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Richard Nixon Presidential Library Contested Materials Collection Folder List Box Number Folder Number Document Date No Date Subject Document Type Document Description 34 1 5/30/1972 Campaign Memo From Magruder to Haldeman RE Sacramento Mailing Samples. 4 pgs. 34 1 5/22/1972 Campaign Memo From Odle to Malek RE Agenda for Staff Meeting 5/23. 1 pg. 34 1 5/22/1972 Campaign Memo From Odle to Election Committee Members RE Staff Meeting Details. 2 pgs. 34 1 5/25/1972 Campaign Memo Odle to Shumway RE Staff Ages. 5 pgs. Wednesday, June 17, 2015 Page 1 of 3 Box Number Folder Number Document Date No Date Subject Document Type Document Description 34 1 5/26/1972 Campaign Memo From Odle to Staff RE Misc. Staff Instructions. 3 pgs. 34 1 5/12/1972 Campaign Memo From Marik to Mitchell, Magruder RE New York State. 2 pgs. 34 1 5/12/1972 Campaign Memo From Shumway to Mitchell, Magruder RE Time Magazine. 1 pg. 34 1 6/6/1972 Campaign Memo From Magruder to Haldeman RE California Sample Mailings. 9 pgs. 34 1 6/26/1972 Campaign Memo From Odle to Election Staff RE Staff Meeting. 1pg. Wednesday, June 17, 2015 Page 2 of 3 Box Number Folder Number Document Date No Date Subject Document Type Document Description 34 1 6/6/1972 Campaign Memo From Odle to Howard RE Mailing Program Costs. 4 pgs. 34 1 6/29/1972 Campaign Memo From Magruder to Strachan RE Attachments. 1 pg. 34 1 6/26/1972 Campaign Memo From Foust to Magruder RE Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero in San Antonio. 7 pgs. 34 1 6/27/1972 Campaign Memo From Rietz to Malek, Magruder RE Press Coverage for Youth Functions. 11 pgs. Wednesday, June 17, 2015 Page 3 of 3 Presidential Materials Review Board Review on Contested Documents Collection: H. R. Haldeman Box Number: 314 Folder: [Campaign 22 Part III June 15-29, 1972 Folder 2] Document Disposition 1 Return Private/Political NOTE, MAGRUPER TO HRH, 5/30/72 2 Retain Open 3 Return Private/Political mEmo, ODLE TO MALEK, 5/22/72 4 Return Private/Political mEmo, ODLE TO ARMENDARIS, ET.AL, 5/22/72 5 Return Private/Political MEMO, ODLE TO SHUMWAY, 5/25/72 6 Return Private/Political MEMU, OPLE TO STAFF, 5/26/72 7 Return Private/Political MEMO, MARIK TO MITCHELL, 5/12/72 8 Return Private/Political MEMO, SHUMWAY TO MITCHELL, 5/12/72 9 Return Private/Political & Private/PersonalNOT, MAGRUDER TD HRH, 10 Return Private/Political MEMO, DOLE TO ARMEN 6/6/72 DARIS, RT AL, 6/26/72 11 Return Private/Political MEMO, ODUE TO HOWARD, 6/6/72 12 Return Private/Political NOTE/ATTACH, mAGium DER TO STRACHAN, 6/29/72 COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT May 30, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR MR. H. R. HALDEMAN FROM: JEB S. MAGRUDE M Attached for your information is a copy of the Revised Letter/Sacramento Reply mail- ing samples. Attachment & Re-elect the President CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 1670 Wilshire Boulevard / Los Angeles, California 90017 Dear Fellow Republican: Can you spare time for some exciting and rewarding work? There is a real need for volunteers in California to work for President Nixons's re-election in November. The President has earned our support. He has brought more than 400, 000 men home from Vietnam. He created the Environmental Protection Agency and signed into law the Clean Air Act. He has slowed the rate of inflation and slowed the awful crime rate. As a Californian, the President is particularly aware of the problems in our state. He has supported the Space Shuttle program which will create 50,000 new jobs, many right here. He has proposed revenue sharing as one way to ease our heavy local and property taxes. Will you volunteer ? You need no special skills or training, just enthusiasm. Please fill in the attached Volunteer Card and send it in today. Sincerely, Ronald Ronald Reagan Reagan Chairman P.S. Please remember to support President Nixon by voting for him in the Primary on June 6th. TEAR HERE Volunteer Card NAME ADDRESS I want to personally support President Nixon for re-election by participating CITY STATE ZIP in the campaign. Please contact me right away! Telephone : Signature INSTRUCTIONS: Please fill out this volunteer card insert it in the business reply envelope and mail today. "Let US reject the narrow visions of those who would tell US that we are evil because we are not yet perfect, that we are corrupt because we are not yet pure, that all the sweat and toil and sacrifice that have gone into the building of America were for naught because that building is not yet done" Richard Nixon Los Angeles, California 90017 Ronald Reagan, Chairman Lyn Nofziger, Executive Director, 1670 Wilshire Boulevard, Published and printed by the Californita Committee for the Re-election of the President Needs You. And the President President Nixon. America Needs Re-elect the President. The Record. The Economy: President Nixon has taken strong action to flatten inflation, make the tax structure more equitable, and avert an international money crisis. He initiated a necessary 90-day wage and price freeze, and enabled $1.5 billion to be loaned to small businesses. Housing starts are up 42% over last year. The Environment: President Nixon established the Environmental Protection Agency, the first federal unit ever set up to protect our quality of life. He has signed the Water Foreign Policy: Quality Improvement Act of 1970 and initiated a President Nixon is the first American President to visit Legacy of Parks program. No less than 25 separate China-holding talks that were the first held between environment bills have been proposed by him. the leaders of the two countries since 1949. And he will also visit Moscow this year. The President's Administration has called a halt to crisis diplomacy, Young Americans: and has opened negotiations to limit nuclear weapons President Nixon has signed into law the bill giving 18- and reduce tension, particularly in the Middle East. year-olds the right to vote, and has overhauled the selective service system with the goal of establishing an all-volunteer army. Revenue Sharing: In order to relieve the burden of taxes at the State and local level - property, sales, income and Crime: other taxes - the President has The President's vigorous law-enforcement proposed a program to make policies have cut in half the increase in the nation's crime more monies available to local rate. He has created special strike forces in 17 cities which, governments by sharing a portion in 1971, brought nearly 600 Federal indictments (2 1/2 times of Federal revenues with them. the number in the last pre-Nixon year), and named over Offered with no strings attached, 2,500 criminal suspects, including many major criminal this program promises to encour- leaders. In Washington, D.C., the one city in which the age problem-solving at the local President has direct authority, serious crime actually level where many of the problems decreased by 13% last year. are. Older Americans: President Nixon has submitted proposals to Congress which would increase Social Security benefits to the nation's elderly by one-third-and the average monthly benefits for an elderly couple by almost $100. The President has also advanced programs to enable more of the elderly to live in their own homes, and to improve nursing care and increase jobs for these same citizens. Vietnam: The President has brought more than 440,000 Americans U.S. TROOPS IN VIETNAM home from Vietnam. Thousands He has reduced Health Care: 600 American ground President Nixon has earmarked combat involvement 500 massive amounts of money by 90% reduced to find a cure for cancer and sickle 400 casualties by 95% Drugs: cell anemia. Federal outlays for and reduced spend- The President has won agreement health in 1973 will reach $25.5 300 ing by two-thirds. He from Turkey to place a total ban on billion, and the President nas has laid the found- the growing of opium poppy made 200 proposed a National Health ation for a lasting an agreement with France to assist in Insurance Standards Act, a peace in Southeast 100 halting the traffic of drugs and Family Health Insurance Plan, and Asia. stepped up arrests of pushers. He is the National Health Education 0 & spending 6 times more for rehabilita- 65 '66 '67 '68 '69 '70 '71 Foundation, all aiming at better '72 tion and 5 times more for drug health care for EVERYONE. education than ever before. Re-elect the President CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90017 Address Correction Requested FIRST CLASS U.S. POSTAGE Permit No. 54552 Los Angeles, California BUSINESS REPLY MAIL No Postage Stamp Necessary if Mailed in the United States Postage will be paid by CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT NORTH CENTRAL CALIFORNIA REGION 1507 21st STREET SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA 95814 Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM CONFIDENTIAL May 22, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. FREDERIC V. MALEK FROM: ROBERT C. ODLE, JR. SUBJECT: Agenda for Staff Meeting, Tuesday, May 23, 7:30 a.m. 1. In the post-Vietnam crush, Dan Piliero and Charles Shearer were not introduced. You might introduce them, describe their duties, etc. If Andre Le Tendre is present, you might introduce him as well. 2. You should praise everyone for their work on the Vietnam speech. 1701 did a good job and it was noticed at the WH (examples: the 50,000 + telegrams and the results of the Vietnam poll on Metromedia where we won 82% to 18% -- of the 6,000 responses, we can trace 3,500 to 1701). You should stress that we should continue to report on Vietnam follow-up in the weekly report. Weekly report inputs are due today at noon and these should include more Vietnam follow-up which was accomplished last week. 3. Call on Dr. Robert Marik who will introduce Director of the Direct Mail Division Bob Morgan for a presentation on his Division's programs. 4. Call on Jon Foust, Tour Director, for a presentation on the requirements of being a 1701 advance man. 5. Call on Rob Odle for a brief suggestion on security measures to be taken this week. cc: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder VDCC: Mr. Gordon Strachan GONFIDENTIAL Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM May 22, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. ALEX ARMENDARIS MR. MURRAY CHOTINER MR. PETER DAILEY MR. ANTHONY DE FALCO MR. HARRY S. FLEMMING MR. JON FOUST MR. LARRY GOLDBERG MRS. PAT HUTAR MR. JERRY JONES MR. PAUL JONES MR. ALLAN KAUPINEN MR. FRED LA RUE MR. ROBERT MARDIAN DR. ROBERT MARIK MR. RICHARD MC ADOO MR. DON MOSIMAN MR. FRANK NAYLOR MR. EDWARD NIXON MR. DAN PILIERO MR. HERBERT PORTER MR. ROBERT REISNER MR. KEN RIETZ MR. GLENN SEDAM MR. CHARLES SHEARER MR. DE VAN SHUMWAY MR. HUGH SLOAN MR. WILLIAM STOVER MR. ROBERT TEETER MR. DAN TODD DR. CLAYTON YEUTTER FROM: ROBERT C. ODLE, JR. 1. Our next staff meeting will be tomorrow, Tuesday, May 23, at 7:30 a.m. in the third floor conference room. 2. Material for the weekly report is due by noon Tuesday. This week's report should emphasize our follow-up activities in behalf of the President's recent speech on Vietnam. Thus, please mention these activities in your part of the weekly report. 3. Next Monday, May 29, is Memorial Day. Since all government offices and most businesses will be closed, we will operate with a greatly reduced staff. While our switchboard will be open, each division head is free to close down as much of his office -2- as he chooses. If you are traveling, please remember to leave your telephone number or numbers with Bob Reisner. 