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The original documents are located in Box 19, folder "Presidential News Summaries, 1973- 1975 (2)" of the Stanley Scott Papers at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Bettye L. Scott donated to the United States of America her copyrights in all of her husband's unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to these materials. NEWS SUMMARY November 5, 1974 Tuesday's networks, wires The major stories: -- Secretary of State Kissinger challenges the World Food Conference to establish a global food reserve. -- Speaking in Rome to representatives of 100 nations as they begin the ten-day food conference he pro- posed last year, Kissinger suggested that the only lasting solution to the food crisis is population control. -- The Economy - Coal talks may resume but a United Mine Workers' spokesman said a nationwide coal strike is unavoidable. --- General Motors new car sales dropped nearly 40 per cent in the last 11 days of October. Sales of the four domestic automakers for the month were down 26.8 per cent from a year ago. -- Chrysler Corporation said Tuesday it is laying off another 7,100 employees indefinitely because of lagging sales. Chrysler already had laid off 7,750 workers. -- Prices on the New York Stock Exchange soared to the highest close in two months. The Dow Jones average for 30 industrial stocks was up 17.52 to 674.75, highest since Sept. 6. Sales were 15,960,000 shares. -- Former President Nixon voted Monday in his hospital room by absentee ballot. He is reported terribly weak and still suffering much pain. -- Secretary of State Kissinger begins a fast trip of the Middle East as he tries to head off another war. -- State Department officials disclosed that Russia had freed Simas Kudirka, the Russian sailor U.S. Coast Guard officials returned to his ship in 1970 when he sought American asylum. Kudirka, his mother, and his wife and two children flew to Chicago. RALD GE A. FORD JBRART 2 Henry E. Petersen, who directed the early Watergate investigation and relayed reports of grand jury progress to former President Nixon, resigns as Assistant Attorney General. Retires Dec. 31 after 27 years with the Justice Department, where he has headed the criminal division. ABC Commentary - Harry Reasoner It is good to be able to report on this election day that all is not apathy and that one unit of American government has fearlessly confronted a major problem: I refer to the City of New York which has just passed a law providing the death penalty for smoking in elevators or supermarkets. Well, maybe not the death penalty, but it's something pretty darn tough and they don't intend to fool around about it. It has taken the City of New York more than a year now to take a look at the West Side Highway to see what's wrong with it. In 200 years they haven't been able to figure out what to do with the bathroom habits of the city's dogs. Broadway and Times Square look like something out of the Theatre of the Absurd; violent crime is up 13 per cent. But in just 24 hours the city managed to get threatening signs up on practically every elevator in town with the promise that anyone who managed to drop ashes in the vegetable bins was going to get it, and get it good. I should note two things: I am not singling out New York, which is reasonably well governed, all things considered. This is just an example of an axiom of government at all levels, which is that they normally take action in areas that aren't all that helpful or difficult. And, second, I want to note that I don't approve of smoking in elevators, or anywhere where it is offensive to non-smokers. But there are too many threatening signs in the world; too many warnings that no one quite believes or heeds. A profusion of signs, invoking the majesty of the law, dilutes its majesty. One estimate is that the only sign that New Yorkers -- and maybe most Americans believe anymore -- is "Tow Away Zone. " Maybe they should have put that one up in the elevators. FORD & RALD LIBRARY 70 3 World Food Conference NBC John Chancellor described the World Food Conference which convened in Rome Tuesday as "a meeting upon which the fate of millions of people depends." David Burrington covered Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's address to the opening session of the Conference. Burrington said Kissinger outlined a broad program for world food reserves and massive technological aid to increase the productivity of underdeveloped nations. Kissinger also stressed the need for total worldwide cooperation and for participation by the oil-rich Arab nations, Burrington reported. "We recognize the responsibilities we bear by virtue of our extraordinary productivity, advanced technology, and our traditional positions, Kissinger said on film. "That is why we proposed this conference. That is why a secretary of state is giving his address." Although Kissinger's speech was "well received" at the Conference, Burrington described several violent anti-American protests elsewhere in Rome. The American offices of Honeywell, an electronic firm, were firebombed, Burrington reported. In addition, several thousand Communist Party members attended an anti-Kissinger rally where they charged that the Secretary of State is meddling in Italian political affairs. Burrington said that some diplomats fear that the Conference could possibly be affected by the agitated political climate surrounding the sessions in Rome. If so, Burrington said the Conference could turn into a shouting contest. U.S. Food Policy: Irving R. Levine presented a 3:35 minute analysis of U.S. Government food policy. Levine said that the Ford Administration, despite worldwide famine in Asia and Africa, decided "not to set up government stockpiles of grain even though at the United Nations last year it was the American Secretary of State who first proposed the food conference and indicated the need to build up stock- piles." Levine said one opponent of any stockpiling policy has been Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz. Levine said Butz has said the U.S. is willing to sell grain to any nation desirous of setting up stockpiles. Butz appeared on film. FORD & RAAL BRAR 10 to 4 American farmers also oppose stockpiling, Levine reported, because the possibility that such grain could be sold at any time holds down the price farmers receive for their harvests. Levine said that as a result of this opposition to stockpiling, the U.S. emphasis at the World Food Conference will be on the technological help America can give other nations who want to increase their productivity. "Like Secretary Butz, American officials believe that other nations should expect less from the United States now because of our own troubles with the disappointing harvest, recession, and inflation," Levine said. NBC documentary on food situation: John Chancellor said that after the elections he will report from Rome on the World Food Conference and that NBC will present a documentary on the world food situation on Sunday, Nov. 24. ABC Secretary of State Henry Kissinger appeared at the World Food Conference in Rome to address representatives from more than 100 nations, reported Harry Reasoner. Ted Koppel, reporting from Rome, said that Kissinger and members of his staff consider his speech "one of the most important he has ever delivered." Kissinger (on film) said: "The threat of famine, the fact of hunger, have haunted men and nations throughout history. Our presence here is recognition that this eternal problem has now taken on unprecedented scale and urgency, and that it can be dealt with only by concerted worldwide action." The most controversial part of Kissinger's speech was his proposal for an international system of nationally held food reserves. "A worldwide reserve of as much as 60,000,000 tons of food above present carry-over levels may be needed to assure adequate food security," Kissinger said. George Watson reporting from Rome said: "Despite the dire warnings voiced in Rome today, there is little evidence that the overstuffed multitudes yet realize that millions of people face famine and starvation." FORD & RALD LIBRARY 30 5 British economist Barbara Ward led a group of experts who believe that food prices could lead to worldwide conflict. Ward said: "We've got countries -- my own, Europe, America -- where people are overeating and endangering their health, and the combined risk of other people starving. I don't think any moral community could survive that. I don't think people want to stuff themselves while babies are dying." An estimated five million people in Asia, Africa, and Latin America are starving and many of them will die unless they are given immediate aid, Watson said. "The challenge to provide that aid inevitably falls on the U.S. because only North America enjoys the bounty of abundant grain," reported Watson. "Even in America, grain supplies at this time are the lowest they have been in 25 years while prices are at a new high. " CBS "Secretary Kissinger was the keynote speaker, this Conference an American idea, "said Marvin Kalb. "Food, no less than fuel, has now become a global problem requiring global solutions. "Kissinger appealed to the food producers to boost their output and now pool their reserves in a new international effort to defeat hunger and famine. He quickly pledged America's help.' Kissinger (on film) recited an American pledge to "make a major effort to match its capacity to the magnitude of the challenge." "Kissinger exhorted everyone to meet the challenge," Kalb said. Kissinger (on film) suggested that "the traditional donors and the new financial powers make a major effort to provide the foods and funds required. " "Kissinger, who maintained his busy pace here, conferring with top Italian leaders and with the Pope, does not expect instant results," Kalb said. "He knows that his food-sharing proposals are vague, and he knows that the Communists oppose them. He did want to set a general direction for conquering what he calls 'the scourge of hunger.' The next week or so will determine whether he can achieve even this modest goal. " RALD GE A. FORD VIBRARY 6 Coal Talks CBS Charles Kuralt reported: "It is beginning to look like a Nov. 12 coal miners' strike is unavoidable. Contract talks broke down again today, and although the union is working on new proposals, it would be difficult to get a new contract ratified by the Monday midnight deadline." Mitchell Krauss reported a confidential government report said a coal strike could cost 200,000 jobs, including 120,000 jobs of miners, whose union has no strike funds. Other industries affected would be: (1) Steel, which uses 15 per cent of all coal mined, and