In the Reagan White House, Ca- ed as an example of "the kind of de- chief of staff James A. Baker III and binet Council recommendations tail he (Reagan) leaves to us" the deputy chief of staff Michael K. usually are kicked around by the content of diplomatic letters that Deaver. Before he was hospitalized, full Cabinet, with the President Secretary of State Alexander M. Reagan normally met with these presiding. Haig Jr. carried from the President three at the beginning and the end to heads of state in four Middle of each workday at the White Make Preliminary Decisions Eastern countries in the last few House. "He uses his Cabinet as a board of days. At the hospital, Reagan has also directors. The only difference, as he "We simply asked the President been receiving nightly national se- always says, is that there's no vote if we had his authority to sign his curity reports from the State De- on this board. He makes the deci- name to those letters. And he said, partment, daily intelligence reports, sion," an aide said. "He's a very 'Yes, of course,' without asking to periodic Defense Department me- good delegator of authority, but you read the letters," the aide said. mos, a summary of mail from mem- can't delegate decisions of a certain "That's a good example, We'll bers of Congress, recommendations magnitude." say, 'Mr. President, it would be ap- for key appointments and decision Thursday, Dr. Dennis O'Leary, propriate that you send a message memos from his Cabinet Councils. who is in charge of patient care at to so-and-so, expressing such-and- Reagan 'Can Run the Country' George Washington University such.' He doesn't care whether he It is to these Cabinet Councils- Hospital, said that "it will take four sees the message, as long as he's essentially subcabinets grouped by to six months before he (Reagan) is confident we're going to get an ap- propriate message sent out." general subject matter-that Rea- chipper," although O'Leary added gan entrusts much of the prelimina- that Reagan "can run the country. Backlog of Decision ry decision-making at the White He's doing that now." Although senior advisers insist House. The councils have continued (White House Deputy Press Sec- that the hospitalized President has to meet regularly since Reagan was retary Larry Speakes quoted Dr. been making all the decisions that shot, usually with Vice President Ruge as saying that Thursday was are "essential" for him to make, one acknowledged that there is a back- log building up of unresolved pres- idential decisions-one, for in- stance, on offshore oil drilling; an- other on airline regulations. "The criterion now is whether it's 'time urgent," a key adviser. said. "Ifit's not, it's postponed." There is also another criterion, of course: whether it is an issue Rea- gan is interested in personally. J For example, on Monday morning p Reagan edited a statement that fi went out under his name announc- a ing the Administration's decision to r relax automobile regulations. The idea was to save the troubled auto industry more than $1.3 billion. "It's something he has strong views about and we knew he would want to see that statement before it went out," an aide said. Basically, Reagan's workday from a hospital bed has consisted of early morning and late afternoon meetings with top aides, usually those the White House unofficially LOS ANGELES TIMES 4/10/81 Aides Used to Making Decisions Reagan Style Credited for Smooth Operation By GEORGE SKELTON and DON IRWIN, Times Staff Writers WASHINGTON-Ronald Rea- lished style of governing has pro- gan may be the first "9-to-5 Pres- vided, however, is ample room and ident" in two decades, and that ini- authority for subordinates to carry tally raised eyebrows in workaholic on with the spadework and prelim- Washington. But Reagan's relaxed inary decisions necessary for them style is now generally credited with to develop final options for the having kept the government run- President to choose among. ning relatively smoothly while he "This President isn't now and has been hospitalized. never has gotten involved in detail. More than the banker's hours the I mean, he doesn't want to get in- President usually keeps-with volved with it," a senior aide said. Wednesday afternoons off for "free "He's very supportive and has time," such as horseback riding-it confidence in his people," the aide is Reagan's long established modus continued. "If this had happened to operandi of heavily delegating au- a (President like) Carter, I suppose thority to trusted subordinates that there would have been a reluctance has kept his Administration func- by his staff to move forward on tioning "without missing a beat," as some things." the White House describes it. Please see REAGAN, Page 14 "If this were a President like Jim- my Carter, who insisted on making every decision down to who got to play on the White House tennis court, he never would have made it through last week," one key Rea- gan aide said. "Ronald Reagan probably doesn't even know there is a White House tennis court." President's 'Best Day Yet' At George Washington Universi- ty Hospital, where Reagan is recu- perating from a gunshot wound in the chest and working only two hours a day, dectors talked Thurs- day about the President's returning to the White House sometime be- tween today and Monday. Thursday was "the President's best day yet," his personal physician. Dr. Daniel Ruge, said. "I promise to 'suit up' and come off the bench as soon as possible," Reagan wrote as a postscript to a note he sent. to House Minority Leader Robert H. Michel (R-III.) Thursday, asking that Repulicans "redouble" their efforts to "enact all the key elements" of his embattled economic recovery plan. Despite such determined spirit, Reagan's wound will clearly reduce his ability to work for weeks to come, just as it has in the 10 days since he was shot. What Reagan's previously estab-