4. Because of the unexpected demand for the state notebooks by various divisions of the campaign, Biba Wagner on the third floor is greatly in need of extra secretarial assistance during the day. Our volunteers help Biba with xeroxing, collating, etc., but she is very much in need of assistance from those with top typing skills. Therefore, if any of the secretaries in your office have any extra time during the day, perhaps when you are traveling, if you would ask them to get in touch with Biba at extension 341, she will be able to get the state notebooks which she is working on completed by her deadline of June 15 Thank you very much. cc: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder bcc: Mr. Gordon C. Strachan Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM May 25, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. DE VAN L. SHUMWAY FROM: ROBERT C. ODLE, JR. SUBJECT: Staff Ages As we discussed, the following information on staff ages should produce some grist for your press mill. Hopefully it will also serve to counter the argument that the Nixon people are all at least middle aged and mostly old. The attached graph indicates the age span here at the Committee. While the mean (average) computed to be 32, Sylvia Panarites, who did the research on this, tells me that the median age is statistically correct and it is 27. So, you can say the average of the 1701 staffer is 27 . According to Sylvia, the ethics of statistics allow you to use either the mean or the median SO we should use the median because it is to our advantage in this case. The definite age concentration of our staff under the age of 33 is quite apparent -- as the attached chart show, 65% of the staff is under 33. Along with the chart and mean and median age you might be interested in the mean age of the various sections of the Committee: Youth 23 Finance 37 Political 30 Voter blocs excluding youth 30 PR/media 28 Scheduling and advance 26 Polling and research 30 Secretaries 28 Assistants 29 -2- Directors 40 Although the Finance Committee has the highest mean age, its trea- surer, Hugh Sloan, is only 30. Youth, as expected, has the lowest mean age. The following random age samples may also be of interest as well: Tom Carroccio - 26 - tour desk assistant Ed Cowling - 29 - tour desk assistant Sandy Cram - 27 - scheduler 1 Sue Davis - 25 - advancewoman Jon Foust - 33 - director of advance office Curt Herge - 33 - chief scheduler Bill Minshall - 22 - scheduler Roger Stone - 20 - scheduler Dan Evans - 22 - public opinion polls Rick Fore - 26 - Marik's assistant - campaign planning and strategy Ted Garrish - 29 - public opinion polls Bob Morgan - 34 - director of direct mail operation Bib Wagner - 22 - state election research coordinator Frank Almaguer - 27 - assistant to the director of the Spanish- speaking voting bloc Art Amolsch - 32 - speech writer Leslye Arsht - 27 - national issues research D. J. Atwood - 30 - assistant editor of The Re-elector Gary Burhop - 22 - in charge of convention activities under Tom Bell Tom Bell - 24 - Rietz assistant Ann Dore - 30 - communcations coordinator Joan Connelly - 24 - surrogate media placement Ken Smith - 22 - in charge of Young Speakers program -3- George Gorton - 25 - heads up college activities in support of the President Angela Harris - 28 - PR/media assistant Jim Mills - 26 - assistant to the director for elderly Powell Moore - 34 - press and information director Bill Novelli - 30 - advertising Bob Reisner - 24 - Magruder's assistant 1 Connie Santarelli - 29 - personnel assistant Jeannie Mitchell - 29 - in charge of volunteers Ken Reitz - 31 - youth director Dan Todd - 33 - elderly vote director Chris Todd - 25 - elderly fieldwoman Jeb Magruder - 37 - chief of staff Dan Piliero - 29 - lawyers committee Richard McAdoo - 36 - transient voter Bart Porter - 33 - director of spokesmen resources Rob Odle - 28 - director of administration Bob Podesta - 22 - general assistant under Rietz working with Young Voters Committees Angie Miller - 20 - heads up Nixonettes and Nixonaires Harry Flemming - 31 - political coordinator Mark Bloomfield - 22 - special project coordinator for Flemming and Kaupinen Dave Allen - 28 - writing and research Ken Talmage - 26 - Stans A.A. Al Kaupinen - 36 - political coordinator Another point brought out by the chart is that only 11 people of approximately 200 are over 50. CR P Staff Age Span avenue age-32yrs medianage- - 27,05 61-64yes 3 58-61 yrs 2 54-57yrs 2 50-53yrs 4 46-49yrs 20 42-45yr 8 38-11 yrs 22 34-37yrs 6 30-33yrs 26 26-293Rs 34 2:2-25yes 50 18-21 yrs 9/9 13 0 10 20 30 50 50 60 number of staff 4 cc: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder Mr. Frederic V. Malek Mr. Kenneth Rietz bcc: The Honorable John N. Mitchell, F.Y.I. Mr. Gordon ct Strachan Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM May 26, 1972 ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL MEMORANDUM FOR THE STAFF FROM: ROBERT C. ODLE, JR. 1. Division heads and their assistants should note that there will. not be a staff meeting on Tuesday, May 30. 2. Recently, the Controller's Office has received a number of ex- pense account forms, check requests, etc., which have not been first routed through this office. This just delays payment because the Controller's Office then sends the requests back to Odle's office for approval. Please remember to send all ex- pense accounts, check requests, etc., to Odle's office where they are approved and then sent to the Controller for payment. (Note: this does not apply to the Finance Division). 3. Please "take it easy" with respect to requests for White House tours. This is the busy season for tours and the Visitors Of- fice at the White House has asked us to request tours only for genuine VIPs and people who have been helpful to the Committee. Please don't ask for tours for neighbors or friends of neigh- bors. Also, please don't ever attempt to get someone on a tour when requested by a Congressman or a Senator who has been turned down by the Visitors Office -- it would not be proper for someone at 1701 to get someone on a tour when a Senator could not. 4. Our telephone system is becoming overloaded by the expansion of the staff -- but if the following steps are taken it can adequately service our needs from now until November: a. Effective immediately please place all outgoing (not long distance calls) on your seven-digit outside lines rather than your three-digit branch lines. Save the branch lines for inter-office and WATS calls. This will mean that the operator will be able to put calls through to your office more easily since your branch numbers will not be busy. By not having to take as many messages, the operator will be able to answer incoming calls more quickly. ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL -2- b. Please give out your seven-digit direct-dial numbers to all your callers. This is becoming increasingly important be- cause of the large number of "citizens" calls coming into our switchboard. Our telephone equipment is not designed to process all your incoming calls through the switchboard and will break down if the outside lines are not used for most incoming calls. Also, when leaving a message at the White House or other office, please ask the party to return your call at your direct number, e.g., "John Jones at 333-9876" rather than "John Jones at the Committee." C. We now have 10 WATS lines -- the maximum number we can have. Seven can be reached by dialing 80, three by dialing 87. If both 80 and 87 ring busy then dial com- mercially on your seven-digit line. d. If you and your secretary have different three-digit branch lines, please answer your own branch line yourself. It is similar to an intercom system and the caller will be some- one from 1701. Outside calls are put through to your sec- retary. Please do not have your secretary place your calls to other staff members at 1701. It's not necessary and it wastes time. e. Please do not ask the operator to place calls for you. Her job is to answer the outside calls and transfer calls -- not place them. If her time is taken up placing calls she cannot answer incoming calls as efficiently as she could. Also, please don't ask the operator for the telephone number of a fellow staff member -- look on your staff list. (Additional copies are available from Sylvia Panarites). f. Please remember that during the day Ruby Youngs (a former White House assistant chief telephone operator) runs the switchboard and Kathy O'Melia is our receptionist. Kathy can be reached at 391, not.0. Ruby can be reached at 0. 5. The attached "hometown" news release form should be filled out as soon as possible by all members of the staff and sent to Mrs. Laura Underwood in the Press Office. Please do this just as soon as possible. bec: Mr. Gordon C. Strachan ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL HOMETOWN NEWS RELEASE FORM (type or print) NAME AGE HOMETOWN ADDRESS (city) (state), (street no.) HOW LONG PARENTS: Father's Name Deceased Living Mother's Name Deceased Living PARENTS' ADDRESS (if different from above) (city) (state) (street number) HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER (S) WIFE'S/HUSBAND'S NAME ADDRESS PARENTS: Living Deceased Divorced HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER(S) YOUR JOB WITH THE COMMITTEE (title or descriptive phrase): PREVIOUS ENPLOYMENT (list more than just gov't positions) (title) (name of employer) (type of employment) (title) (name of employer) (type of employment) (title) (name of employer) (type of employment) (use reverse side for added information) CIVIC, FRATERNAL OR CHARITABLE ACTIVITIES OTHER (List here anything not covered above which you would like to see mentioned in a press release about you) Return to Yes. Laura Underwood 372, when completed. 0 Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM May 12, 1972 CONFIDENTIAL MEMORANDUM FOR: THE HONORABLE JOHN N. MITCHELL THROUGH: JEB S. MAGRUDER FROM: ROBERT H. MARIK RHM SUBJECT: New York State In our initial conversation with Mr. Bixby and Steve Blum of the New York Re-election Committee, it has been obvious that they would prefer to run their state campaign in a nearly autonomous fashion. In particular, they have some well de- veloped ideas on the type of programs which should be imple- mented for direct mail and telephone. They also have demo- graphic data to determine which clusters of voters should be approached by each method of communication. In the case of direct mail, they are prepared to argue strongly to use a vendor with whom they have dealt in earlier Rockefeller campaigns rather than to participate in our national arrangement with the Donnelley Corporation. In all other states where direct mail will be used, we have been proceding on the assumption that Bob Morgan, working with the November Group, would bear the responsibility for developing the direct mail materials, in close cooperation with the State Re-election Committees. He would then follow through on the production and development of the mailings, using the Donnelley Corporation. In the direct mail and telephone programs, funds for these activities have been budgeted in the key states through the Washington Committee, and have not been included in the state budgets. The purpose of this memorandum is to ascertain from you whether you desire that the New. York State mail and telephone programs be coordinated closely from Washington as in the other states, CONFIDENTIAL - 2 - or whether you would prefer that Bixby be allowed to proceed with more independence, controlled only by an agreed-upon budget figure. Coordinate direct mail and telephone programs closely as in other key states Be prepared to yield more autonomy to Bixby in New York than to the Chairmen of most other states maril4Bloom CONFIDENTIAL Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM May 12, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR THE HONORABLE JOHN N. MITCHELL THROUGH: JEB S. MAGRUDER SUBJECT: TIME Magazine You indicated to me last week that you had a special relationship with Hal Bruno of Newsweek Magazine and would be spending some time with him on Thursday. Hal's counterpart at Time Magazine (as roving political reporter) is Simmons (Sim) Fentress. Sim is basically friendly and tells me that from time to time he sat down with you on a background basis in 1968 -- a relationship he would like to reinstitute this year. It would be helpful to me for my own backgrounding as well as in my relationships with Hal and with Sim if I were allowed to sit in on such meetings, even though they are informal and off-the-record. Suggestion:- That you meet informally with Sim sometime within the next two weeks for 30 minutes to an hour. If you approve, I will contact Sim and coordinate the scheduling with Lea. Approve Disapprove Comments: I want to clarify that I have not mentioned the Bruno situation to Fentress. He came to me with this specific request. The establishment of a special relationship with both major news magazines would seem to me to be of assistance to the President's re-election effort. Van DEVAN L. SHUMWAY 0 COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT June 6, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR MR. H. R. HALDEMAN