which has only a three-week stockpile; (2) electric power, of which half is produced by burning coal, but which has ten-week reserves. (Utility spokesmen say they would begin precautionary cutbacks if the strike lasted past four weeks) ; (3) railroads -- 25 per cent of railroad tonnage is coal, and the big coal-hauling roads could lose up to $33 million a week. All industries would lose jobs. "Even if a strike does not occur, the cost of coal will go up," Krauss reported. "It's already as much as 500 per cent higher than a year ago. With the mine workers demanding up to a 50 per cent increase in wages and benefits, coal customers can expect to pay substantially more after a contract is signed." "Labor experts warn that if the coal workers get their contract demands, workers in the oil and chemical industry, whose contract expires on Jan. 7, will be looking for a similar settlement," Krauss said. NBC Chancellor reported the morning walkout by United Mine Workers from contract negotiations going on in Washington. Chancellor said union spokesman later said the UMW would go back to the bargaining table but that a strike is unavoidable. Chancellor reported the governors of 12 coal producing states were invited to the White House Thursday "to talk about what a strike might do to their states. " FORD & RALD BRARY 13 7 ABC Bill Matney reported that the United Mine Workers strike is set for Monday (Nov. 11). With negotiations between the UMW and the mine operators being as unproductive as they are, "the only hope now is for a short strike. " Drop in New Car Sales NBC John Chancellor said that the four major American auto manufacturers reported new car sales decreased 26 per cent in October compared with the same period last year. CBS Charles Kuralt reported the "gloomy news" that the country's four big automakers reported October car sales were down 26 per cent over a year ago. "It was the worst October in 10 years, " he said. Chrysler Corporation announced it will lay off another 7,100 employees for an indefinite time later this month because of the slumping car sales, he reported. ***** RALD GE R. FORD UBRART 8 Nixon's Health CBS Richard Nixon voted by absentee ballot Tuesdav, Charles Kuralt reported. His doctors said Nixon is still quite weak but that increased physical activity has been ordered for him. One Nixon aide said, "He's in much better shape -- cussing out everybody," Kuralt reported. ABC Nixon Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler reported that Richard Nixon will remain in the hospital for several weeks. Harry Reasoner said that Nixon voted by absentee ballot, and while he will not follow the election in detail, he will keep up with the overall results. NBC Chancellor reported that physicians attending former President Nixon said he is still terribly weak and in pain when he moves. The doctors said Nixon is doing more walking and voted Monday by absentee ballot. Kissinger in Egypt NBC Richard Valeriani reported that Secretary of State Kissinger travelled from the World Food Conference in Rome to Egypt where he had originally planned to announce the next phase of Middle East peace negotiations. Instead, Valeriani said, Kissinger's strategy has been undercut by the Arab summit's recent endorsement of the Palestine Liberation Organization. "He is now on something of a salvage operation, trying to determine what kind of negotiations are still possible and trying to head off a negotiating stalemate that could lead to war," Valeriani said. CBS "Secretary of State Kissinger's Mideast peace blitz has begun again, Kuralt said. "Tonight he is in Cairo and tomorrow he plans quick trips -- very quick trips -- to Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria and Israel." FORD & RALE IBRARY 9 "Egyptian President Sadat met Tuesday with Yasir Arafat and then held an evening meeting with Kissinger. Although Kissinger and Arafat say they've never met each other, this is the fourth time they've been in Cairo at the same time, which has given rise to speculation that there may be some communi- cation between them after all." ABC Secretary of State Henry Kissinger met with Egypt's President Sadat in Cairo to discuss the recent Arab summit and prospects for a new round of Mideast peace negotiations, reported Harry Reasoner. New York Times Report on King Hussein NBC John Chancellor said the New York Times reported Tuesday that King Hussein of Jordan has given up the West Bank of the Jordan River and will not negotiate for its future. The area now lies in the hand of the Palestine Liberation Organ- ization, Chancellor said. Hussein has given Palestinians living in Jordan the option of choosing either Jordanian or Palestinian citizenship. Israeli Border Raid NBC John Chancellor reported that Israeli troops struck six miles into Lebanon and kidnapped a village chief accused of working with Arab terrorists. Chancellor said the Israelis also captured his son in the operation which was carried out completely by helicopter. Israeli-Lebanon Border Tensions ABC Bill Seamans gave a 2:30 minute report on life and tensions on the Israeli side of the Lebanese border. "Living under the gun has become a normal way of life,' " said Seamans. FORD & RALD LIBRARY 10 Simas Kudirka Freed by Russia CBS CBS reported that Lithuanian seaman Simas Kudirka, who tried to defect to a U.S. Coast Guard cutter four years ago, then was declared an American citizen by Congress, arrived in Chicago with his mother, his wife and two children. Kent State CBS reported testimony at the Kent State University trial of eight former Ohio national guardsmen indicated all the shots two photographers heard came from the direction of the guardsmen. Henry Petersen Resigns NBC John Chancellor reported that Assistant Attorney General Henry Petersen announced Tuesday that he will resign at the end of the year. Chancellor said Petersen, chief of the Criminal Division at the Justice Department, had headed the early investigations of Watergate. Petersen indicated that Watergate was one of the reasons he is leaving the Department, Chancellor said. "I feel that I have done a professional job, but if you are in the eye of a hurricane, you are bound to feel some wind, " Petersen said on film at his press conference. CBS Assistant Attorney General Henry Petersen, who headed the government's Watergate investigation before the special prosecutor was appointed, is resigning, reported Charles Kuralt. Petersen said his wife persuaded him to resign, and that he plans to relax for the next several months. ABC Assistant Attorney General Henry Petersen resigned to pursue private practice, and the White House accepted Petersen's resignation "with regret," said Harry Reasoner. FORD A LIBRARY RALE 11 Reasoner said Petersen, who had been criticized for the manner in which he handled the early Watergate investi- gation, said he "would do it the same way if he had to do it again." President Ford's Day Bob Schieffer (CBS) reported the President spent most of Tuesday working on routine matters at the White House. His only announced appointment was a meeting with Liberian President William Tolbert. Watergate Trial NBC John Chancellor reported that three FBI agents who questioned former White House aide John Ehrlichman and former Attorney General John Mitchell soon after the Watergate break-in took the witness stand in the Watergate cover-up trial Tuesday. Chancellor said the agents testified that Mitchell and Ehrlichman told them that all they knew about the break-in was what they had read in the newspapers. "Ehrlichman and Mitchell are charged with lying about that, = Chancellor said. CBS Kuralt reported three FBI agents testified at the Water- gate trial, supporting the prosecution's charges that John Ehrlichman and John Mitchell lied to the FBI. Fred Graham said: "The scandals of the Nixon administration were largely the work of lawyers." He reported that so far, 18 lawyers have been convicted, indicted, or named unindicted co-conspirators in major crimes, although only two have been disbarred. "This has underscored public complaints that the legal profession often seems slow or lax about disciplining un- ethical lawyers," said Graham. FORD A. RALD LIBRARY 12 North Carolina Agriculture ABC Roger Peterson gave a 2:10 minute report on new agricultural developments in North Carolina's coastal lowlands. The East Dismal Swamp, as it is officially referred to on maps, is being transformed from a timber bearing region into farm lands for production of wheat, corn, and soybeans. The First Colony Farm located in this area is one of the largest farms in America with 372,000 acres, and it is becoming a highly effective food pro- ducing unit, Koppel reported. First Colony Farms are owned by the McLean trucking company, he said. Steven Bull Resigns CBS Steven Bull, "an important assistant to former President Nixon" has resigned from Nixon's San Clemente staff and returned to the East, said Kuralt. FORD a RALD LIBRARY at 13 ABC NBC CBS A. Administration News 1. Ford on Elections 1:15 (#2) - 1:15 (#2) 2. Kissinger at World 1:45 (#5) 2:50 (#2) 2:40 (#7) Food Conference 3. Henry Petersen :30 (#9) 1:05 (#9) :20 (#5) Resignation 4. Kissinger in Mideast 1:35 (#8) 1:05 (#7) :30 (#6) 5. U.S. Food Policy --- 3:35 (#3) ---- 6. Steve Bull Resignation - - :20 (#4) B. Other Major News 1. Elections 2:05 (lead) 11:20 (lead, #15- 5:30 (lead) +2:45 (#13) 22, Brinkley) 2. Nixon Health :30 (#3) :10 (#11) :15 (#3) 3. World Food Conference 2:45 (#4) - 4. North Carolina 2:10 (#6) -------- Agricultural Development 5. Coal 1:15 (#7) :25 (#8) 2:35 (#9) 6. Auto Sales :15 (#8) :10 (#12) :25 (#10) 7. Halloween Murder :15 (#10) - 8. Boston's Fogg Museum :15 (#11) :15 (#14) Theft 9. NBC Food Coverage -- :25 (#4) -------- 10. Israeli border raid 2:05 (#12) :15 (#5) 11. NY Times Hussein story :20 (#6) 12. Watergate Trial -- :20 (#10) 1:35 (#12) 13. Useless Legislation 1:40 (Reasoner) 14. India Hunger ----- -- 2:45 (#8) LIBRARY GERALD R. FORD EDITORIALS/COMMENTS ON RECENT NEWS November 5, 1974 FROM TUESDAY'S PAPERS Harry B. Ellis, Christian Science Monitor: Contingency plans to cushion the U.S. economy against a nationwide coal strike now are on the desk of the nation's top energy coordinator, Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton. First priority, said an official of the Federal Energy Administration (FEA) is to help more than one million American homeowners who heat by coal, plus thousands of retail stores and offices that also burn coal. "If it gets cold and there's a strike said an official, "these people are in trouble because they don't have stockpiles." Particularly vulnerable to a coal strike is the huge American steel industry, which consumes 15 per cent of all coal mined, and whose industry-wide stocks are dangerously low. Half the nation's electricity is produced by coal and some power plants in the southeastern United States are down to a two-week supply of coal. James Strong, Chicago Tribune: Miners in Illinois coal fields are set to leave the pits Friday night in advance of the anticipated nationwide soft-coal strike next week. "Monday is Veterans Day and a holiday for miners in Illinois, so when they leave this weekend they won't be back until the contract is settled, an industry official said Monday. ---- Robert P. Hey, Christian Science Monitor, Washington: The prime federal agency which aims to discourage Americans from smoking is being reorganized and moved from Washington to Atlanta. The change is beginning to cause a quiet stir here. It comes as per capita cigarette smoking in the U.S. creeps upward for the fourth consecutive year toward the record-high figure of 1963. Several Washington antismoking sources, most of whom request anonymity, fear the move will result in "reorganizing the program out of existence." EDITORIALS Philadelphia Inquirer, "Famine is not Just a Specter." In November, 1968, the eminent British novelist, statesman and scientist, C. P. Snow, declared in a speech at Fulton, Mo., that he had never been nearer despair over the prospects of large-scale famine in the world. He raised a dreadful specter -- that in the FORD is LIBRARY RALD 1. 