FROM: JEB S. MAGRUDE P Attached for your information are copies of the following California sample mailings: Four-page test (Sacramento reply, Tustin reply, San Mateo reply) Red, White & Blue Telegram with teaser Telegram Telegram with teaser Re-elect the President BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE PAID CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90017 California Committee For The Re-election Of The President Address Correction Requested FIRST CLASS U.S. POSTAGE Permit No. 54552 Los Angeles, California BUSINESS REPLY MAIL No Postage Stamp Necessary if Mailed in the United States Postage will be paid by CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGION P.O. BOX 897 TUSTIN, CALIFORNIA 92680 Re-elect the President CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 1670 Wilshire Boulevard / Los Angeles, California 90017 Mr. & Mrs. William J. Dunn 801 Ronda Mendoza Laguna Hills, Ca 92653 Dear Mr. & Mrs. W. Dunn: Your help is needed by President Nixon as he seeks re-election this year. He needs your help in order to win a big victory in his home State. No one expects you to volunteer your help on blind faith. The President himself doesn't expect that. But we believe he has earned your support, and here's the record to back up our belief: The rate of increase in crime in the Nation has been cut in half. He has created special anti-crime strike forces in 17 cities which in 1971 brought nearly 600 Federal indictments and identified over 2,500 criminal suspects. In Washington, D. C., the one city in which the President has direct authority, serious crime actually DECREASED by 13% last year. President Nixon has declared a "war on drugs". He is attacking drug traffic on all fronts. He has won an agreement from Turkey to place a total ban on the growing of opium poppy. He has made an agreement with France to assist in halting the smuggling of heroin from Marseilles. He has added more men to the U.S. Customs Service to check in-coming baggage more thoroughly. He has stepped-up arrests of pushers. He is spending 6 times more for rehabilitation and 5 times more for drug education than ever before. VIETNAM. He has brought home nearly half a million Americans from that communist-battered country, reduced casualties by 95%, and is moving resolutely toward a lasting peace, with freedom in that part of the world. THE ECONOMY. The President has taken strong action to curb inflation and avert any semblance of recession. He initiated a necessary--and couragecus--90-day wage-price freeze, and then established a wage board and price commission to make sure our future economic growth is real and not inflated. He has moved to END America's role as the provider for every nation, and is demanding that other nations begin to pay their fair share of the free world's defense. The President knows that the small business of America must be successful and thriving. He has enabled $1.5 billion to be loaned to small businesses since he took office. To make the tax structure fairer and to relieve the tax burden at the State and local levels, he has proposed a Federal revenue sharing program. This program will make more monies available to local governments by sharing a portion of Federal revenues with them. This will encourage and help finance problem-solving at that same local level by people who understand local problems best in such areas as schools, transportation and law enforcement. ENVIRONMENT. President Nixon has established the ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, the first Federal unit ever set up to protect our quality of life. He has signed the Water Quality Improvement Act of 1970, and initiated a Legacy of Parks program to insure that our wilderness areas remain "forever wild". And he has signed a joint agreement with Canada, to recapture the beauty of the Great Lakes. In sum, he has proposed 25 SEPARATE ENVIRONMENT IMPROVEMENT BILLS. HEALTH. The President has earmarked massive amounts of money for research efforts to discover CURES FOR CANCER AND SICKLE CELL ANEMIA. He has also proposed a National Health Insurance Standards Act, a Family Health Insurance Plan, and the National Health Education Foundation--all geared to assisting more and more people enjoy healthier and longer lives. President Nixon's philosophy toward senior citizens has been that they can and should play significant roles in the future of our country because of their VAST EXPERIENCE and ACCUMULATED WISDOM. To help, the President has asked Congress for an increase of one-third in Social Security benefits--or, roughly, $100 MORE A MONTH per couple. There's much more, but the whole of President Nixon's record cannot be told in one letter. Enough has been said here, though, to demonstrate that the President has taken action--real McCoy action-to bring an America in shambles (remember the riots and turmoil of 1968?) back to its feet. Surely, you will agree with that-- and with the need to keep SOUND, STABLE, COMMON-SENSE leadership at the helm of our country. Is the President's re-election the sure thing that some have said it is? In politics, nothing is a sure thing without working for it. President Nixon needs help--your help! Please come through for the President complete the volunteer card that's enclosed and mail it in today. Sincerely, Ronald Ronald Reagan Reagan Chairman Re-elect the President TEAR HERE Volunteer Card Mr. & Mrs. William J. Dunn 030 0001970 801 Ronda Mendoza 38289 Laguna Hills, Ca 92653 71 I want to personally support President Nixon for re-election by participating in the campaign. Please contact me right away! Telephone & Signature INSTRUCTIONS: Please fill out this volunteer card insert it in the business reply envelope and mail today. TELEGRAM MRS. C. A. CARLETON 1625 IDAHO AV. ESCONDIDO, CA 92025 AMERICA NEEDS PRESIDENT NIXON AND PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS YOU, BOTH AS AN AMERICAN AND AS A FELLOW CALIFORNIAN. ON PRIMARY DAY, JUNE 6TH, YOU HAVE THE CHANCE TO SHOW YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE PRESIDENT. A REALLY BIG VOTE WILL SIGNAL THE NATION THAT THE PRESIDENT HAS THE UNITED SUPPORT OF CALIFORNIA REPUBLICANS. PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS SUCH A VOTE. HE NEEDS YOUR VOTE. PLEASE REMEMBER TO VOTE ON JUNE 6TH. RONALD REAGAN CHAIRMAN, CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles. California 00017 BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE PAID Address Correction Requested California Committee For The Re-alection of The President & telegram TELEGRAM MR. & MRS. JACK HERING 3928 ALBERAN AV. LONG BEACH, CA 90808 AMERICA NEEDS PRESIDENT NIXON -- AND PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS YOU, BOTH AS AN AMERICAN AND AS A FELLOW CALIFORNIAN. ON PRIMARY DAY, JUNE 6TH, YOU HAVE THE CHANCE TO SHOW YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE PRESIDENT. A REALLY BIG VOTE WILL SIGNAL THE NATION THAT THE PRESIDENT HAS THE UNITED SUPPORT OF CALIFORNIA REPUBLICANS. PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS SUCH A VOTE. HE NEEDS YOUR VOTE. PLEASE REMEMBER TO VOTE ON JUNE 6TH. RONALD REAGAN CHAIRMAN, CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT BULK RATE 1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles. California 90017 U.S. POSTAGE PAID California Committee TELEGRAM For The Re-election of The President 4 Address Correction Requested TELEGRAM MRS. MARGARET F. TRIBBEY 3616 ATLANTIC AV. APT. B LONG BEACH, CA 90807 AMERICA NEEDS PRESIDENT NIXON -- AND PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS YOU, BOTH AS AN AMERICAN AND AS A FELLOW CALIFORNIAN. ON PRIMARY DAY, JUNE 6TH, YOU HAVE THE CHANCE TO SHOW YOUR SUPPORT FOR THE PRESIDENT. A REALLY BIG VOTE WILL SIGNAL THE NATION THAT THE PRESIDENT HAS THE UNITED SUPPORT OF CALIFORNIA REPUBLICANS. PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS SUCH A VOTE. HE NEEDS YOUR VOTE. PLEASE REMEMBER TO VOTE ON JUNE 6TH. RONALD REAGAN CHAIRMAN, CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 1670 Wilshire Boulevard / Los Angeles, California 90017 BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE TELEGRAM PAID California Committee For The Re-election or The President Address Correction Requested Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM June 26, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. ALEX ARMENDARIS MR. MURRAY CHOTINER MR. PETER DAILEY MR. BERNARD DE LURY MR. EDWARD FAILOR MR. HARRY FLEMMING MR. JON FOUST MR. LARRY GOLDBERG MRS. PAT HUTAR MR. JERRY JONES MR. PAUL JONES MR. ALLAN KAUPINEN MR. PAUL KAYSER MR. FRED LA RUE MR. ROBERT MARDIAN DR. ROBERT MARIK MR. RICHARD MC ADOO MR. DON MOSIMAN MR. FRANK NAYLOR MR. EDWARD NIXON MISS BETTY NOLAN MR. DAN PILIERO MR. HERBERT PORTER MR. ROBERT REISNER MR. KEN RIETZ MR. GLENN SEDAM MR. CHARLES SHEARER MR. DE VAN SHUMWAY MR. HUGH SLOAN MR. WILLIAM STOVER MR. ROBERT TEETER MR. DAN TODD MR. JOHN WIRTH DR. CLAYTON YEUTTER FROM: ROBERT C. ODLE Cur next staff meeting will be tomorrow, Tuesday, June 27, at 7:30 a.m. in the third floor conference room. Material for the weekly report to Mr. Mitchell is due by the close of business Tuesday. Thank you. CC: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder bcc: Mr. Gordon C. Strachan Committee for the Re-election of the President MEMORANDUM June 6, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. W. RICHARD HOWARD FROM: ROBERT C. ODLE, JR. I hope this doesn't come as too much of a shock, but a way has finally been figured out SO we will know each month how much your mailing program costs --- and how much ours costs as well. What the RNC has done at our request is to apportion all costs associated with both programs (White House/Colson and 1701/Shumway) between the two. Attached are two documents: your proposed mailing budget and the RNC recap sheet. As can be seen, you are well within your budget for the first four months of 1972 and indeed the only time you exceeded it was in February and that was caused by the special insert for FIRST MONDAY. Your projected budget for the first four months of 1972 was $143,100 and only $104,351 has been spent. But as you pointed out in your May 3 memo, it would be wise to save some funds for a large nationwide mailing which might be requested in the last weeks of the campaign. We'll furnish these reports to you approximately 15 days from the close of each month. Please let me know if you have any questions. cc: Mr. Bruce A. Kehrli Mr. Jeb S. Magruder Mr. De Van L. Shumway bcc: Mr. Gordon C. Strachan CONFIDENTIAL - EYES ONLY Proposed Mailing Budget for 1972 (based on imposed limits) Months Number of Mailings Cost Per Monthly Total Mailing January 25 $1,500 $37,500 February 21 $1,500 $31,500 March 22 $1,550 $34,100 April 25 $1,600 $40,000 May * 24 $1,650 $39,600 June 29 $1,700 $49,300 July ** 28 $1,750 $49,000 August 10 $1,800 $18,000 Pre-Convention Total $299,000 August 10 $1,800 $18,000 September 45 $1,900 $85,500 October 58 $2,000 $116,000 November 16 $2,000 $32,000 Post-Convention Total $251,500 Jan. through election $550,000 * President's trip to Russia - less mail generated ** Includes 4th of July weekend CONFIDENTIAL - EYES ONLY Administratively Confidential To: Rob Odle From: Barry Mountain Recap Sheet - Printing and Mailing Expenses Incurred by Mr. Chuck Colson's Office RNC Account 1000 January February March *April Indirect Labor 1,202.80 1,202.80 2,973.20 3,171.60 Pre-paid Supplies 1,189.89 2,264.38 1,285.32 2,000.00 Computer 2,276.85 2,765.62 2,220.08 3,900.00 Direct Labor -0- 2,451.95 1,936.35 2,000.00 Pre-Paid postage 4,725.86 2,977.72 10,710.75 5,000.00 Stamps 8,000.00 4,416.00 -0- -0- Special Order Items 63.00 1,087.85 3,715.00 2,316.75 Additional Machines (additional capacity needed to serve 1000 and 2000 above normal RNC requirements) Model 1870 offset press 1,243.00 1,243.00 Model 1250 offset press 465.00 465.00 Model 2000 Elect Copier 580.00 580.00 Multi 1485 Vaccum Exposure Frame 139.50 139.00 Collator, folder, inserter 1,231.10 1,231.10 First Monday Special Inserts 21,178.63 Total Monthly Expenditure 17,458.40 38,344.95 26,501.30 *22,046.95 1) *No cost figures will be final until after the June 10th GAO report is filed. The RNC accounting department has been spending all of its time and effort on the GAO report and computerizing the accounting system at the RNC. After June 10, we will be able to give you exact figures for all expenses after April 6, 1972. Understanding that you need to have some idea what you are spending on printing and mailing services at the RNC, we are submitting this estimated expense sheet. 