2 next 10 years or so, "many millions of people in the poor countries are going to starve to death before our eyes -- or, to complete the cosmetic picture, we shall see them doing so upon our television sets. " Now, six years later, the specter has become a reality. In a report released last month, a U.S. House subcommittee declared: "During 1974, conservative estimates are that somewhere between 200 and 400 million of our fellow human beings will stare starvation directly in the face. " --- Christian Science Monitor, "Mideast Impasse." Henry Kissinger returns to the Middle East amid a mood of great uncertainty. How much of the thunder in Rabat was a public relations exercise is an open question. But the present dilemma was bound to come. The Palestinians are the crux to any solution of the Arab-Israeli dis- pute, and Israel and the U.S. must cope with the fact that the PLO is fast winning world recognition. Henry Kissinger, who has both the diplomatic skill and the trust of the Arabs and Israelis, is still the key to successful negotiation of a peace settlement. -------- Chicago Tribune, "On Coping with Hunger. " If it is true that the greater the number of people working on a problem, the less they are likely to accomplish, then the prospects for the World Food Conference opening in Rome today are dim indeed. About 1,250 delegates and official observers took part in the United Nations Population Conference in Bucharest in August, and there was only scattered and lukewarm agreement with the Chief American delegate, Caspar Weinberger, who argued with considerable logic that the remedy for overpopulation is to reduce the birth rate. The countries with the greatest population problems seemed to find this hard to perceive. The Law of the Sea Conference in Caracas last summer attracted 5,000 participants who debated for 10 weeks and could agree only to meet again next year. The Rome conference, sponsored by the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, will be attended by about 2,000. But if the numbers are smaller than at Caracas, the problem of hunger is likely to prove more emotional and harder to discuss rationally than the law of the sea. So if anything is to be achieved, it will require double the effort to put common sense above demagoguery. --- Christian Science Monitor, "Ford Versus Freedom of Information. 11 Congress certainly seemed veto-proof in trying to improve the American people's access to the official information that is right- fully theirs in a government of the people. After going along with President Ford on most of the changes he wanted, the Senate approved FORD IT BRAI 3 the compromise freedom-of-information bill by voice vote, and only two representatives voted against it in the House. But Mr. Ford vetoed it anyway, although he is on record in favor of open government. When Congress returns, it ought to vote its apparent convictions and promptly override this veto. If by any chance it does not, the public will hear one more hollow note in Congressional criticism of the executive for lack of action. Detroit News: Walter R. Mears, assistant Washington bureau chief for the Associated Press, was named chief of the Detroit News Washington Bureau Friday (Nov. 1). Mears will assume his new position in mid-December, replacing J. F. terHorst, who became press secretary to President Ford Aug. 9, then resigned that post a month later to return to The News as national syndicated columnist. Mears, a prize-winning Washington reporter since 1961, was AP's chief political writer and head of its Washington Senate staff before becoming assistant bureau chief. Nationwide Coal Strike Threatened Barry Serafin reported that the threat of a nationwide coal strike "has grown considerably." Serafin said United Mine Workers negotiators walked- out early Tuesday morning from talks with mine operators. UMW president Arnold Miller called contract terms unacceptable, Serafin said. Miller (on film) said "with what they handed us, they have declared a strike in the coal fields. They would not ratify what they (owners) offered." Serafin said that it is not believed that Miller has closed the door entirely to a resumption of talks. However, a strike now appears likely, he added. Kissinger in Rome Marvin Kalb reported that maximum security was in force for the arrival of Secretary of State Kissinger. Kalb said "Rome resembles a kind of armed camp. " Following his speech to the World Food Conference, Kissinger will go to Cairo, Kalb said. Kissinger thinks there is "a crack of daylight" -- a chance that Egyptian President Sadat will agree to separate negotiations with Israel over further withdrawals in the Sinai. FORD A FRALD BRAR 4 "That would create new momentum toward an eventual Arab- Israeli negotiation and ease the pressures on those oil exporters -- allegedly Iran and Saudi Arabia -- who might be willing to stabilize oil prices and perhaps, in time, lower them, Kalb said. MIDWEST EDITORIALS Food: St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "Selective grants. If The recent history of the Food for Peace program in Chile illustrates the dangers of political exploitation of food aid. Chile received ample food assistance until the 1970 election of a socialist government, at which point the food aid ceased. Now the Depart- ment of Agriculture is once again eager to demonstrate its concern for that country. In this year of crop shortages, the World Food Conference will no doubt wonder how the U.S. suddenly uncovered one million tons of wheat for a friendly dictatorship. ---- Chicago Sun-Times, "Food and the future." If the world food shortage is to be met, the world's governments must: (1) set up an international food bank; (2) increase population controls; (3) make economic help available to the poor countries more abundantly and more efficiently than it has been. Cincinnati Post, "Toward a world food bank." We urge the establishment of a world food bank, with a number of reservations: (1) The stockpile should be a temporary measure; (2) the United States should join a world food bank only if other nations are prepared to do their share. Americans also will have to recognize they cannot cure world hunger if underdeveloped countries fail to curb their runaway population growth. Dallas Morning News, "Crude and crass media. II Barely a half hour after his surgery, reporters at the Long Beach hospital where Mr. Nixon is being treated asked physicians when he would be able to testify at the Watergate trial. The question was repugnant and the reporters knew better. But always, there are a few who give the rest a bad name. The free flow of information does not demand gross impropriety, much less a constant carping and hounding to the grave. FORD & LIBRAR RALD 10 Bis 'Do you take this man for all he's worth, in siekness and health, for richer or poorer: Rochester Times-Union 11-2-74 FORD & LIBRARY RALO GE 5 Ft. Worth Star-Telegram, "U.S. Policy Realistically Adjusted." " The fact that India's Mrs. Gandhi has been a little friendlier toward the Communist bloc than toward the United States makes Secretary of State Kissinger's visit there of more than ordinary interest. The good reception given him in New Delhi indicates that the new relaxed policy in Washington has been launched auspiciously. --- Minneapolis Tribune, "Week of change in the Middle East.' " As always, the route to peace in the Middle East remains filled with obstacles. Developments of the past week, in which the Palestine Liberation Organization was designated the "sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people," changed the route. But nothing yet clearly shows that the new route is either longer or more difficult. ------------ Milwaukee Journal, "Detente needs spadework." The Moscow announcement that President Ford and Leonid Brezhnev will meet later this year can be taken as a positive sign that both nations still are committed to detente. At the same time, the limits of summitry must be underscored. Summits are only as productive as diplomatic spadework done before them. ------- Milwaukee Sentinel, "PLO's poor credentials." The designation of the Palestinian Liberation Organization as the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people reinforces as an old tenet of Chairman Mao Tse-tung, as he said, political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Dayton Daily News, "U.S. food programs costly, obsolete.' " If food prices are to be held down in the long run, the United States must make fundamental changes in the food production, processing and distribution system. Price competition has shriveled. Atty. Gen. William Saxbe says the Justice Department will ask jail terms and fines for price-fixers. But that's only a start. The admin- istration and Congress ought to take it from there. FORD & LIBRARY RALD 30 6 St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "Unfair tax plan." The fact that President Ford's proposed 5 per cent surtax would last only a year, while a liberalized tax credit for corporations would be permanent suggests that either the tax proposal was not well thought out or the President was trying to slip a tax subsidy for business through Congress concealed in a package of stag- flation proposals. There is a crying need for equitable treatment of all taxpayers, irrespective of their power. Dayton Daily News, "Jobs for veterans. " President Ford's Veterans Day promise to put 70,000 unemployed Vietnam veterans on the federal payroll is at obvious cross-purposes with his own budget cutting anti-inflation program and risks opening federal employment to other raids later. A neat coup for the present, but the trick will be for Mr. Ford, if he cannot manage to turn the economy around, to resist the terrible pressure for similar relief his gesture will draw from other, also aggrieved, segments of the work force. --- St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "An economy in trouble." President Ford's economic program suggests he does not grasp the seriousness of the economic situation: Unemployment at 6 per cent, gross national product declining at an annual rate of 2.9 per cent, and an inflation rate of 11.5 per cent. Perhaps after the elections are out of the way, Mr. Ford will be better disposed to a program that recognizes the seriousness of the problem, and get tough. Detroit Free Press, "Grain exports must go for hungry, not detente. " At a time when the United States must face the prospect of a modest decline in grain consumption, and when Asia has serious hunger problems, it is unconscionable to send grain to Russia. Detente has its values, but so does humanity. Detroit News, "President is no pessimist." In our view, what the American people need now is some of President Ford's own self- confidence about the future and the ability of this country to con- quer its problems, or learn to live with them. Adopting an opti- mistic attitude is easier said than done, of course, but too much criticism can be as destructive of the human spirit as too many defeats. RALD FORD JBRARY & 70 BOWIS "OR, well. A tried Cleveland Plain Dealer, 10/31/74 RALD LIBRARY R. FORD GE 7 St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "'Fairness' in oil." To the beleaguered consumer, neither the Shah of Iran's new proposal to "simplify" the oil pricing mechanism nor oil companies' con- stant excuses are convincing and Secretary of State Kissinger's trip to Iran has changed nothing. ---- GERALD RALD GF A. FORD /BRART Rochester Times-Union 11-1-74 FORD & LIBRARY RALD GF 8 MIDWEST NEWS Morton Kondracke and Thomas Ross, Chicago Sun-Times, Washington: The United States has never ruled out partici- pation by the Palestine Liberation Organization in Middle East peace talks, White House sources said. The clear implication is that the United States eventually may recognize the P.L.O., to salvage Secretary of State Henry Kissinger's diplomacy. "The important thing is that the momentum toward peace be kept up," the sources said. Jerome F. Hansen, Detroit News: Serious doubts are being voiced by many world leaders and energy experts about the workability of a world oil-sharing scheme which the United States last week said it will join. Under the plan, member nations agree to pool their petroleum and sovereignty to meet any future oil embargo. But Norway and France have declined to participate and other nations have doubts about the work- ability or validity of using a fixed 7 per cent figure to trigger the plan into action. ---------- Edwin Darby, Chicago Sun-Times: It is probable the auto manufacturers will make a much improved and respectable profits showing in 1975, even though sales are flat. There probably will not be significant increases in the cost of essential materials next year, the painful payroll reductions mean higher productivity, and the ministrikes that hit General Motors, especially, this year are not likely to recur. --- Chicago Sun-Times, Washington: Sheldon B. Lubar, Federal Housing Administration commissioner, confirmed Friday that he has submitted his resignation effective Nov. 30. A top assistant to Housing and Urban Development Secretary James T. Lynn, Lubar has been in charge of government mortgage insurance and housing production programs since June, 1973. HUD sources said Lubar was disenchanted with Lynn's hostile relations with Congress, but Lubar denied that was the reason for leaving. RALD GE R. FORD UBRART 9 Clark Bell, Chicago Daily News: The U.S. dollar will remain the world's strongest currency despite the enormous petroleum profits and increased monetary strength of the oil- producing nations, says Joseph A. Rodrick, chief trader for foreign exchange in the New York branch of Credito Italiano. The dollar will maintain its international status because of the rechanneling of oil profits back into the United States and the dollar's current strength, he told the Investment Analysts Society of Chicago. NEW ENGLAND PAPERS Portland Press Herald, "Seeking a way out." For Sen. Mike Mansfield, "good sense" means wage and price controls. For Treasury Secretary William E. Simon, that's a mistake. President Ford does not want controls. In the beginning, President Nixon did not want them either. No one wants them now, not even Senator Mansfield. But in seeking alternatives, what presents itself? Jawboning? How can an industry be persuaded to hold the line on prices when all its costs are increasing? How can it bargain aggressively to hold the wage line when unions threaten or execute a strike? Newsday, "Time to deflate oil profits." It's the consumer who's being asked to buy less, drive less, heat less and generally tighten his belt. The oil companies get no such admonition. We do not believe in profiteering at the expense of the consumer. We call upon the President to plug the holes in his "new mobilization." The oil industry's special tax breaks are a good place to start. ------------------------- Dan Fisher, Rochester Times-Union, Los Angeles: Short of rationing, the only way the United States can significantly reduce its gasoline consumption during the next four years is to increase fuel prices through higher taxes, a group of Rand Corp. researchers said. The Rand report was conducted under a $500,000 grant from the National Science Foundation. And the research conclusions run counter to principal portions of the Ford Administration's energy program Rochester Times-Union, Rep. Holtzman faults Ford economy.' Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman says she's "surprised ont GE A. FORD JBRART and saddened that a President could be so out of touch. If you take his surtax proposal, you see how little the President understands the burden that inflation has 10 placed on the little people of this country," " she said. "It shows such callousness and lack of understanding. --- Judith Bender, Newsday, Albany: Two top campaign aides of Governor Malcolm Wilson are apparently convinced that the Governor's rival, Rep. Hugh Carey violated the new state election law, but they did not file a complaint. A Carey aide dismissed their finding as an "embarrassing clerical error" and nothing more. In any case, the matter is now "under review" by the election board, according to its executive director, Thomas Wallace. The matter involved hundreds of thousands of dollars that Carey raised in loans from or guaranteed by his brother, Edward, President of the multimillion-dollar New England Petroleum Corp., to finance his primary campaign. Patrick J. Sloyan, Boston Herald American, Washington: President Ford's plan to use private negotiations with U.S. auto-makers to improve auto fuel economy has produced an angry reaction from foreign manufacturers already leading the mile-per-gallon sweepstakes. At the same time, U.S. auto- makers are grumbling that Ford is promoting sales of foreign cars by urging fuel conservation programs by American consumers. The Administration won a court battle to keep Ralph Nader and representatives of other consumer groups out of the meeting. H. Peter Metzger, Boston Herald American: In about two months, the Atomic Energy Commission will be no more, and thereby hangs an exquisite irony or two. There are good technical reasons for dissolving the AEC and absorbing part of it into the newly-proposed Energy Research and Development Agency, but of the main reason there can be no doubt: The AEC is just not believed any more, and a bureaucracy without credibility simply cannot be trusted with something as important as nuclear power. RALD GE R. FORD VIBRART Nick Thimmesch The Best Can Have Pity for the Defeated Nixon Washington. Editorialists and com- For an entire generation, To some degree Mr. Nixon mentators struggled last Richard Nixon has been has become Goldstein to week to find a way to com- controversial and, alter- many in our society, and that ment on Richard M. Nixon's nately. a failed, triumphant is bad. before the rusn surgery, up under a veranda, faithful Battimore Sun potential political damage showing Mr. Nixon propped from associating himseif with Mr. Nixon again. in response dog King Timahoe alongside. Mr. Nixon tells the doctor that 11/5/74 to a request by Pat Nixon for him to see her husband. his condition is aggravated by It takes a largeness of spirit pining for his records and to summon compassion. The RALD OF R. FORD UBRART tapes in Washington, and can best are those who extend a he write him a prescription? hand to a defeated enemy and The omnipresent Punk the do not wish him to twist slowly Penguin, in an aside, says, in the wind. "Somebody tell him he has the wrong foot up." 11 William Safire, syndicated columnist: The only way to turn Arabs away from dreams of economic domination of the Western World is for the United States to take the lead in cracking their cartel. The only way to turn Arabs away from war against Israel is for the United States to make clear to them that Israel would win. RALD OF R. FORD UBRART NEWS SUMMARY ELECTION SPECIAL November 6, 1974 (As of 7 a.m., E.S.T.) Washington AP - Just as predicted, Democrats emerged victorious in yesterday's elections. This primarily was the result of massive voter discontent over inflation and White House scandals. Democrats are heading for a two- thirds bulge in the House an expanded margin in the Senate and a near-record total of Governorships. The Democrats have gained at least five seats in the Senate at least 37 in the House, -- and they have picked up a net gain of six Governorships over the Republicans. Here's a roundup of some of the candidates who have emerged as winners as a result of the Democratic sweep: The victors include some new national democratic stars who are potential candidates for national office. There's Governor Elect Hugh Carey of New York and Senators-Elect John Glenn of Ohio and Dale Bumpers of Arkansas. In Florida, former Secretary of State Richard Stone, a Democrat, has defeated conservative Republican Jack Eckerd for the seat of Republican Senator Edward Gurney. Gurney is under indictment for bribery, conspiracy