2 We will provide re-cap sheets to you within 15 days from the close of each month. 3) Users will receive detailed worksheets of their operation's monthly activity within 5 days of the closing O f:the month. CC: Tom Evans Chuck Colson Account 1000 Special Order Items February Dunhill List Rental 63.85 Aero Mailing Service 844.00 Promise and Performance 24.00 Kodak Microfilm Viewer 156.00 1,087.85 Special Inserts Monday and First Monday Monday February 7 Lanman 4,680.00 (Mrs. Nixon in Africa) Design Assoc. 1,521.11 Fontana Litho 7,804.37 Monday February 14 Trade Type 37.96 Harbinger 633.99 Design Assoc. 2,600.00 Fontana 3,801.20 21,178.63 Special Order Items March Design Associates (Summons to Greatness) 2,600.00 National Crusader Newspaper (Bill Blair) 275.00 Fritz Hofheimer List Rental 840.00 3,715.00 Special Order Items April * Superintendent Of Documents 2,000.00 (State of the World Message) Temporary Employment Agency (Print Shop) 316.75 sub-total 2,316.75 COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT Juner 29, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR MR. GORDON 10% STRACHAN FROM: JEB S. MAGRUDER Attached are forwarded for your information. Attachments (2) & Committee for the Re-election of the Presiden MEMORANDUM June 26, 1972 MEMORANDUM FOR: MR. JEB S. MAGRUDER foust FROM: JON A. FOUST SUBJECT: Appearances by Mr. Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero in San Antonio, Texas on June 24 Mr. Ed Nixon and actor Cesar Romero appeared in San Antonio last Satur- day, June 24 at events sponsored by the National Hispanic Finance Com- mittee for the Re-election of the President. The schedule consisted of a leadership breakfast at which Cesar Romero appeared, and a visit to a new Mexican-American owned bank, an appearance at a "Tamalada" festival, and an appearance at a $1,000 per plate fund raising dinner by both Mr. Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero. The breakfast, the visit to the bank, and the dinner went very well from the standpoint of the appearances by our speakers. At the bank, Mr. Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero opened accounts and the lobby was packed with guests. The "Tamalada" festival was not well attended due to the fact that the tickets were purchased in blocks of 500 and the purchasers did not give the tickets to people who would attend. The temperature was 100° which also may have affected the attendance. There was very favorable coverage on WOAI-TV (NBC) which mentioned that the day's events would be climaxed by a $1,000 per plate dinner. The press clippings are attached. Attachment SAN Antonio EXPRESS/NEWS Suniong,June25,1927 1927 GOP Contributors Meet p.2.B Ed Nixon, Cesar Romero Twenty-five persons attending a Spanish-speaking have headed an effort of $1,000-a-plate dinner Saturday night climaxed this type to re-elect the President. a day of activities to raise funds for the Re- D.J. Lee, chairman of the Bexar County publican Party's presidential campaign. Mov- Finance Committee, said more than 1,200 per- ie-stage-television star Cesar Romero and sons attended a tamalada during the after- President Nixon's brother, Ed. were featured noon. Ed Nixon and Romero briefly attended at the dinner which was held at the St. Antho- the event which was held at V.I. Keefe Field. ny Hotel. In the morning, 44 persons a nd e d a The day's activities were sponsored by the breakfast and a short time later, Ed Nixon National Hispanic Finance Committee. and Romero opened savings accounts at the A spokesman said the dinner is a "first of Mission Federal Savings and Loan Associa- its kind" because it marks the first time the tion, 1006 S.W. Military Dr., Lee said. Page 2-B * * San Antonio EXPRESS/NEWS - - Sunday, June 25, 1972 GOP Fund Raisers Actor Cesar Romero and Ed Nixon, brother of President Nixon, leave the Hilton Palacio del Rio Hotel, cn route to the $1,000-a-plate dinner Saturday night to raise funds for the Republican Partyis presidential campaign.-Staff Photo by Ron Jones. 2-A Sunday, June 25, 1972 Movie Star Attends Tamalada Attracts Small Crowd By SHARON WATKINS Although 7,000 tickets report- edly had been sold in advance, Saturday's Tamalada to raise funds for the re-election of Pres- ident Nixon failed to muster a crowd. Fewer than 50 people - in- cluding mariachi musicians and campaign workers -- had ar- rived at V.I. Keele Field by the time the official M of 0 rcad e brought Ed Nixon, brother of the President, and movie actor Cesar Romero for a scheduled 2 p.m. appearance. SCRAP PLANS Plans were scrapped for a for- mal rally in the grandstand area. and the lebrities emerged from the fieldhouse at about 2:15 p.m. for an informal handshaking and autograph ses- sion. Only 40 tickets had been sold at the gate by the time Romero CESAR ROMERO, veteran actor and Nixon left at 2:45 p.m. of stage, films and television. If the crowd was small, it was gives a solid wink to one of his also enthusiastic -- at least in fans at St. Mary's Keefe Field. seeking Romero's autograph. The handsome, 65-year-old movie veteran strolled through PRESIDENT NINON'S brother, Ed Nixon, signs au- the crowd, stepping in time to tograph for Tony Kindla, 10, as Terri Lujan, 16, looks the Latin rhythm and munching on. Nixon attended "Tamalada" at Kcele Field Satu- a ho: dog. day as part of a Re-elect Nixon campaign visit to Nixon, 17 years younger than San Antonio. Nixon, who attended a cocktail party Sat- the President and an oceano- urday evening, left town after the event. graphic engineer. had arrived in San Antonio just in time for the sparsely attended tamalada. He was to make another appear- ance at a Saturday-evening cocktail reception before con- SAN ANTONIO LIGHT tinuing on the "Re-Elect Nixon" campaign trail. PAGE 2-A THREE EVENTS The a m alada was one of three Saturday events sponsored by the National Hispanic Fi- nance Committee for Re-clection of the President. A breakfast at the Hilton Palaco del Rio Hotel was attended by about 40 local Republicans, and the final event was a $1.000 per plate dinner Saferday night at the St. An- thony Hotei. Other officials at the tamalada were Antonio Rodriguez, con- sultant for Spanish-American Af- fairs at the White House: Alex Armendariz, director of Nixon's Spartsh-speaking C a 111 pai n committee, and Eloy Rodriguez, Texas chairman for the His- panic Finance Committee. A $1,000 PLATE By CHARLES DECKER SAN Antonio LIGHT Twenty-five persons paid $1,000 'ach Saturday night for PAGE 2-A the opportunity to eat a meal consisting of tenderloin of beef and for the chance to contribute SUNDAY, JUNE 25 1972 to the Re-elect the President campaign fund. The dinner at the St. Anthony Hotel, sponsored by the National Strolling Hispanic Finance Committee, was to climax the San Antonio visits of Edward C. Nixon, the President's younger brother, Down River and screen star Cesar Romero, a veteran Republican cam- Cesar Romero, handsome star of the paigner. NIXON CAMPAIGNER movies, became a typical tourist for a Romero, who has campaigned short time Saturday morning, leaving his for Nixon since his first presi- room at the Hilton Palacio del Rio Hotel dential bid in 1960, told the and taking a stroll on the downtown riv- group, "I am a Republican from way back. I've been with the erwalk. President since 1960 and I am Friends and aides with the Latin actor convinced he is a great man." Romero said that "God will- campaigning for President Nixon didn't ing" Nixon would be in office know where he'd gone, but Romero said, another four years. "You can't come to San Antonio and not EVERY AREA Benjamin Fernandez, national see the Alamo, So I just went." chairman of the Hispanic So- The 65-year-old entertainer, tanned as ciety, said, "We will actively darkly as his brown, loosely woven shirt, participate in every area of Re- was impressed with the river and restau- publican politics." rants. "The river is very beautiful," he Other Republican officials who Fuentes, California state chair- said. "San Antonio is certainly flavorful. man of the NHFC; and Mrs. attended were Van Henry Stella Elizondo, executive secre- It's almost like you're in a foreign coun- Archer, Bexar County Republi- tary to the state director of the try." can chairman; Alex Mendares, the national campaign chairman society. City Councilman Alvin Although Romero easily stood out in for Mexican-Americans; R u d y Padilla, who was introduced as crowds, he was not bothered on the river "Mr. Republican" also attended. and spent a leisurely time getting, as he said, "a little air." THE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT Nixon's Brother Coming to S.A. Edward C. Nixon, President Nixon's brother, will attend the fund-raising activities of the Na- tional Hispanic Finance Com- mittee in San Antonio Saturday. The committee, whose purpose is to collect funds for the re- election of the P resident, Is holding R 1-6 p.m. tamalada at V.J. Kecle Field and a $1,000-a- plate dinner at St. Anthony Hotel Saturday night. Saturday, June 24, 1972 8.A SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS PAGE 34 Thursday, June 22, 1972 THE SUN Tamalada This Saturday Dr. Oscar E. Gutierrez, right, buys first 500 tickets to the National Hispanic Finance Committee's Tamalada this Saturday from 1 to 6 p.m. at V.J. Keefe Field on the St. Mary's University Campus. Receiving the check for $625 is David Lee, county chair- man of the NHFC. The tamalada will have as special guests movie actor Cesar Rom- ero and National Office of Economic Opportunity Director Phillip Sanchez. Also pre- sent will he Robert Martian, deputy on the Committee to Re-elect the President; Alex Armendariz, director of Spanish-speaking Campaign Committee for the Re-el- ection of the Committee; and Benjamin Fernandez, national NHFC chairman. Tickets at $1.25 each are available at the NHFC office, 711 E. Houston St. Telephone num- ber is 223-1818. COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT 1701 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NW WASHINGTON D C 20006 June 27, 1972 (202) 333.0920 MEMORANDUM FOR: FRED MALEK JEB MAGRUDER FROM: KEN RIETZ SUBJECT: Summary of Press Coverage for Youth Functions Toward the end of May, two youth events were held which received quite a bit of publicity: the Neighbors for Nixon/Tower registration drive on May 20 in Dallas, Ft. Worth and Beaumont; and the announcement of the formation of the Student Leaders for the President on May 22 in Los Angeles. I thought you would be interested in the publicity generated by these events: NEIGHBORS FOR NIXON/TOWER (May 20): May 19 - Ken Rietz was interviewed by: Dallas Times Herald - clipping attached WFAA Radio Station - aired May 19 (at least 3 times) Dallas Morning News - clipping attached (two other small articles taken from the press release are attached) KERA-TV (PBS) - aired May 19 KTVT-TV (Independent) - aired May 19 WBAP-TV (NBC) - news interview, aired May 19 KDFW-TV - Aired Crossroads '70s 30 minute talk show on May 20. -2- May 20 - Press conference with Ed Nixon was attended by: Dallas Times Herald - ran on May 20 (no clipping) Dallas Morning News - ran on May 21 (no clipping) KTVT and KDFW Television Stations - ran May 20 unidentified radio station - no feedback May 20 - Registration drive was covered by: KBAP-TV - Filmed young people going door to door, aired on May 20 National Public Television covered the entire event for a Sander Vanocur special on June 23. BEAUMONT REGISTRATION EVENT - May 20 Celebrity Jock Mahoney (Tarzan, Rangerider) attended this event in behalf of the Young Voters for the President. He was covered by: Television - Channel 6 (interview and actual footage of him going door to door - no feedback) Channel 4 (5 minute video tape - aired May 20) Radio - KAYC (10 minute show) KLVI (45 minute talk show) Newspaper - Picture story appeared on May 21 in Beaumont Enterprise (clipping being sent) ANNOUNCEMENT OF STUDENT LEADERS FOR THE PRESIDENT - May 22 In attendance at press conference (no feedback on actual usuage, although reports are that most media carried something): Television: KTTV, KTLA, KNBC (NBC), KHJ, KABC (ABC), KCOP and Theta Cable television *We provided color film to the students' hometowns (10). *We provided color sound film to 17 