and perjury. In Colorado, Gary Hart swamped two-term Republican Senator Peter Dominick. Hart was campaign manager for the disastrous George McGovern presidential campaign. President Ford's Statement Washington (UPI) Following is the official text of President Ford's statement on the Tuesday elections: The people have spoken and for 26 years I have accepted the verdict of the people, which is the essence of our system of free government. First may I congratulate every citizen who did his duty by voting today. I have not seen the total turnout, but I am sure it was greater than anticipated in many places. FORD in LIBRARY RALO 30 2 I also congratulate the winners of both parties and extend my sympathy to those who lost. The willingness of candidates to fight for their convictions and their Party is an important ingredient of representative Democracy. And those who lose often come back to win another day. There was no argument about the number one issue in this campaign: Inflation and its crippling effect on the economy and the lives of all Americans. The mandate of the electorate places upon the next Congress a full measure of responsibility for resolving this problem. I will work with them wholeheartedly in this urgent task which is certainly beyond partisanship. Also beyond partisanship, I am confident, is the necessity of keeping America strong both economically and militarily as the leader of the free world, of moving forward toward a safer and saner international order, of strengthening our cooperation with old allies and old adversaries alike. I am confident that the new Congress will work wholeheartedly with me in this urgent task. * * * * Among veteran House Republicans defeated in Tuesday's election were: William Widnall (N.J.), William Bray (Ind.), Wiley Mayne (Iowa), Bob Price (Tex.), Carleton J. King (N.Y.), Vernon Thomson (Wis.), Bill Scherle (Ia.), Don Brotzman (Colo.), Wilmer Mizell (N.C.) and Bob Hanrahan (Ill.) A veteran Democrat who was replaced with a Republican was Frank Clark (Pa.). * * * FORD & LIBRARY RALD OF Annavent Winners LIST OF (Those marked * served in the 93d Congress; those marked t served in a previous Congress. Number which precedes name of candidate designates congressional district) ALABAMA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR James B. Allen, * Democrat Gadsden. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Mobile. (Jack Edwards, * Republican Mobile. 2. (William L. (Bill) Dickinson,* Republican Montgomery. 3. Bill Nichols,* Democrat Sylacauga. 4. Tom Bevill,* Democrat Jasper. 5. Bob Jones, * Democrat Scottsboro. 6. (John H. Buchanan, Jr., * Republican Birmingham. 7. Walter Flowers, * Democrat Tuscaloosa. ALASKA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Mike Gravel, * Democrat Anchorage. C.R. Lewis, Republican Anchorage. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE William L. Hensley, Democrat Kotzebue. Don Young,* Republican Fort Yukon. ARIZONA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Jeno D Phone: Barry M. Goldwater, * Republican Scottsdale. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Patricia M. Democrat. 1. John J. Rhodes, * Republican Mesa. Life Phone: 2. Morris K. Udall,* Democrat Tucson. with Dolgunsd, Rate 3. Phone: (Sam Steiger, * Republican Prescott. 4. (Byron T. "Bud" Brown, Democrat Scottsdale. (John B. Conlan, * Republican Paradise Valley. (1) RALD GE R. FORD LIBRARY T 2 ARKANSAS FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Dale Bumpers,1 Democrat Charleston. declare FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Bill Alexander,' * Democrat Osceola. 1. www.nec Denor, Instructions 2. Wilbur D. Mills, * Democrat Kensett. Judy Patty Pepublican Little Roals. Bill Clinton, Democrat 3. Fayetteville. (John Paul Hammerschmidt, * Republican Harrison. 4. Ray Thornton, * Democrat Sheridan. 1 J. W. Fulbright* defeated in primary. CALIFORNIA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Alan Cranston,* Democrat Palm Springs. II Richard Areadia FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE (Harold T. (Bizz) Johnson, * Democrat Roseville. 1. 2. Don H. Ciausen.* * Republican Crescent City. Charles John E. Moss,* * Democrat Sacramento. 3. 4. Robert L. Leggett, * Democrat Suisun City. (John Burton, * Democrat San Francisco. 5. Phillip Burton, * Democrat San Francisco. Two 6. Carl Richar amity George Miller.¹ Democrat Martinez. Waldie 7. Dickmond Ronald V. Dellums.' * Democrat Berkeley. 8. American Fortney H. (Pete) Stark. * Democrat Danville. 9. rephblican t. Don Edwards. * Democrat San Jose. 10. Our-Jose. Leo J. Ryan, * Democrat South San Francisco. 11. unt. Gary G. Gillmor. Democrat Santa Clara. 12. (Paul N. "Pete" McCloskey, Jr.,* * Republican_ Menlo Park. 1 Jerome Waldie* not a candidate, defeated in gubernatorial primary. RALD FORD ¡BRART OF R. 3 CALIFORNIA-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Norman Y. Mineta, Democrat San Jose. Gubsont's. Republi Ginov. Barron, cate dom. John J. McFall, * Democrat Manteca. 14. Gibson 15. B.F. Sisk.* * Democrat Fresno. Republican Julian Comeino, be expirtora. 16. Burt L. Talcott,* Republican Salinas. Gran. (John Krebs, Democrat Fresno. 17. [Bob Mathias,* Republican Tulare. 18. Bishops William M. Ketchum, * Republican Bakersfield. 17. Dising 19. Robert J. Lagomarsino,* Republican Ojai. Chatsworth. 20. (Barry Goldwater, Jr.,* Republican Burbank. 21. James C. Corman,* Democrat Reseda. 22. Carlos J. Moorhead,* Republican Glendale. Thomas M. Rees, * Democrat 23. Beverly Hills. Holifield Henry A. Waxman,3 Democrat Los Angeles. 24. American 25. Edward R. Roybal,* Democrat Los Angeles. 26. (John Rousselot,* Republican San Marino. 27. Alphonzo Bell.* * Republican Marina Del Rey. 28. Yvonne Brathwaite Burke,* Democrat Los Angeles. Culver City. 29. Augustus F. (Gus) Hawkins,* * Democrat Los Angeles. George F. Danielson. * Democrat Monterey Park. 30. rico Rivent. Charles H. Wilson, * Democrat Hawthorne. 31. Glenn M. Anderson, * Democrat Harbor City. 32. Visgil Robert 33. Del Clawson, * Republican Downev. James American Normalk . Charles S. Gubser* not a candidate. a Chet Holifield* not a candidate. RALD GERALD BRAR LIBRARY R. 11 FORD 33 4 CALIFORNIA-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Mark W. Hannaford, Democrat Lakewood. Hosmer Hill Bond Lench. 34. Jurdate Beach. (Jim Lloyd, Democrat West Covina. 35. (Victor V. Veysey* Republican Claremont. George E. Brown, Jr., * Democrat Colton. 36. received Bebby-Ray Vincent, Demoer 37. Jerry L. Pettis,' * Republican Loma Linda. Lake Greman, Norest Hanna Jerry M. Patterson.⁵ Democrat Santa Ana. Grove. 38. Beach. Lawy D. Kallenberger, Peace and Farrison 39. Charles E. Wiggins, * Republican Fullerton. Prodarial 40. Andrew Hinshaw. Republican Newport Beach. Surpon Macia O'Cumer, SandDiew 41. Bob Wilson. Republican San Diego. We Lionel Van Deerlin, * Democrat Chula Vista. 42. (Bill 43. (Clair W. Burgener, * Republican Rancho Santa Fe. & Craig Hosmer* not a candidate. 5 Richard T. Hanna* not a candidate. COLORADO FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Gary Hart, Democrat Denver. instructions. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Pat Schroeder, * Democrat Denver. 1. Timothy E. Wirth, Democrat Denver. 2. Boulder. Frank E. Evans, * Democrat Beulah. 3. (E. Keith Records, Republican Rocky Ford. [John Carroll, Democrat Westminster. 4. (James P. (Jim) Johnson, * Republican Fort Collins. Ben Ganoway, Democrat Denver. 5. William L. Armstrong, * Republican Aurora. RALD A. FORD TERART 5 CONNECTICUT FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Abraham A. Ribicoff, * Democrat Hartford. IT Wallace Norman FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE William R. Cotter, * Democrat Hartford. 1. Charlie-Burke George, Steele Christopher J. Dodd. Democrat North Stonington. 2. Anthon Robert Giaimo, * Democrat North Haven. 3. James Altham, Jr., Republican Hamden. Peter Koltypin, George Wallace Stratford. Joelle R. Fishman, Communist New Haven. James C Flairficidas 4. Stewart B. McKinney, * Republican Fairfield. Alan B Endowan Coorge 5. Ronald A. Sarasin, * Republican Beacon Falls. Hinginia. (Anthony Toby Moffett.² Democrat Unionville. Grasso 6. 2 Robert H. Steele* not a candidate : nominated for Governor. # Ella T. Grasso* not & candidate; nominated for Governor. DELAWARE FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Insurance Solar Pierre S. du Pont IV, Republican Wilmington. Donald American George July FLORIDA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Gurney Richard (Dick) Stone, Democrat Tallahassee. Fekerd Republica FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Bob Sikes,* Democrat Crestview. 2. Don Fuqua,* Democrat Altha. 3. Charles E. Bennett,* Democrat Jacksonville. 4. [Bill Chappell, Jr.,* Democrat Ocala. 1 Edward J. Gurney* not a candidate. FORD & LIBRARY RALD 30 6 FLORIDA-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Ganter 5. Orlando. (Richard Kelly, Republican Holiday. 6. 1c. W. Bill Young,* Republican St. Petersburg. 7. Sam M. Gibbons,* Democrat Tampa. & James A. Haley,* Democrat Sarasota. Provider 9. (Lou Frey, Jr.,* Republican Winter Park. 10. L. A. (Skip) Bafalis,* Republican Ft. Myers Beach. 11. Paul G. Rogers,* Democrat West Palm Beach. 12. J. Herbert Burke,* Republican Hollywood. 13. William Lehman,* Democrat North Miami. 14. Claude Pepper,* Democrat Miami Beach. Michael A Carricarte 15. [Dante B. Fascell.* Democrat Miami. CRIMA 2 Bill Gunter* not a candidate; defeated in primary runoff for Senator. GEORGIA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Herman E. Talmadge.* Democrat Lovejoy. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. JBo Ginn,* Democrat Millen. 2. Dawson Mathis, * Democrat Albany. 3. (Jack Brinkley, * Democrat Columbus. C-LP Savanan 4. (Elliott H. Levitas, Democrat Atlanta. Blackbarn, Republicant. (Andrew Young. * Democrat Atlanta. 5. [Summery TI. Ogle, III God 6. John J. Flynt, Jr., * Democrat Griffin. Nowt Carrollton Davis 7. [Larry McDonald.1 Democrat Marietta. Desirvey Collins, 8. W.S. (Bill) Stuckey, Jr., * Democrat Eastman. 9. (Phil Landrum, * Democrat Jasper. Paral ilburn 10. Robert G. Stephens. Jr., * Democrat Athens. 1 John W. Davis* defeated in primary. FORD & LIBRARY RALD 30 7 HAWAII FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Daniel K. Inouye,* Democrat Honolulu. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Spark M. Matsunaga.* Democrat Honolulu. Paul, Republican Hondula 2. (Patsy Takemoto Mink, * Democrat Waipahu. Cortey, Honoldius IDAHO FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Frank Church,* Democrat Boise. I Stoddend FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Ook, Democ Indro. (Steven D. Symms,* Republican Caldwell. Orvalthanser George Hansen, 1 Republican Pocatello. 