California stations. Newspapers - Los Angeles Times (clipping attached), Los Angeles Herald-Examiner (clipping attached), Christian Science Monitor, UPI, and AP *We provided to all hometown newspapers (of the participants) with photographs and individualized press releases (one clipping attached, no feedback on others) -3- Radio - Radio News West (25 stations in Calif.), Mutual Broad- casting (27 Calif., 50 national), KNX-CBS, KBVQ, KHJ, KFI, KRLA, Western International News Service (30 stations) *We made audio telephone feeds to 50 California stations and to hometown stations in all national regions. Pallas Morning GOP Plans Big Pu To Register Voters Friday, May 19, 1972 5 4/13/72 The Ballas florning Nrms Fort Worth Bureau Politics FORT WORTH -The publican party is planning Return DI Cost Data Intensive in in re ter vorers the Nov ber general crion. Austin Bureau convention in San Antonio IN THE lieutenant gover- ing support to the Democrat- sor-collector Reed Ster AUSTIN-County chairmen this week. nor's race, Bill Hobby said ic contince for president told county commissio if political parties have been Signers 0 (the Briscoe en- "I have always opposed U.S. SEN. JOHN TOWER Friday. rged by Secretary of State forced busing" in schools and will parricipate in a special Stewart said GOP too Bob Bullock to get their esti- dorsement include city man- he denounced opponent Wayne Connally for trying to voter registration drive in have asked him to COT nates of June 3 election ex- ager Scott McDonald of Dal- raise this as an issue. Dallas Saturday after mak- 300 persons to register enses to him pemptly. las, Mayors George Boyce of Bullock said costs of the Mesquire. William H. Larkin 1 Hobby also charged that ing a fire ant inspection tour ers. The assessor-coll the "infamous Parr ma- through Southeast Texas with said they plan to begin unoff should be less than the of Waxahachie, Vernon n. Cowning of Lancaster, Joe chine" had supported Con- undersecretary of agricul- rst primary because of the nally in the first primary. He ture J. Phil Campbell. spected lighter vote. Fewer Ramsey of Greenville, Bill ian half the county chair- Neu of Denton and John Gat- cited Connaily's 4.017 votes Tower and Camphell will nen have returned their C.6.i- in Duval County to 160 for tour the Eagle Lake and 11 of San Antonio. More than ates for the runoff. War- Hobby. 74 for sen. Joe Chris- Wharton area Saturday 200 city officials signed the ants are issued on the basis endorsement. tie and 30 for Sen. Ralph morning to inspect a special ( three-fourths the estimat- Hall. Hobby also accused fire ant eradication program. d cost of holding the elec- FRANCES FARENTHOLD, Connally of signing the The voter registration ion. Briscoe's opponent. talked of "scandalous" Sharptstown drive in Dallas is being spon- After the election, pay- taxes on a hedgehopping air- banking legislation SO it sored jointly by the Com- nents are made on the basis plane tour from Denton to could come up in the Scnate. mittee to re-elect the Presi- of a sworn statement plus Texarkana and Tyler. She Connally charged Hobby dent, Texans for Tower and ancelled checks. promised to exercise frugal- with fonce-straddling on the state Republican parry. ity iin government, and to school busing, support of par- Tower will appear at a cnf- DOLPH BRISCOE'S head- seek taxes on corporate prof- ty nominces for president fee for workers in the voter juarters announced endorse- its if more revenue is need- and other questions. The can- registration "blitz" at the nent of the gubernatorial ed. She said no tax increase didate quoted from Hobby's Promenade Shopping Center, andidate by a number of would be levied on individ- newspaper, the Houston Beltline and Coit Road. Also ity officials attending their uals or homeowners. Post, as saying the ony cir- participating in the ceremony cumstance under which Hob- will be Edward Nixon. broth- by would support Richard er of the President, Dallas Nixon for president this year Congressman Jim Collins and, is if George Wallace won the Robert Fuller, television star Democratic nomination. star. Labor's Committee on Po- Saturday night Tower will litical Education endorsed attend the Dallas gridiron Hobby on the basis of pledg- dinner. Morning liws 5/20/12 Dallas Times Herald Nixon younn error claimed success President Nixon is not about per cent of the mock elections to concede anything on the so- and conventions that have called "youth vote," says Ken been held at colleges and high Rietz. national director of the schools." Young Voters for the Presi- What has Nixon got to offer dent. the young? Sinatra "A decision was made to go "We are running on the after the youth vote. got President's record, whether sings one 25 million new voters and to it's an older person or a young sit back and say we can't get person," Rietz said. "We are for Agnew any of them is pretty ridicu- stressing the President helped lous," Rietz said. the 18-year-old get the vote. that he endorsed it as a candi- He was in Dallas Saturday BALTIMORE (UPI)-Sunger for a voter registration drive date and signed it into law. -Dallas News Staff Photo. Frank Sinatra came out of a in behalf of Nixon and Sen. "He is ending the draft and en Rictz "What 14-month returement Friday to John Tower. has put in a lottery system e're trying to do is in- sing at an extravaganza honor- He said in the 10 months which affects every single de young people in a ing Vice President Spiro T. since the Young Voters cam- young American. The Presi- Agrew. paign was initiated "we have dont's winding down of the eaningful way. "I feel like haven't worked been more successful than war has been a very popular 1 years, Sinatra told the issue with them. President's Forces anybody ever thought we lack-tic audience at the state would be." "A third of the White House tepublican fund-raiser "A Sa- President Nixon, he claimed, staff is under 30 years old and ite to Ted Agnew Night.' had more youngsters working most of the young people are beek Young Voters Sinatra retired March 23, for him in the New Hampshire in key positions, not just mes- 971, and had not sung in pub- primary "than McCarthy in sengers." c since. Sinatra said back- By CAROLYN BARTA 1968 or McGovern in 1972." Rietz said alothough college many of these new voters are tage following the perform- "The President has won 90 campuses are tough grounds to Ken Rietz, the man who going to vote in November, nce that this was his last plow for the President, sur- ccessfully engineered a Rietz said, but he noted that ublic song. even at Republi- .* veys show him leading other nning U.S. senatorial cam- Nixon is running ahead in an fund raising occasions. hopefuls, including George ign in Tennessee two years Tailoring a rendition of "The McGovern, the Democratic college polls and success ady is a Tramp" from the frontrunner of the moment. 0. partly by involving upg people. is now mar- may depend on how many of show "Pal Joey," Sinatra paid Surveys also show most aling the youth vote for the young people are regis- ribute to the former Maryland youngsters are going along esident Nixon, tered. governor. with the President's bombing National director of Young "He has the gall to call the Thirty per cent of the eligi- and mining decision in Viet- ters for the President. press a mess, that's this gen- nam, at least for the "short ble new young voters are tleman He's champ.' term." 212 is going after the 25 now registered. Rictz expects llion new voters in the 18 But he emphasized nobody 21-year-old range-firs: to that number to reach 60 per on the Nixon team was "fcol- cent by election day. which is ish enough" to believe Nixen t them registered and SPC- would remain as popular as he d convince them to vote the national average of all is now if the Vietnam situa Nixon and get involved in voters. tion deteriorated. campaign. Now on Icave of absence "If the situation is real bad 'No one can predict Fow from the advertising public in November the President is in trouble with all voters, not relations firm of Allison. Tre- just young voters," Rictz said. leaven and Rictz, the 30- year-old Rietz was campaign manager for Bill Brock in the Tennessee contest for U.S. Senate in 1970. He is in Dallas to help kick off a giant voter registration blitz Saturday, which begins at 10 a.m. at Promenade Shopping Center. More than 300 volunteers will be sworn in as deputy registrars for the 1-day drive. Angle Hurris ER- of 05/24/72 A-12. THE SAN DIEGO UNION Nixon Supported By College Group Son Diego Union Staff Dispotch SACRAMENTO - Lt. Gov. release of American prisoners Ed Reinocke, saying protesters of war. against President Nixon's deci- Juel Piasta, student president at the University of San Fran- sign 10 mine Halphong harber: cisco. announced formation of a were not representative of the similar group. Student Leaders majority, yesterday introduced for the President. leaders of Students for Peace in NIXON'S TRIPS CITED Vietnam to a press conference. Piasta said Mr. Nixon, "by He- said the newly formed going to China and Russia has group was typical of a majority gone farther than other Ameri- of the nation's students who can presidents toward building have "demonstrated they're the structure of peace." tired of violence. tired of pró- He said student presidents at test for the sake of protest. East Los Angeles College. Call-I 1,000 SIGN PETITION fornia State College at Fuller- A spokesman for about 40 stu- ton. Pepperdine University and dents accompanying Reinecke others will visit California - Steve Block, a freshman in campuses "to speak to stu- dents, 10 try to organize them" international studies at the Uni- in support ni the Nixon admin-i versity of California at Davis istration's Vietnam policies. said about 1.000 students on his: Bill Feeney, another UC Davis campus signed a petition sup- freshman. said antiwar stu- porting Mr. Nixon's Victnam dents utilizing "sensational tac- ties" have garnered more head- policies, and that copies of the lines from the nation's medial petition were being sent to all than these who quietly support other campuses in the state. the President. The student group. Block "But remember." he said, said, "organized 10 openly sup- "the 1,000 students who signedi port the President for ins ac- petitions at CC Davis were 800 tions for obtainment of a sin- more than the 200 who sat on cere peace." the railroad tracks" recently in "We.do not advocate war, he a student-organized demonstra- added.: "We feel President Nix- tion to delay trains. on's recent offer to the North: Vietnamese was fair and real sonable, and should be accept- ed." Block said U.S. military 3C- Lions against North Vietnam were accompanied by a "gener- ous" peace offer - withdrawal of all American troops four months after a cease-fure and Reinecke, Students feet in Sn6dgrass Slough south of the Elliott Ranch property - is proof of For Nixon navigability. SF chronicing Sac ER gy SSacramento 5/24/72 About 30 students and Students Who Lieutenant Governor Ed Reinecke announced a statewide petition dirve Back Nixon 5/23/22 yesterday to show that many students support President Nixon's Viet- nam policy. Policy Speak Displaying about 1000 sig- natures of students backing Representatives of two groups of Mr. Nixon, Steve Block, a students supporting President Nix- Democrat and a student at on's policies in Indochina held a news the University of California, conference today in the Capitol, seek- Davis, told newsmen he ing "to dispel the myth that all stu- thought Mr. Nixon's last dents are against the President." peace offer was "very gen- erons" and called on U. S. They conceded they have an uphill citizens to unite behind the fight. But Joe Piasta, student body president. president at the University of San "We do not think dissent is Francisco and representing the "Stu- wrong," he said, "hut the dent Leaders for Nixon," argued: more dissent the less the "The only thing students are unani- chances are for peace in mous on is that they want peace in Vietnam." Vietnam." He predicted Nixon will Block, who initiated the get a large number of student votes, petition drive last week. said contending that when students go to despite "peer pressure" that the polls in November "in the last makes students "afraid to analysis, they will judge him (Nixon) talk against" protest leaders on whether peace has arrived, not on he has found that many stu- the