1 Orval Hansen* defeated in primary. ILLINOIS FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Adlai E. Stevenson III,* Democrat Chicago. LaGrange. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. (Ralph H. Metcalfe, * Democrat Chicago Omeago. 2. Morgan F. Murphy, * Democrat Chicago. [Martin A. Russo. Democrat 3. Calumet Park. Repubhean 4. [Edward J. Derwinski,* * Republican Flossmoor. 5. John C. Kluczynski,* Democrat Chicago. Collier 6. (Henry J. Hyde, Republican Port Ridge. 7. Cardiss Collins, * Democrat Chicago. 8. (Daniel D. Rostenkowski, * Democrat Chicago. 9. Sidney R. Yates,* Democrat Chicago. 10. (Abner J. Mikva, Democrat Evanston. Republican (Frank Annunzio,* Democrat 11. Chicago. Mitchell G Zadrozny, 1 Harold R. Collier* not a candidate. FORD & LIBRARY RALD 70 40-937-74-2 8 ILLINOIS-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued 12. (Detty C. Spence, Charmas (Philip M. Crane,* Republican Mount Prospect. 3 13. Stanley [Robert McClory, Republican Lake Bluff. Mabert Rember Democrat 14. (John N. Erlenborn, Republican Glen Ellyn. arends15. (Tim L. Hall, Democrat Dwight. Clifferd Перивнем Genera. 16. Marshall (John B. Anderson,* Republican Rockford. 17. John J. Houlihan, Democrat Park Forest. George M. O'Brien,* Republican Joliet. I 18. Pearise (Robert H. Michel,* Republican Peoria. 19. Gonde, Democrat Malino (Tom Railsback,* * Republican Moline. 20. Springfield [Paul Findley,* * Republican Pittsfield. >inc 21. (Edward R. Madigan,* * Republican Lincoln. 22. George E. Shipley, * Democrat Olney. kepubhean Denville 23. Melvin Price,* * Democrat East St. Louis. Gray 24. (Paul Simon, 3 Democrat Carbondale. itepublicant e Leslie C. Arends* not a candidate. 8 Kenneth J. Gray* not a candidate. INDIANA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Birch Bayh, * Democrat Indianapolis. Rickerd FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1: (Ray J. Madden.* Democrat Gary. Floyd J. Fithian. Democrat Lafavette. 2. alparaise. John Brademas,* Democrat South Bend. 3. (Virginia R. Black, Republican South Bend. J. Edward Roush, * Democrat Huntington. 4: Tokuko 5: (Elwood H. Hillis, * Republican Kokomo. 6: David Walter Evans, Democrat Indianapolis. RALD GE R. FORD TBRART 7: (John T. Myers,* * Republican Covington. (Philip H. Hayes, Democrat Evansville. & (Lee H. Hamilton.* * Democrat Columbus. 9s 9 INDIANA-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued 10. (Philip R. Sharp, Democrat Muncie. 11. Andrew Jacobs, Jr.,t Democrat Indianapolis. William II IN IOWA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Hughes John C. Culver, * 1 Democrat Cedar Rapids. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Edward Mezvinsky,' * Democrat Iowa City. S Leach Culver Michael T. Blouin.² Democrat Dubuque. 2. Gross 3. Watches. Charles E. Grassley,3 Republican New Hartford. Neal Smith,* Democrat Altoona. 4. 5. (Tom Harkin, Democrat Ames. Schoole, 6. (Berkley Bedell, Democrat Spirit Lake. Gitys 1 Harold Hughes* not a candidate. 2 John C. Culver* not a candidate; nominated for Senator. 1 H. R. Gross* not a candidate. KANSAS FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Bill Ros, Topeha. Bob Dole,* Republican Russell. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Gitys 1. Keith G. Sebelius.' Republican Norton. Roy Martha Keys,¹ Demecrat Manhattan. 2. David 3. Larry Winn, Jr., * Republican Overland Park. Tad ruerican City (Bort Chenney 4. Garner E. Shriver, * Republican Wichita. RALD GE R. FORD JBRART John S Stevens Crimary 5. [Joe Skubitz, Republican Pittsburg. 2 Bill Roy* not a candidate; nominated for Senator. 10 KENTUCKY FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Wendell H. Ford. Democrat Owensboro. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Stubbletieb, Carroll Hubbard. Jr..¹ Democrat Mayfield. William H. Natcher, * Democrat Bowling Green. 2. Insurance Romano L. Mazzoli, * Democrat Louisville. 3. 4. Barbourmeade Marion Gene Snyder,* Republican Brownsboro Farms. 5. Tim Lee Carter.* Republican Tompkinsville. [John B. Breckinridge. * Democrat Lexington 6. Carl D. Perkins. * Democrat 7. Hindman. 1 Frank A. Stubblefield* defeated in primary. LOUISIANA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Russell B. Long,* Democrat Baton Rouge. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. (F. Edward Hébert. * Democrat New Orleans. (C. Emmett Pugh, Republican New Orleans. [Lindy (Mrs. Hale) Boggs, * Democrat New Orleans. 2. Orlenn 3. Jr., (David C. Treen, * Republican Metairie. 4. Joe D. Waggonner, Jr.,* Democrat Plain Dealing. 5. (Otto E. Passman, * Democrat Monroe. (Ross P. Shirah, Republican Monroe. Rarick Inv 6. (W. Henson Moore, Republican Baton Rouge. 7. [John B. Breaux,* Democrat Crowley. 8. Gillis W. Long,* Democrat Alexandria. RALD GE R. FORD JBRAPY 1 John A. Rarick* not a candidate ; defeated in primary runoff. 11 MAINE FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. [Peter N. Kyros, * Democrat Portland. (David F. Emery, Republican Rockland. 2. Markham L. Gartley, Democrat Bangor. [William S. Cohen,* Republican Bangor. MARYLAND FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Charles McC. Mathias, * Republican Frederick. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Homas J. matem, Democrati Robert E. Bauman,* Republican Easton. 2. Clarence D. Long.* Democrat Towson. 3. (Paul S. Sarbanes. * Democrat Baltimore. 4. [Marjorie S. Holt,* * Republican Severna Park. Hogans. Gladys Noon Spellman. Democrat Laurel. 6. Goodloe E. Byron.* Democrat Frederick. 7. Parren J. Mitchell, * Democrat Baltimore. 8. Gilbert Gude, * Republican Bethesda. 1 Lawrence J. Hogan* not a candidate; defeated in gubernatorial primary. MASSACHUSETTS FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. (Silvio O. Conte,* Republican Pittsfield. 2. Edward P. Boland,* Democrat Springfield. Donohue [Joseph D. Early. Democrat Worcester. Robert F. Drinan. * Democrat Newton. 4. 5. Paul E. Tsongas, Democrat Lowell. 6. Michael J. Harrington,* Democrat Beverly. 7. Torbert H. Macdonald, * Democrat Malden. Thomas P. O'Neill. Jr..* Democrat Cambridge. FORD A RALD LIBRARY 8. GE 1 Harold D. Donohue* not a candidate. 12 MASSACHUSETTS-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued John Joseph Moakley, * Democrat Boston. 9. 10. Margaret M. Heckler,* Republican Wellesley. 11. James A. Burke,* Democrat Milton. Gary E. Studds,* Democrat Cohasset. 12. Lilan Mackey MICHIGAN FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE John Conyers, Jr.,* Democrat Detroit. 1. Marvin L. Esch,' * Republican Ann Arbor. 2. Democrat Garry Brown,* Republican Schooleraft. 3. Edward Hutchinson, Republican St. Joseph. 1. Richard F. Vander Veen * Democrat Grand Rapids. Banids 5. Labor Bob Carr. Democrat East Lansing. in Chamberlain Bundoipir Donald W. Ricgle. Jr.,* * Democrat Flint. 7. Bob Traxler.* * Democrat Bay City. J Jr., Reput 8. Bav FORD & RALE LIBRARY s FE Guy A. Vander Just.* Republican 9. 1 Charles E. Chamberlain* not a candidate. 13 MICHIGAN-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued 10. Elford A. Cederberg, * Republican Midland. Kathrun Ronert 11. Philip E. Ruppe, * Republican Houghton. Thoodore [James G. O'Hara.* Democrat Utica. 12. Charles C. Diggs, Jr., * Democrat Detroit. 13. George E. McCall, Republican Detroit. Judith Hagans, Socialist Workers Detroit. [Percy Ray Wheeler, United States Labor Detroit. (Lucien N. Nedzi, * Democrat Detroit. 14. William D. Ford,* Democrat Taylor. Jack A. Underwood, Republican Westland. 15. Aldi C. Fuhrmann, American Independent Westland. Claytee O. Artz, Socialist Workers Detroit. (James R. Eades, United States Labor Woodhaven. (John D. Dingell.* Democrat Trenton. Visa 16. William M. Brodhead, Democrat Detroit. Griffiths, C 17. James J. Blanchard, Democrat Pleasant Ridge. Robert 18. SandraJ 19. William S. Broomfield, Remblican Birmingham. 2 Martha W. Griffiths* not a candidate. MINNESOTA FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE (Ulric Scott, Democrat Winona. 1. (Albert H. Quie,* * Republican Dennison. FORD A LIBRARY RALD 30 Nelsen2 (Tom Hagedorn,¹ Republican Truman. 3. (Bill Frenzel,* Republican Golden Valley. 4. (Joseph E. Karth.* Democrat St. Paul. Joseph 1 Ancher Nelsen* not a candidate. 14 MINNESOTA-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Donald M. Fraser, * Democrat Minneapolis. 5. Phil D Heights Edward Zwacha Richard Nolan, Democrat Waite Park. 7. Bob Bergland, Democrat Roseau. Dan Beher Republican James L. Oberstar.³ Democrat Chisholm. Blatnika Robert C. Bester, independent 2 John M. Zwach* not a candidate. 8 John A. Blatnik* not a candidate. MISSISSIPPI FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Jamie L. Whitten.* Democrat Charleston. 1. David R. Bowen,* Democrat Cleveland. 2. 3. G.V. (Sonny) Montgomery, * Democrat Meridian. Thad Cochran. Renublican Jackson. 4. Trent Lott.* Republican Pa-cagoula. 5. MISSOURI FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Thomas F. Eagleton.* Democrat St. Louis. T FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE William (Bill) Clay.* Democrat St. Louis. 1: j. Mill Sincerely James W. Symington, * Democrat Ladue. 2. Howard C Oblenderf Rein Villages Leonor K. (Mrs. John B.) Sullivan,* * Demo- St. Louis. crat. 3. Jo-tun P States Maria Wm. J. (Bill) Randall.* Democrat Independence. 4. FORD & LIBRARY GERALD RALO Richard Bolling.* Democrat Kansas City. T. 5. 6 (Jerry Litton. * Democrat Chillicothe. 15 MISSOURI-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued 7. Providers Gene Taylor,* Pepublican Sarcoxie. 8. Richard H. Ichord, * Democrat Houston. 9. (William L. (Bill) Hungate, * Democrat Trov. 10. (Bill D. Burlison, * Democrat Cape Girardeau. MONTANA FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. (Max S. Baucus, Democrat Missoula. 2. [John Melcher, * Democrat Forsvth. (Jack) Deft. NEBRASKA FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. (Charles Thone, * Republican Lincoln. 2. (Daniel C Lynch Omaira. (John Y. McCollister,* Republican Omaha. Martin 3. Wayne W. Ziebarth, Democrat Wilcox. [Virginia Smith,¹ Republican Chappell. 1 Dave Martin* not a candidate. NEVADA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Bible Harry Reid,¹ Democrat Las Vegas. Paul Laxalt, Republican Carson City. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Jim Santini, Democrat Las Vegas. Devid Towell look know 1 Alan Bible* not a candidate. NEW HAMPSHIRE FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Cotton Louis C. Wyman,* 1 Republican Manchester. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Norman E. D'Amours. Democrat Manchester. Wyman GERALD RALD OF R. FORD JBRART 2. Localand (James C. Cleveland. Republican New London. 