mining of Halphong Harbor or dents support the President. the invasion of Cambodia." The students formed a new group called Students Steve Block, a student on the Davis for Peace in Victnam to col- campus of the University of Califor- lect the signatures from Cal- nia and a representative of "Students Mornia compuses. for Peace In Vietnam." said be and "It's pretty hard to get others have circulated petitions sup- (news) coverage if you don't porting Nixon and have guthered 1,- sit on railroad tracks or tern 000 signatures on the Davis campus over a few ears," Chick alone. He said plans are under way to said. Nonetheless, he said circulate the petitions on other cam- there was widespread sta- puses. dent support for Mr. Nixon's But, he added, it is difficult to get policies. press coverage at Davis "unless we sit. "Students on entiplises to- on the railroad tracks or turn over day are demonstrating that cars." they are tired of violent pro- test," said Reinecke, who arranged the news confer- ence. United Press Metro Page The Sacramento Union Wednesday Morning, May 24, 1972 Page A3 Assist From Reinecke Two Campus Movements Back Nixon Peace Plan By JACK WOODARD committee, headed by USC student body Tim Brockman, East Los Angeles Col- Political Writer president Kent Clemence. lege student body president and a former Piasta said the committe backs both helicopter pilot in Vietnam. said the With an assist from Lt. Gov. Ed Re- Nixon's foreign policy and his domestic Nixon administration's coals are just Inecke, leaders of two campus move- programs, including revenue sharing. the He said the President wants only an ments in support of President Nixon's 18-year-old vote and draft reforms. honorable peace and to guarantee the Vietnam peace plan met the press Tues- 'We'll speak to students on our cam- right of self-determination of t.e people day in the Capitol. puses and urge them to vote for President of South Victnam. "We had to do something drastic to get Nixon," he said. Several of the students complained of on the news," explained Steve Block, a Block and Fency said they hope to ex- systematic bias by the news media to- University of California at Davis student. pand the petition drive in support of ward those who commit acts of violent when asked why Reinecke's help was Nixon's peace proposal to other campus- protest and said campus newspapers are sought. es. radically oriented. "We didn't want to pop a fire hydrant "We do not advocate wor. but we think or sit on the railroad tracks. President Nixon's peace offer IS most fair TIM MORGAN, a student senstor at Block and fellow UC-Davis freshman and should be accepted." said Block. "We UC-Davis. said the Cal Assie newspaper Bill Fency. both Democrats. are organiz- do not feel dissent is wrong. but now it there is "devoted 100 per cent to violent ers of Students for Peace in Victnom. may jeopardize chances for peace. antiwar protesters. Also represented at the news confer- A student senator from UC-Derkeley ence arranged by Reinecke was Student FENEY SAID Nixon's plan was echood the complaint and said ".. 15 at Leaders for the President. a nationwide "drawn to put a quick end to the war. not most impossible to fet elected tastudent committee formed Monday in Los Ange- as a means to escalate or expand it." He office if you support Pressdent Name les. added that dissenters are civing and and They said their only hope ni forning the comfort to North Victnam and Red China UC papers to give non-radicats equal JOE PIASTA, student body president About 40 students. including members treatment is by means of appeals to " C of the University of San Francisco, 15 of the student senates at UC-Davis and media boards that govern the compus western region representative on the UC-Berkeley, attended the gathering. publications. FYI: Teri ann from 6. Carton Dallas Morning news ,Thers 5/24/72 Students Back 5124 Nixon Campaign LOS ANGELES (Sp.) - Eleven student body presi- dents representing 10 regions throughout the nation an- nounced the formation of Student Leaders for Presi- dent Committee. Th commit- tee will thelp organize cam- pus support for President Nixon's re-election cam- paign. Committee chairman Kent Clemence, president of the University of Southern Cali- fornia student body. pledged "a vigorous effort to get the President's message to the American students and mobi- lize maximum support for him on every college campus in the United tates." ccry =2 = National group formed Thursday, May 25, 1972 The Grattle Times A 11 U. W. student is Pro-Nixon leader Ralph Anderson, former The committee was mestic policy problems and lege Republicans. University of Washington formed Monday in Los Ange- he is the best man for the A political-science major, student-body president, is les. Anderson will serve as job." Anderson hopes to go into one of 11 national student the committee's representa- Anderson said he Is work- law. He is a senior. leaders who have formed the tive for the Pacific North- Student Leaders for the ing to set up a local organi- The committee's national west. President Committee to help Anderson said the Presi- zation that will embrace chairman is Kent Clemence, organize campus support for dent has "exhibited great young people, 18 to 25, and president of the student body the re-election of President proficiency and courage in not just collegians. He is at the University of Califor- Nixon. dealing with foreign and do- president of the U. W. Col- nia. $ A Los Angeles Herald-Examiner, Tuesday, May 23, 1972 A-11 Herald-Examiner Photo PRESIDENT NIXON'S RE-ELECTION BOOSTED BY 11 COLLEGE STUDENT BODY LEADERS Claim that all the students' were against the President's policies is labeled 'hogwash' STUDENT LEADERS BOOST NIXON President Richard Nixen's hody president at the University Nixon is "moving to meet ourltens to them." re-election has been given a of Washington, said h? is im- domestic needs," and Roger L. Patrick Mosher. 2. of the boost by 11 college student bods pressed with Nixon's domestic leaders from across the coun- and foreign policies. Lee, 22, of the University of Al- University of Texas. said the try, who said there is much Gregg Adams, 20, of Wabash abama, said the people of the President's stands on economic more backing for the Chief Ex- University in Indiana. said he South realize the President "lis- controls impress him. ecutive on the nation's campus--agrees with the President's for- es than most people realize. (eign policies, while Jeff- Wis- The young leaders, who said well, 21, of the University of they have the backing of more Wisconsin, saw the trip to China than 100 student leaders across as a stroke of "diplomatic gen- the nation, outlined their rea-lius." sons for supporting the Presi- Mark Tulis, 21, of Brandeis dent during a news conference University, said the President is yesterday at the Los Angeles presponsive to the needs of Press Club. Americans," and Joe Plasta, 20. Kent Clemence, 22. student nf the University of San Fran- body president at the Universityleisco, lauded the President's of Southern California, sandiforeign and domestic stands. claims that "all the students" Bruce Bishop. 20. of Old Do- were against Mr. Nixon's poli- minion College in Virginia, said cies were "hogwash" and that! there was "strong" support for the President at USC. John Ramay. 22, student body president at South Dakota State University, said a recent mock election on his campus in the home state of Sen. George Mc- Govern was won by President Nixon. Raiph Anderson. 11, It. student

Document source description

This file contains: From Magruder to Haldeman RE Sacramento Mailing Samples. 4 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 5/30/1972 From Odle to Malek RE Agenda for Staff Meeting 5/23. 1 pg. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 5/22/1972 From Odle to Election Committee Members RE Staff Meeting Details. 2 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 5/22/1972 Odle to Shumway RE Staff Ages. 5 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 5/25/1972 From Odle to Staff RE Misc. Staff Instructions. 3 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 5/26/1972 From Marik to Mitchell, Magruder RE New York State. 2 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 5/12/1972 From Shumway to Mitchell, Magruder RE Time Magazine. 1 pg. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 5/12/1972 From Magruder to Haldeman RE California Sample Mailings. 9 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 6/6/1972 From Odle to Election Staff RE Staff Meeting. 1pg. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 6/26/1972 From Odle to Howard RE Mailing Program Costs. 4 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 6/6/1972 From Magruder to Strachan RE Attachments. 1 pg. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 6/29/1972 From Foust to Magruder RE Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero in San Antonio. 7 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 6/26/1972 From Rietz to Malek, Magruder RE Press Coverage for Youth Functions. 11 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 6/27/1972

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    "ocrText": "Richard Nixon Presidential Library\nContested Materials Collection\nFolder List\nBox Number\nFolder Number\nDocument Date\nNo Date\nSubject\nDocument Type\nDocument Description\n34\n1\n5/30/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Magruder to Haldeman RE\nSacramento Mailing Samples. 4 pgs.\n34\n1\n5/22/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Odle to Malek RE Agenda for Staff\nMeeting 5/23. 1 pg.\n34\n1\n5/22/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Odle to Election Committee Members\nRE Staff Meeting Details. 2 pgs.\n34\n1\n5/25/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nOdle to Shumway RE Staff Ages. 5 pgs.\nWednesday, June 17, 2015\nPage 1 of 3\nBox Number\nFolder Number\nDocument Date\nNo Date\nSubject\nDocument Type\nDocument Description\n34\n1\n5/26/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Odle to Staff RE Misc. Staff\nInstructions. 3 pgs.\n34\n1\n5/12/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Marik to Mitchell, Magruder RE New\nYork State. 2 pgs.\n34\n1\n5/12/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Shumway to Mitchell, Magruder RE\nTime Magazine. 1 pg.\n34\n1\n6/6/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Magruder to Haldeman RE California\nSample Mailings. 9 pgs.\n34\n1\n6/26/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Odle to Election Staff RE Staff\nMeeting. 1pg.\nWednesday, June 17, 2015\nPage 2 of 3\nBox Number\nFolder Number\nDocument Date\nNo Date\nSubject\nDocument Type\nDocument Description\n34\n1\n6/6/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Odle to Howard RE Mailing Program\nCosts. 4 pgs.\n34\n1\n6/29/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Magruder to Strachan RE\nAttachments. 1 pg.\n34\n1\n6/26/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Foust to Magruder RE Ed Nixon and\nCesar Romero in San Antonio. 7 pgs.\n34\n1\n6/27/1972\nCampaign\nMemo\nFrom Rietz to Malek, Magruder RE Press\nCoverage for Youth Functions. 11 pgs.\nWednesday, June 17, 2015\nPage 3 of 3\nPresidential Materials Review Board\nReview on Contested Documents\nCollection: H. R. Haldeman\nBox Number: 314\nFolder:\n[Campaign 22 Part III June 15-29, 1972 Folder 2]\nDocument\nDisposition\n1\nReturn Private/Political NOTE, MAGRUPER TO HRH, 5/30/72\n2\nRetain Open\n3\nReturn\nPrivate/Political mEmo, ODLE TO MALEK, 5/22/72\n4\nReturn\nPrivate/Political mEmo, ODLE TO ARMENDARIS, ET.AL, 5/22/72\n5\nReturn\nPrivate/Political MEMO, ODLE TO SHUMWAY, 5/25/72\n6\nReturn\nPrivate/Political MEMU, OPLE TO STAFF, 5/26/72\n7\nReturn\nPrivate/Political MEMO, MARIK TO MITCHELL, 5/12/72\n8\nReturn\nPrivate/Political MEMO, SHUMWAY TO MITCHELL, 5/12/72\n9\nReturn\nPrivate/Political & Private/PersonalNOT, MAGRUDER TD HRH,\n10\nReturn\nPrivate/Political MEMO, DOLE TO ARMEN 6/6/72 DARIS, RT AL, 6/26/72\n11\nReturn\nPrivate/Political MEMO, ODUE TO HOWARD, 6/6/72\n12\nReturn\nPrivate/Political NOTE/ATTACH, mAGium DER TO STRACHAN, 6/29/72\nCOMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\nMay 30, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR MR. H. R. HALDEMAN\nFROM:\nJEB S. MAGRUDE\nM\nAttached for your information is a copy of\nthe Revised Letter/Sacramento Reply mail-\ning samples.