2 Norris Cotton* not a candidate. = Louis C. Wyman* not a candidate; nominated for Senator. 16 NEW JERSEY FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE James J. Florio, Democrat Camden. Luhr field. Kitsch, inde 1. Raymond Carotenuto, An Independent com. Julius Lovin Socialist/Indor Tradon ficights. Emailia Dodu Camden. William J. Hughes. Democrat Ocean City. 2. Charles Androw James J. Howard.' * Democrat Spring Lake Heights. 3. endent Frank Thompson, Jr., * Democrat Trenton. 4. Roben Freylenghuyeen Millicent Fenwick. Republican Bernardsville. P. Nowton, New Leadership Charles Edwin B. Forsythe,' * Republican Moorestown. 6. Andrew Maguire, Democrat Ridgewood. 7. Saddle River CK. Robert A. Roe, * Democrat Wayne. 8. Schmidt Labor Henry Helstoski,* * Democrat Rutherford. 9. Peter W. Rodino, Jr.,' * Democrat Newark. 10. Joseph G. Minish, * Democrat West Orange. 11. Admit i\. Levin, Democrat Matthew J. Rinaldo, Republican Union. Robert 12. Omiorine O'rook I in Gov- ernment. 13. Helen S. Meyner, Democrat Phillipsburg. Marchid, 1 Peter H.B. Frelinghuysen* not a candidate. RALD 1m R. FORD UBRART 17 NEW JERSEY-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Dominick V. Daniels. * Democrat Union City. 14. Neighbor Edward J. Patten, * Democrat Perth Amboy. 15. Export SAMPLE, Fiscataway. NEW MEXICO FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Manuel Lujan, Jr., Republican Albuquerque. Vertin Volley American Harold Runnels, * Democrat Lovington. 2. Renald Trybor Pepul Markill NEW YORK FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Daman New Jacob K. Javits,* Republican New York. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Otis G. Pike,* * Democrat Riverhead. 1. Eath ? mocrat. 2. James R. Grover, Jr.,' Republican Babylon. ? Neil Greens, Jerome Ambro, Jr., Democrat East Northport. 3. S. 4. Norman F. Lent,* Republican Baldwin. 5. (John W. Wydler,* * Republican Mineola. Lester L. Wolff.* Democrat Great Neck. 6. Resiyn Heights: 7. Joseph P. Addabbo,* Democrat Ozone Park. 8. (Benjamin S. Rosenthal.* * * Democrat Flushing. James J. Delanov.* * Democrat Long Island. 9. Mario Biaggi,* Democrat Bronx. 10. James H. Scheuer, Democrat Floral Park. Brasco, RALD 1mg A. FORD VIBRANT 11. Shirley A. Chisholm, Democrat Brooklyn. 12. AM k. 1 Frank J. Brasco* not a candidate. 18 NEW YORK-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Podell Stephen J. Solarz,2 Democrat Brooklyn. 13. Dobosh Frederick W. Richmond.³ Democrat Brooklyn. Rooney,4. Leo C. Zeferetti,⁴ Democrat Brooklyn. Carey 15. Elizabeth Holtzman,* Democrat Brooklyn. 16. John M. Murphy,* Democrat Staten Island. 17. Edward I. Koch.* Democrat New York. 18. Charles B. Rangel, * Democrat New York. 19. Bella S. Abzug,* * Democrat New York. 20. Herman Badillo.* * Democrat Bronx. 21. Jonathan B. Bingham.* Democrat Bronx. 22. William Democrat 23. Peter A. Peyser, * Republican Irvington. Reid Richard L. Ottinger. t 5 Democrat Pleasantville. 24. Name Angell, Democrat 25. Hamilton Fish. Jr.,* Republican Millbrook. Libertanan John D Benjamin A. Gilman. Republican Middletown. 26. Matthew F. McHugh, Democrat Ithaca. Robison 27. Ressegure, Samuel S. Stratton, * Democrat Amsterdam. 28. Edward W. Pattison. Democrat New York. FORD A LIBRARY GERALD RALD 29. Carlon Sammae Lake. 30. Robert C. McEwen, * Republican Ogdensburg. 3 Bertram L. Podell* defeated in primary. 3 John J. Rooney* not a candidate. Hugh L. Carey* not a candidate: nominated for Governor. Ogden Reid* not a candidate defeated in gubernatorial primary. Howard W. Robison* not a candidate. 19 NEW YORK-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Poneld I Reile 31. Donald J. Mitchell, Republican Herkimer. Theodoree Hartlord. 32. James M. Hanley, * Democrat Syracuse. William Rebertable Bockman 33. William F. Walsh, Republican Syracuse. Bensies Noble, Liberal Irons 34. Frank Horton, * Republican Rochester. Margaret 35. Barber B. Conable, Jr., Republican Alexander. David Smithsa 36. John J. LaFalce. Democrat Kenmore. Henry J. Nowak. Democrat Buffalo. 38. (Rerhere (Jack F. Kemp,' Republican Hamburg. William L. Democrat 39. James F. Hastings, Republican Caneadea. Dunkirk 7 Henry P. Smith III* not a candidate. & Thaddeus J. Dulski* not a candidate. NORTH CAROLINA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Errin Robert Morgan.¹ Democrat Lillington. Republical FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Walter B. Jones, * Democrat Farmville. Hearth) 2. L.H. Fountain, * Democrat Tarboro. 3. David N. Henderson,* Democrat Wallace. 4. (Ike Andrews,* Democrat Siler City. Ward 5. Stephen L. Neal, Democrat Winston-Salem. injury Mizen, 6. Richardson Prever, * Democrat Greensboro. Does Bitchie, kepul 7. Charles Rose,* Democrat Fayetteville. 8. W. G. (Bill) Hefner, Democrat Concord. Earl B 9. Chart, (James G. Martin. * Republican Davidson. 10. FORD A. GERALD LIBRARY (James T. (Jim) Broyhill, Republican Lenoir. 11: (Roy A. Taylor. * Democrat Asheville. Albert I 1 Sam J. Ervin, Jr.,* not a candidate. 20 NORTH DAKOTA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR William L. 'Bill" Guy, Democrat Casselton. Milton R. Young,* Republican La Moure. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Beaner Dongan, Demaarat Diamande. Mark Andrews,* * Republican Mapleton. oHTo FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Metzenbaum, John Glenn,¹ Democrat Columbus. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. A-Lulten, Democrati Chicinnati Willis D. Gradison, Jr., Republican Cincinnati. 2. Edward W. Walterman [Donald D. Clancy,* * Republican Cincinnati. 3. Charles W. Whalen, Jr.,* Republican Dayton. 4. [Temes I Gebrlich Womkensta (Tennyson Guyer,* Republican Findlay. Bruce Edwards 5. Bowling Green. Delbert L. Latta,* Républican Bowling Green. 6. Allan Wood, Democrat William H. Harsha,* Republican Portsmouth. Patrick L. Neison, 7. Clarence J. Brown.* Republican Urbana. Franke, Independent Powell 1. Edward Strinko, Democrat 8. Thomas N. Kindness.² Republican Hamilton. Dvn Gingerich 9. Thomas Ludlow Ashley,* Democrat Maumee. Carleton 3. Perrysburg 10. Hem Bumpass, Athens Clarence E. Miller,* Republican Lancaster. 11. (Michael D Coffey Membership (J. William Stanton, * Republican Painesville. 12. (Lear Democratic Comminson (Samuel L. Devine,* * Republican Columbus. (Food M Pitensuer, Democrat Lersin. 13. (Charles A. Mosher, * Republican Oberlin. [John F. Seiberling. * Democrat Akron. 14. Mark Robert 15. L. MeGe, Chalmers P. Wylie,* Republican Worthington. 16. John 0. Freedom, Democration (Ralph S. Regula,* * Republican Navarre. David D. Noble, Clemmait 17. John M. Ashbrook.* Republican Johnstown. Glifford Shipson, FORD a GERALD RALD LIBRARY 1 Howard M. Metzenbaum* defeated in primary. $ Walter E. Powell* not a candidate. 21 OHIO-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Wayne L. Hays, * Democrat Flushing. 18. Raiph H. Romig, Republic Charles J. Carney, * Democrat Youngstown. 19. Pinch Reverv Is: 20. James V. Stanton, * Democrat Cleveland. (Robert A. Frantz, Republican Cleveland. 21. [Louis Stokes, * Democrat Cleveland. Charles A. Vanik, * Democrat Euclid. 22. Fran: Penublica Ronald M. Mottl, Democrat Parma. Minshall Ceorge 23. William 8 William E. Minshall* not a candidate. OKLAHOMA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Ed Edmondson, + Democrat Muskogee. Henry Bellmon,* * Republican Red Rock. Paul Edward Trent, Independent Norman. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE [James R. Jones,* * Democrat Tulsa. 1. Theodore M. "Ted" Risenhoover,¹ Democrat. Tahlequah. 2. Raipir 3. Carl Albert,* * Democrat McAlester. 4. Tom Steed,* Democrat Shawnee. [John Jarman, * Democrat Oklahoma City. 5. II Older City Glenn English, Democrat Cordell. 6. John / Bennett 2 Clem McSpadden* not a candidate ; defeated in gubernatorial runoff. OREGON FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Better $ Reberter Portiand Bob Packwood,* Republican Lake Oswego. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Forest Grove. Wyathi 1: [Les AuCoin, Democrat Portland. FORD & GERALD RALD LIBRAR (Al Ullman. * Democrat Baker. T 2: Kennetir Brown, Gervais 2 Wendell Wyatt* not a candidate. 22 OREGON-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued Green 3. (Robert Duncan, t 2 Democrat Gresham. Republican Portiand. 4. (James Weaver, Democrat Eugene. (John Dellenback, * Republican Medford. 1 Edith Green* not a candidate. PENNSYLVANIA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Richard S. Schweiker. Republican Worcester. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. William A. Barrett. * Democrat Philadelphia. 2. Robert N.C. Nix.* Democrat Philadelphia. 3. William J. Green,* Democrat Philadelphia. Collect Renublica 4. (Joshus Eilberg. * Democrat Philadelphia. tradore Emmori, Ware 5. Richard T. Schulze,¹ Republican Malvern. Gus Yatron, * Democrat Reading. 6. Robert W. Edgar. Democrat Broomall. Williams 7. 8. Edward G. Biester. Jr.,* Renublican Furlong. 9. (E. G. Shuster,* Republican Everett. 10. information. (Joseph M. McDade,* Republican Scranton. 11. Daniel J. Flood. * Democrat Wilkes-Barre. 12. (John P. Murtha. * Democrat Johnstown. 13. Lawrence Coughlin,* Republican Villanova. 14. (William S. Moorhead. * Democrat Pittsburgh. Zechary T T Davis, Republice 15. Fred B. Rooney, * Democrat Bethlehem. Michael J. 16. Edwin D. Eshleman. * Republican Lancaster. Lebanon: Pater a 17. (Herman T. Schneebeli, Republican Williamsport. 1 John H. Ware* not a candidate. 3 Lawrence G. Williams* not a candidate; defeated in primary. GE LIBRARY GERALD A. FORD 23 PENNSYLVANIA-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued 18. (H. John Heinz, III, Republican Pittsburgh. Goodling William F. Goodling. Republican Jacobus. Jeseph Paul 20. Joseph M. Gaydos, * Democrat McKeesport. Janesh I AnderkeeP Classpost 21. John H. Dent,* Democrat Ligonier. Charles Kensington Thomas E. Morgan,* * Democrat Fredericktown. 22. 23. (Albert W. Johnson, * Republican Smethport. Joseph P. Vigorito,' * Democrat Erie. 24. Frank W 25. Gary A. Myers, Republican Butler. 8 George A. Goodling* not a candidate. RHODE ISLAND FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE / Fernand J. St Germain, * Democrat Woonsocket. 1. Tiernan Edward P. Beard.¹ Democrat Cranston. 1 Robert O. Tiernan* not a candidate; defeated in primary. SOUTH CAROLINA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Ernest F. Hollings. * Democrat Columbia. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Mendel J. Davis,* Democrat Charleston. 1. Shouling 2. Floyd Spence, * Republican Lexington. Real County. Dorr. Butler Derrick,¹ Democrat Edgefield. Barker Renublica James R. Mann.* Democrat Greenville. 4. Kenneth L. Holland.² Democrat Camden. Gettys Port John W. Jenrette. Jr.. Democrat North Mvrtle Beach. 