\nAttachment\n&\nRe-elect the President\nCALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\n1670 Wilshire Boulevard / Los Angeles, California 90017\nDear Fellow Republican:\nCan you spare time for some exciting and rewarding work?\nThere is a real need for volunteers in California\nto work for President Nixons's re-election in November.\nThe President has earned our support. He has brought more\nthan 400, 000 men home from Vietnam. He created the\nEnvironmental Protection Agency and signed into law the\nClean Air Act. He has slowed the rate of inflation and\nslowed the awful crime rate.\nAs a Californian, the President is particularly aware of\nthe problems in our state. He has supported the Space\nShuttle program which will create 50,000 new jobs, many\nright here. He has proposed revenue sharing as one way\nto ease our heavy local and property taxes.\nWill you volunteer ? You need no special skills or training,\njust enthusiasm. Please fill in the attached Volunteer\nCard and send it in today.\nSincerely,\nRonald Ronald Reagan Reagan\nChairman\nP.S. Please remember to support President Nixon by\nvoting for him in the Primary on June 6th.\nTEAR HERE\nVolunteer Card\nNAME\nADDRESS\nI want to personally support President\nNixon for re-election by participating\nCITY\nSTATE\nZIP\nin the campaign. Please contact me\nright away!\nTelephone\n:\nSignature\nINSTRUCTIONS: Please fill out this volunteer card insert it in the business reply\nenvelope and mail today.\n\"Let US reject the narrow visions of those\nwho would tell US that we are evil because\nwe are not yet perfect, that we are corrupt\nbecause we are not yet pure, that all the\nsweat and toil and sacrifice that have gone\ninto the building of America were for naught\nbecause that building is not yet done\"\nRichard Nixon\nLos Angeles, California 90017\nRonald Reagan, Chairman Lyn Nofziger, Executive Director, 1670 Wilshire Boulevard,\nPublished and printed by the Californita Committee for the Re-election of the President\nNeeds You.\nAnd the President\nPresident Nixon.\nAmerica Needs\nRe-elect\nthe President.\nThe Record.\nThe Economy: President Nixon has taken strong action to flatten\ninflation, make the tax structure more equitable, and avert an\ninternational money crisis. He initiated a necessary 90-day wage and\nprice freeze, and enabled $1.5 billion to be loaned to small businesses.\nHousing starts are up 42% over last year.\nThe Environment:\nPresident Nixon established the Environmental\nProtection Agency, the first federal unit ever set up\nto protect our quality of life. He has signed the Water\nForeign Policy:\nQuality Improvement Act of 1970 and initiated a\nPresident Nixon is the first American President to visit\nLegacy of Parks program. No less than 25 separate\nChina-holding talks that were the first held between\nenvironment bills have been proposed by him.\nthe leaders of the two countries since 1949. And he\nwill also visit Moscow this year. The President's\nAdministration has called a halt to crisis diplomacy,\nYoung Americans:\nand has opened negotiations to limit nuclear weapons\nPresident Nixon has signed into law the bill giving 18-\nand reduce tension, particularly in the Middle East.\nyear-olds the right to vote, and has overhauled the\nselective service system with the goal of establishing an\nall-volunteer army.\nRevenue Sharing:\nIn order to relieve the burden of\ntaxes at the State and local level\n- property, sales, income and\nCrime:\nother taxes - the President has\nThe President's vigorous law-enforcement\nproposed a program to make\npolicies have cut in half the increase in the nation's crime\nmore monies available to local\nrate. He has created special strike forces in 17 cities which,\ngovernments by sharing a portion\nin 1971, brought nearly 600 Federal indictments (2 1/2 times\nof Federal revenues with them.\nthe number in the last pre-Nixon year), and named over\nOffered with no strings attached,\n2,500 criminal suspects, including many major criminal\nthis program promises to encour-\nleaders. In Washington, D.C., the one city in which the\nage problem-solving at the local\nPresident has direct authority, serious crime actually\nlevel where many of the problems\ndecreased by 13% last year.\nare.\nOlder Americans:\nPresident Nixon has submitted proposals to Congress\nwhich would increase Social Security benefits to the\nnation's elderly by one-third-and the average monthly\nbenefits for an elderly couple by almost $100. The\nPresident has also advanced programs to enable more\nof the elderly to live in their own homes, and to improve\nnursing care and increase jobs for these same citizens.\nVietnam:\nThe President has brought more than\n440,000 Americans\nU.S. TROOPS IN VIETNAM\nhome from Vietnam.\nThousands\nHe has reduced\nHealth Care:\n600\nAmerican ground\nPresident Nixon has earmarked\ncombat involvement\n500\nmassive amounts of money\nby 90% reduced\nto find a cure for cancer and sickle\n400\ncasualties by 95%\nDrugs:\ncell anemia. Federal outlays for\nand reduced spend-\nThe President has won agreement\nhealth in 1973 will reach $25.5\n300\ning by two-thirds. He\nfrom Turkey to place a total ban on\nbillion, and the President nas\nhas laid the found-\nthe growing of opium poppy\nmade\n200\nproposed a National Health\nation for a lasting\nan agreement with France to\nassist\nin\nInsurance Standards Act, a\npeace in Southeast\n100\nhalting the traffic of drugs\nand\nFamily Health Insurance Plan, and\nAsia.\nstepped up arrests of pushers. He is\nthe National Health Education\n0\n&\nspending 6 times more for rehabilita-\n65\n'66\n'67\n'68\n'69\n'70\n'71\nFoundation, all aiming at better\n'72\ntion and 5 times more for drug\nhealth care for EVERYONE.\neducation than ever before.\nRe-elect the President\nCALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\n1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90017\nAddress Correction Requested\nFIRST CLASS\nU.S. POSTAGE\nPermit No. 54552\nLos Angeles, California\nBUSINESS REPLY MAIL\nNo Postage Stamp Necessary if Mailed in the United States\nPostage will be paid by\nCALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE\nRE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\nNORTH CENTRAL CALIFORNIA REGION\n1507 21st STREET\nSACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA 95814\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nCONFIDENTIAL\nMay 22, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR:\nMR. FREDERIC V. MALEK\nFROM:\nROBERT C. ODLE, JR.\nSUBJECT:\nAgenda for Staff Meeting,\nTuesday, May 23, 7:30 a.m.\n1. In the post-Vietnam crush, Dan Piliero and Charles\nShearer were not introduced. You might introduce\nthem, describe their duties, etc. If Andre Le Tendre\nis present, you might introduce him as well.\n2. You should praise everyone for their work on the\nVietnam speech. 1701 did a good job and it was noticed\nat the WH (examples: the 50,000 + telegrams and the\nresults of the Vietnam poll on Metromedia where we won\n82% to 18% -- of the 6,000 responses, we can trace 3,500\nto 1701).\nYou should stress that we should continue to report on\nVietnam follow-up in the weekly report. Weekly report\ninputs are due today at noon and these should include\nmore Vietnam follow-up which was accomplished last week.\n3. Call on Dr. Robert Marik who will introduce Director of\nthe Direct Mail Division Bob Morgan for a presentation\non his Division's programs.\n4. Call on Jon Foust, Tour Director, for a presentation on\nthe requirements of being a 1701 advance man.\n5. Call on Rob Odle for a brief suggestion on security measures\nto be taken this week.\ncc: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder\nVDCC: Mr. Gordon Strachan\nGONFIDENTIAL\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nMay 22, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR:\nMR. ALEX ARMENDARIS\nMR. MURRAY CHOTINER\nMR. PETER DAILEY\nMR. ANTHONY DE FALCO\nMR. HARRY S. FLEMMING\nMR. JON FOUST\nMR. LARRY GOLDBERG\nMRS. PAT HUTAR\nMR. JERRY JONES\nMR. PAUL JONES\nMR. ALLAN KAUPINEN\nMR. FRED LA RUE\nMR. ROBERT MARDIAN\nDR. ROBERT MARIK\nMR. RICHARD MC ADOO\nMR. DON MOSIMAN\nMR. FRANK NAYLOR\nMR. EDWARD NIXON\nMR. DAN PILIERO\nMR. HERBERT PORTER\nMR. ROBERT REISNER\nMR. KEN RIETZ\nMR. GLENN SEDAM\nMR. CHARLES SHEARER\nMR. DE VAN SHUMWAY\nMR. HUGH SLOAN\nMR. WILLIAM STOVER\nMR. ROBERT TEETER\nMR. DAN TODD\nDR. CLAYTON YEUTTER\nFROM:\nROBERT C. ODLE, JR.\n1. Our next staff meeting will be tomorrow, Tuesday, May 23, at\n7:30 a.m. in the third floor conference room.\n2. Material for the weekly report is due by noon Tuesday. This\nweek's report should emphasize our follow-up activities in behalf\nof the President's recent speech on Vietnam. Thus, please mention\nthese activities in your part of the weekly report.\n3. Next Monday, May 29, is Memorial Day. Since all government\noffices and most businesses will be closed, we will operate with\na greatly reduced staff. While our switchboard will be open,\neach division head is free to close down as much of his office\n-2-\nas he chooses. If you are traveling, please remember to leave your\ntelephone number or numbers with Bob Reisner.\n4. Because of the unexpected demand for the state notebooks by\nvarious divisions of the campaign, Biba Wagner on the third floor\nis greatly in need of extra secretarial assistance during the day.\nOur volunteers help Biba with xeroxing, collating, etc., but she\nis very much in need of assistance from those with top typing skills.\nTherefore, if any of the secretaries in your office have any extra\ntime during the day, perhaps when you are traveling, if you would\nask them to get in touch with Biba at extension 341, she will be\nable to get the state notebooks which she is working on completed\nby her deadline of June 15\nThank you very much.\ncc: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder\nbcc:\nMr. Gordon C. Strachan\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nMay 25, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR:\nMR. DE VAN L. SHUMWAY\nFROM:\nROBERT C. ODLE, JR.\nSUBJECT:\nStaff Ages\nAs we discussed, the following information on staff ages should\nproduce some grist for your press mill. Hopefully it will also\nserve to counter the argument that the Nixon people are all at\nleast middle aged and mostly old. The attached graph indicates\nthe age span here at the Committee. While the mean (average)\ncomputed to be 32, Sylvia Panarites, who did the research on this,\ntells me that the median age is statistically correct and it is\n27. So, you can say the average of the 1701 staffer is 27 .\nAccording to Sylvia, the ethics of statistics allow you to use\neither the mean or the median SO we should use the median because\nit is to our advantage in this case.\nThe definite age concentration of our staff under the age of 33\nis quite apparent -- as the attached chart show, 65% of the staff\nis under 33.\nAlong with the chart and mean and median age you might be interested\nin the mean age of the various sections of the Committee:\nYouth\n23\nFinance\n37\nPolitical\n30\nVoter blocs excluding\nyouth\n30\nPR/media\n28\nScheduling and advance\n26\nPolling and research\n30\nSecretaries\n28\nAssistants\n29\n-2-\nDirectors\n40\nAlthough the Finance Committee has the highest mean age, its trea-\nsurer, Hugh Sloan, is only 30. Youth, as expected, has the lowest\nmean age.