6. Edam Mar 1 Wm. Jennings Bryan Dorn* not a candidate; defeated in gubernatorial primary. $ Tom Gettys* not a candidate. RALD GE R. FORD JBRAPA 24 SOUTH DAKOTA FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR George McGovern, * Democrat Mitchell. Leo K Thorenass Republics FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Prank D. (Larry Pressler, Republican Humboldt. 2. JJuch M Wailand ficire. (James Abdnor, * Republican Kennebec. TENNESSEE FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. (James H. Quillen, * Republican Kingsport. 2. (John Duncan,* Republican Knoxville. 3. (Marilyn Lloyd, Democrat Chattanooga. Daker, 4. Joe L. Evins,* Democrat Smithville. 5. Richard Fulton,* Democrat Goodlettsville. 6. School Democr T.aus. (Robin Beard, * Republican Brentwood. 7. Ed Jones, * Democrat Yorkville. ECCE Democrat Memphis 8. Dan TEXAS FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. (Wright Patman, * Democrat Texarkana. Republican 2. Charles Wilson,* Democrat Lufkin. 3. (James M. Collins,* Republican Dallas. 4. (Ray Roberts, * Democrat McKinney. Republican Via 5. livel, Dallas. (Alan Steelman,* * Republican Dallas. 6. [Olin E. Teague,* Democrat College Station. Results Heurne 7. (JIM Diady, Democrat Home (Bill Archer, * Republican Houston. 8. (Bob Eckhardt, * Democrat Houston. Renublican Houston 9. Jack Brooks,* Democrat Beaumont. Forguson Republican 10. J. J. (Jake) Pickle,* Democrat Austin. W. R. (Bob) Poage, * Democrat Waco. 11. Don Clements, Republican Brownwood. Laurel N. Dunn, Independent Waco. FALLO OF R. FORD JBRASH 25 TEXAS-Continued FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE-Continued 12. James C. Wright, Jr.,* Democrat Fort Worth. 13. Jack Hightower, Democrat Vernon. Price, 14. John Young,* * Democrat Corpus Christi. 15. E. (Kika) de la Garza, * Democrat Mission. 16. Richard C. (Dick) White,* * Democrat El Paso. 17. Omar Burleson,* Democrat Anson. Barbara Jordan. * Democrat Houston. 18. Socialist 19. George Mahon,* Democrat Lubbock. 20. Henry B. Gonzalez,* Democrat San Antonio. Fisher21 21. Robert "Bob" Krueger,1 Democrat New Braunfels. Horlan Bob Casey, * Democrat Pasadena. 22. Paul R 23. Abraham (Chick) Kazen, Jr.,* * Democrat Laredo. 24. [Dale Milford, * Democrat Grand Prairie. 1 O. C. Fisher* not a candidate. UTAH FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Bennett Wayne Owens,* Democrat Salt Lake City. Jake Garn,¹ Republican Salt Lake City. Kenneth Rex Larsen, American Parvo. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE K. Gunn McKay,* Democrat Huntsville. 1. S Allan T. Howe,² Democrat Salt Lake City. Owens2 2. 1 Wallace Bennett* not a candidate. 2 Wayne Owens* not a candidate; nominated for Senator. VERMONT FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat Burlington. Aiken Richard Burnington. FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Mallary James M. Jeffords.- Republican Montpelier. I FORD a GERALD LIBRARY 1 George D. Aiken,* not a candidate. $ Richard W. Mallary,* not a candidate; nominated for Senator. 26 VIRGINIA FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Thomas N. Downing,* * Democrat Newport News. 2. Beach. G. William Whitehurst, * Republican Norfolk. 3. David E. Satterfield, III, * Democrat Richmond. 4. Robert W. Daniel, Jr., * Republican Spring Grove. 5. W. D. (Dan) Daniel, * Democrat Danville. 6. (M. Caldwell Butler, * Republican Roanoke. 7. Charrottesville. (J. Kenneth Robinson,* Republican Winchester. 8. Herbert E. Harris. II. Democrat Alexandria. Charries 9. William C. Wampler,* Republican Bristol. 10. [Joseph L. Fisher, Democrat Arlington. Pronbill WASHINGTON FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Warren G. Magnuson, * Democrat Seattle. Clara FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE Kirkhind: 1. Joel Pritchard. Republican Seattle. Llovd Meeds. * Democrat Everett. 2. Don Bonker.¹ Democrat Hanseng Ridgefield. 3. Fuelun 4. Mike McCormack. * Democrat Richland. 5. Thomas S. Folev,* Democrat Spokane. Gary G. Gage, Republican Clarkston. Flovd V. Hicks. * Democrat 6. Tacoma. 7. Brock Adams. * Democrat Seattle. a Julia Butler Hansen* not a candidate. WEST VIRGINIA FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE 1. Robert H. Mollohan, * Democrat Fairmont. 2. (Harley O. Staggers. * Democrat Keyser. John M. Slack.* Democrat 3. Charleston. 4. Ken Hechler,* * Democrat Huntington. RALD GE R. FORD UBRARE 27 WISCONSIN FOR UNITED STATES SENATOR Gaylord A. Nelson,* Democrat Madison. Geratel b. Mei American FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE fLes Aspin,* Democrat Racine. 1. Robert W. Kastenmeier, Democrat Sun Prairie. 2. T Miller, D publican Portage Alvin Baldus. Democrat Menominie. 3. Richland Center. Clement J. Zablocki, * Democrat Milwaukee. 4. Herbert & Jamake, (Henry S. Reuss,* * Democrat Milwaukee. 5. Mildred 1 6. William A. Steiger, Republican Oshkosh. 7. David R. Obey,* Democrat Wausau. Burger, Renublic Robert J. Cornell. Democrat DePere. 8. Procimen, Republican Appleten Davise. (Lynn S. Adelman, Democrat Shorewood. (Robert W. Kasten, Jr.,¹ Republican Milwaukee. 1 Glenn R. Davis,* not a candidate; defeated in primary. WYOMING FOR UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE Teno Roncalio, * Democrat Cheyenne. DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA FOR DELEGATE Walter E. Fauntroy,* Democrat District of Columbia. William R. Phillips, Republican District of Columbia. Anton. V. Wood, Statehood District of Columbia. James G. Banks, Independent District of Columbia. David Hodges Dabney. Independent District of Columbia. Susan Pennington, Independent District of Columbia. GUAM FOR DELEGATE Antonio Borja Won Pat,* Democrat Agana. VIRGIN ISLANDS FOR DELEGATE Ron de Lugo,* Democrat Christiansted. FORD A RALO LIBRARY GE 28 STATISTICAL DIGEST OF RESULTS AT THE PRIMARIES OF 1974 IN THE VARIOUS STATES AFFECTING MEMBERS OF THE 93D CONG. Senate House of Representatives Renomi- Not can- De- Vacan- Renomi- Not can- De- Vacan- nated didates feated cies nated didates feated cies State Democrat Republican Democrat Republican Democrat Republican Democrat Republican Total Democrat Republicen Democrat Republican Democrat Republican Democrat Republican Total Alabama 1 4 3 7 Alaska 1 1 1 Arizona 1 1 3 4 Arkansas 1 3 1 4 California 1 21 17 3 2 43 Colorado 1 2 3 5 Connecticut 1 2 2 1 1 6 Delaware 1 1 Florida 1 10 4 1 15 Georgia 1 8 1 1 10 Hawaii 1 2 2 Idaho 1 1 1 2 Illinois 1 9 12 1 2 24 Indiana 1 4 7 11 Iowa 1 2 2 1 1 6 Kansas 1 4 1 5 Kentucky 1 4 2 1 7 Louisiana 1 6 1 1 8 Maine 1 1 2 Maryland 1 1 4 3 1 8 Massachusetts 8 3 12 Michigan 9 8 1 19 Minnesota 3 2 2 8 Mississippi 3 2 5 Missouri 1 1 9 1 10 Montana 1 1 2 Nebraska 2 1 3 Nevada 1 1 1 1 New Hampshire 1 1 1 1 2 New Jersey 8 6 1 15 New Mexico 1 1 2 New York 1 16 15 5 2 1 39 North Carolina 1 7 4 11 North Dakota 1 1 1 Ohio 1 8 13 2 23 Oklahoma 1 4 1 1 6 Oregon 1 1 1 1 4 Pennsylvania 1 14 8 2 1 25 Rhode Island 1 2 South Carolina 1 2 2 2 6 South Dakota 1 1 1 1 2 Tennessee 3 5 8 Texas 19 4 24 Utah 1 1 1 2 Vermont 1 1 1 Virginia 3 7 10 Washington 1 1 5 1 1 7 West Virginia 4 4 Wisconsin 1 1 5 3 1 9 Wyoming 1 1 Total 15 10 3 4 2 0 0 0 34 220 163 23 21 5 3 0 0 435 GE GERALD FORD & LIBRARY RALE 29 RECAPITULATION SENATE HOUSE Renominated: Renominated: Democrats 15 Democrats 220 Republicans 10 Republicans 163 Total 25 Total 383 Not candidates: Not candidates: Democrats 3 Democrats 23 Republicans 4 Republicans 21 Total 7 Total 46 Defeated: Defeated: Democrats 2 Democrats 5 Republicans 0 Republicans 3 Total 2 Total 8 Replacements: Replacements: Democrats 5 Democrats 28 Republicans 4 Republicans 24 Total 9 Total 52 Renominated 25 Renominated 383 Total 34 Total membership 435 Melzen baum Fulbright FORDO IF GERALD LIBRARY 30 POLITICAL DIVISIONS OF THE U.S. SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES FROM 1855 (34TH CONG.) TO 1973-75 (93D CONG.) [All figures reflect immediate result of elections] Senate House of Representatives Num- Num- ber of ber of Re- Repre- Re- Sena- Demo- publi- Other senta- Demo- publi- Other Congress tors crats cans parties Vacant tives crats cans parties Vacant 34th 1855-1857 62 42 15 5 234 83 108 43 35th 1857-1859 64 39 20 5 237 131 92 14 36th 1859-1861 66 38 26 2 237 101 113 23 37th 1861-1863 50 11 31 7 1 178 42 106 28 2 38th 1863-1865 51 12 39 183 80 103 39th 1865-1867 52 10 42 191 46 145 40th 1867-1869 53 11 42 193 49 143 1 41st 1869-1871 74 11 61 2 243 73 170 42d 1871-1873 74 17 57 243 104 139 43d 1873-1875 74 19 54 1 293 88 203 2 44th 1875-1877 76 29 46 1 293 181 107 3 2 45th 1877-1879 76 36 39 1 293 156 137 46th 1879-1881 76 43 33 293 150 128 14 1 47th 1881-1883 76 37 37 2 293 130 152 11 48th 1883-1885 76 36 40 325 200 119 6 49th 1885-1887 76 34 41 1 325 182 140 2 1 50th 1887-1889 76 37 39 325 170 151 4 51st 1889-1891 84 37 47 330 156 173 1 52d 1891-1893 88 39 47 2 333 231 88 14 53d 1893-1895 88 44 38 3 3 357 220 126 8 54th 1895-1897 88 39 44 5 357 104 246 7 55th 1397-1899 90 34 46 10 357 134 206 16 1 56th 1899-1901 90 26 53 11 357 163 185 9 57th 1901-1903 90 29 56 3 2 357 153 198 5 1 58th 1903-1905 90 32 58 386 178 207 1 59th 1905-1907 90 32 58 386 136 250 60th 1907-1909 92 29 61 2 386 164 222 61st 1909-1911 92 32 59 1 391 172 219 62d 1911-1913 92 42 49 1 391 228 162 1 63d 1913-1915 96 51 44 1 435 290 127 18 64th 1915-1917 96 56 39 1 435 231 193 8 3 65th 1917-1919 96 53 42 1 435 1210 216 9 66th 1919-1921 96 47 48 1 435 191 237 7 67th 1921-1923 96 37 59 435 132 300 1 2 68th 1923-1925 96 43 51 2 435 207 225 3 69th 1925-1927 96 40 54 1 1 435 183 247 5 70th 1927-1929 96 47 48 1 435 195 237 3 71st 1929-1931 96 39 56 1 435 163 267 1 4 72d 1931-1933 96 47 48 1 435 216 218 1 73d 1933-1935 96 59 36 1 435 313 117 5 74th 1935-1937 96 69 25 2 435 322 103 10 75th 1937-1939 96 75 17 4 435 333 89 13 76th 1939-1941 96 69 23 4 435 262 169 4 77th 1941-1943 96 66 28 2 435 267 162 6 78th 1943-1945 96 57 38 1 435 222 209 4 79th 1945-1947 96 57 38 1 435 243 190 2 80th 1947-1949 96 45 51 435 188 246 1 81st 1949-1951 96 54 42 435 263 171 1 82d 1951-1953 96 48 47 1 435 234 199 2 83d 1953-1955 96 46 48 2 435 213 221 1 84th 1955-1957 96 48 47 1 435 232 203 85th 1957-1959 96 49 47 435 234 201 86th 1959-1961 98 64 34 $436 283 153 87th 1961-1963 100 64 36 437 262 175 88th 1963-1965 100 67 33 435 258 176 1 89th 1965-1967 100 68 32 435 295 140 90th 1967-1969 100 64 36 435 248 187 91st 1969-1971 100 58 42 435 243 192 92d 1971-1973 100 54 44 2 435 255 180 93d 1973-1975 100 56 42 2 435 242 192 1 1 Democrats organized House with help of other parties. 2 Democrats organized House due to Republican deaths. 3 Proclamation declaring Alaska a State issued Jan. 3, 1959. 4 Proclamation declaring Hawaii a State issued Aug. 21, 1959. A. FORD RALD GELE LIBRARY