\nThe following random age samples may also be of interest as well:\nTom Carroccio - 26 - tour desk assistant\nEd Cowling - 29 - tour desk assistant\nSandy Cram - 27 - scheduler\n1\nSue Davis - 25 - advancewoman\nJon Foust - 33 - director of advance office\nCurt Herge - 33 - chief scheduler\nBill Minshall - 22 - scheduler\nRoger Stone - 20 - scheduler\nDan Evans - 22 - public opinion polls\nRick Fore - 26 - Marik's assistant - campaign planning and strategy\nTed Garrish - 29 - public opinion polls\nBob Morgan - 34 - director of direct mail operation\nBib Wagner - 22 - state election research coordinator\nFrank Almaguer - 27 - assistant to the director of the Spanish-\nspeaking voting bloc\nArt Amolsch - 32 - speech writer\nLeslye Arsht - 27 - national issues research\nD. J. Atwood - 30 - assistant editor of The Re-elector\nGary Burhop - 22 - in charge of convention activities under Tom Bell\nTom Bell - 24 - Rietz assistant\nAnn Dore - 30 - communcations coordinator\nJoan Connelly - 24 - surrogate media placement\nKen Smith - 22 - in charge of Young Speakers program\n-3-\nGeorge Gorton - 25 - heads up college activities in support of the\nPresident\nAngela Harris - 28 - PR/media assistant\nJim Mills - 26 - assistant to the director for elderly\nPowell Moore - 34 - press and information director\nBill Novelli - 30 - advertising\nBob Reisner - 24 - Magruder's assistant\n1\nConnie Santarelli - 29 - personnel assistant\nJeannie Mitchell - 29 - in charge of volunteers\nKen Reitz - 31 - youth director\nDan Todd - 33 - elderly vote director\nChris Todd - 25 - elderly fieldwoman\nJeb Magruder - 37 - chief of staff\nDan Piliero - 29 - lawyers committee\nRichard McAdoo - 36 - transient voter\nBart Porter - 33 - director of spokesmen resources\nRob Odle - 28 - director of administration\nBob Podesta - 22 - general assistant under Rietz working with Young\nVoters Committees\nAngie Miller - 20 - heads up Nixonettes and Nixonaires\nHarry Flemming - 31 - political coordinator\nMark Bloomfield - 22 - special project coordinator for Flemming and\nKaupinen\nDave Allen - 28 - writing and research\nKen Talmage - 26 - Stans A.A.\nAl Kaupinen - 36 - political coordinator\nAnother point brought out by the chart is that only 11 people of\napproximately 200 are over 50.\nCR P Staff Age Span\navenue age-32yrs\nmedianage- - 27,05\n61-64yes\n3\n58-61 yrs\n2\n54-57yrs\n2\n50-53yrs\n4\n46-49yrs\n20\n42-45yr\n8\n38-11 yrs\n22\n34-37yrs\n6\n30-33yrs\n26\n26-293Rs\n34\n2:2-25yes\n50\n18-21 yrs\n9/9\n13\n0\n10\n20\n30\n50\n50\n60\nnumber of staff\n4\ncc: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder\nMr. Frederic V. Malek\nMr. Kenneth Rietz\nbcc: The Honorable John N. Mitchell, F.Y.I.\nMr. Gordon ct Strachan\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nMay 26, 1972\nADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL\nMEMORANDUM FOR THE STAFF\nFROM: ROBERT C. ODLE, JR.\n1. Division heads and their assistants should note that there will.\nnot be a staff meeting on Tuesday, May 30.\n2. Recently, the Controller's Office has received a number of ex-\npense account forms, check requests, etc., which have not been\nfirst routed through this office. This just delays payment\nbecause the Controller's Office then sends the requests back to\nOdle's office for approval. Please remember to send all ex-\npense accounts, check requests, etc., to Odle's office where\nthey are approved and then sent to the Controller for payment.\n(Note: this does not apply to the Finance Division).\n3. Please \"take it easy\" with respect to requests for White House\ntours. This is the busy season for tours and the Visitors Of-\nfice at the White House has asked us to request tours only for\ngenuine VIPs and people who have been helpful to the Committee.\nPlease don't ask for tours for neighbors or friends of neigh-\nbors. Also, please don't ever attempt to get someone on a\ntour when requested by a Congressman or a Senator who has been\nturned down by the Visitors Office -- it would not be proper\nfor someone at 1701 to get someone on a tour when a Senator\ncould not.\n4. Our telephone system is becoming overloaded by the expansion\nof the staff -- but if the following steps are taken it can\nadequately service our needs from now until November:\na. Effective immediately please place all outgoing (not long\ndistance calls) on your seven-digit outside lines rather\nthan your three-digit branch lines. Save the branch lines\nfor inter-office and WATS calls. This will mean that the\noperator will be able to put calls through to your office\nmore easily since your branch numbers will not be busy.\nBy not having to take as many messages, the operator will\nbe able to answer incoming calls more quickly.\nADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL\nADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL\n-2-\nb. Please give out your seven-digit direct-dial numbers to all\nyour callers. This is becoming increasingly important be-\ncause of the large number of \"citizens\" calls coming into\nour switchboard. Our telephone equipment is not designed\nto process all your incoming calls through the switchboard\nand will break down if the outside lines are not used for\nmost incoming calls.\nAlso, when leaving a message at the White House or other\noffice, please ask the party to return your call at your\ndirect number, e.g., \"John Jones at 333-9876\" rather than\n\"John Jones at the Committee.\"\nC. We now have 10 WATS lines -- the maximum number we can\nhave. Seven can be reached by dialing 80, three by\ndialing 87. If both 80 and 87 ring busy then dial com-\nmercially on your seven-digit line.\nd. If you and your secretary have different three-digit branch\nlines, please answer your own branch line yourself. It is\nsimilar to an intercom system and the caller will be some-\none from 1701. Outside calls are put through to your sec-\nretary. Please do not have your secretary place your calls\nto other staff members at 1701. It's not necessary and it\nwastes time.\ne. Please do not ask the operator to place calls for you. Her\njob is to answer the outside calls and transfer calls -- not\nplace them. If her time is taken up placing calls she cannot\nanswer incoming calls as efficiently as she could. Also,\nplease don't ask the operator for the telephone number of a\nfellow staff member -- look on your staff list. (Additional\ncopies are available from Sylvia Panarites).\nf. Please remember that during the day Ruby Youngs (a former\nWhite House assistant chief telephone operator) runs the\nswitchboard and Kathy O'Melia is our receptionist. Kathy\ncan be reached at 391, not.0. Ruby can be reached at 0.\n5. The attached \"hometown\" news release form should be filled out\nas soon as possible by all members of the staff and sent to\nMrs. Laura Underwood in the Press Office. Please do this just\nas soon as possible.\nbec: Mr. Gordon C. Strachan\nADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL\nHOMETOWN NEWS RELEASE FORM\n(type or print)\nNAME\nAGE\nHOMETOWN ADDRESS\n(city)\n(state),\n(street no.)\nHOW LONG\nPARENTS: Father's Name\nDeceased\nLiving\nMother's Name\nDeceased\nLiving\nPARENTS' ADDRESS (if different from above)\n(city)\n(state)\n(street number)\nHOMETOWN NEWSPAPER (S)\nWIFE'S/HUSBAND'S NAME\nADDRESS\nPARENTS: Living\nDeceased\nDivorced\nHOMETOWN NEWSPAPER(S)\nYOUR JOB WITH THE COMMITTEE (title or descriptive phrase):\nPREVIOUS ENPLOYMENT (list more than just gov't positions)\n(title)\n(name of employer) (type of employment)\n(title)\n(name of employer)\n(type of employment)\n(title)\n(name of employer) (type of employment)\n(use reverse side for added information)\nCIVIC, FRATERNAL OR CHARITABLE ACTIVITIES\nOTHER (List here anything not covered above which you would like to see mentioned\nin a press release about you)\nReturn to Yes. Laura Underwood 372, when completed.\n0\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nMay 12, 1972\nCONFIDENTIAL\nMEMORANDUM FOR:\nTHE HONORABLE JOHN N. MITCHELL\nTHROUGH:\nJEB S. MAGRUDER\nFROM:\nROBERT H. MARIK\nRHM\nSUBJECT:\nNew York State\nIn our initial conversation with Mr. Bixby and Steve Blum of\nthe New York Re-election Committee, it has been obvious that\nthey would prefer to run their state campaign in a nearly\nautonomous fashion. In particular, they have some well de-\nveloped ideas on the type of programs which should be imple-\nmented for direct mail and telephone. They also have demo-\ngraphic data to determine which clusters of voters should be\napproached by each method of communication. In the case of\ndirect mail, they are prepared to argue strongly to use a vendor\nwith whom they have dealt in earlier Rockefeller campaigns\nrather than to participate in our national arrangement with\nthe Donnelley Corporation.\nIn all other states where direct mail will be used, we have\nbeen proceding on the assumption that Bob Morgan, working\nwith the November Group, would bear the responsibility for\ndeveloping the direct mail materials, in close cooperation\nwith the State Re-election Committees. He would then follow\nthrough on the production and development of the mailings,\nusing the Donnelley Corporation.\nIn the direct mail and telephone programs, funds for these\nactivities have been budgeted in the key states through the\nWashington Committee, and have not been included in the state\nbudgets.\nThe purpose of this memorandum is to ascertain from you whether\nyou desire that the New. York State mail and telephone programs\nbe coordinated closely from Washington as in the other states,\nCONFIDENTIAL\n- 2 -\nor whether you would prefer that Bixby be allowed to proceed with\nmore independence, controlled only by an agreed-upon budget figure.\nCoordinate direct mail and telephone programs closely as in other\nkey states\nBe prepared to yield more autonomy to Bixby in New York than to\nthe Chairmen of most other states\nmaril4Bloom\nCONFIDENTIAL\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nMay 12, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR THE HONORABLE JOHN N. MITCHELL\nTHROUGH:\nJEB S. MAGRUDER\nSUBJECT: TIME Magazine\nYou indicated to me last week that you had a special relationship\nwith Hal Bruno of Newsweek Magazine and would be spending some\ntime with him on Thursday.\nHal's counterpart at Time Magazine (as roving political reporter)\nis Simmons (Sim) Fentress. Sim is basically friendly and tells\nme that from time to time he sat down with you on a background\nbasis in 1968 -- a relationship he would like to reinstitute\nthis year.\nIt would be helpful to me for my own backgrounding as well as\nin my relationships with Hal and with Sim if I were allowed to\nsit in on such meetings, even though they are informal and\noff-the-record.\nSuggestion:- That you meet informally with Sim sometime within\nthe next two weeks for 30 minutes to an hour. If you approve, I\nwill contact Sim and coordinate the scheduling with Lea.\nApprove\nDisapprove\nComments:\nI want to clarify that I have not mentioned the Bruno situation to\nFentress. He came to me with this specific request. The establishment\nof a special relationship with both major news magazines would seem\nto me to be of assistance to the President's re-election effort.\nVan\nDEVAN L. SHUMWAY\n0\nCOMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\nJune 6, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR MR. H. R. HALDEMAN\nFROM:\nJEB S. MAGRUDE P\nAttached for your information are copies of\nthe following California sample mailings:\nFour-page test (Sacramento reply,\nTustin reply, San Mateo reply)\nRed, White & Blue Telegram with\nteaser\nTelegram\nTelegram with teaser\nRe-elect the President\nBULK RATE\nU.S. POSTAGE\nPAID\nCALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\n1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90017\nCalifornia Committee\nFor The Re-election\nOf The President\nAddress Correction Requested\nFIRST CLASS\nU.S. POSTAGE\nPermit No. 54552\nLos Angeles, California\nBUSINESS REPLY MAIL\nNo Postage Stamp Necessary if Mailed in the United States\nPostage will be paid by\nCALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE\nRE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\nSOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGION\nP.O. BOX 897\nTUSTIN, CALIFORNIA 92680\nRe-elect the President\nCALIFORNIA COMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\n1670 Wilshire Boulevard / Los Angeles, California 90017\nMr. & Mrs. William J. Dunn\n801 Ronda Mendoza\nLaguna Hills, Ca 92653\nDear Mr. & Mrs. W. Dunn:\nYour help is needed by President Nixon as he seeks\nre-election this year. He needs your help in order\nto win a big victory in his home State.\nNo one expects you to volunteer your help on blind faith.\nThe President himself doesn't expect that. But we believe\nhe has earned your support, and here's the record to back\nup our belief:\nThe rate of increase in crime in the Nation has been cut\nin half. He has created special anti-crime strike forces\nin 17 cities which in 1971 brought nearly 600 Federal\nindictments and identified over 2,500 criminal suspects. In\nWashington, D. C., the one city in which the President has\ndirect authority, serious crime actually DECREASED by\n13% last year.\nPresident Nixon has declared a \"war on drugs\". He is\nattacking drug traffic on all fronts. He has won an\nagreement from Turkey to place a total ban on the growing of\nopium poppy. He has made an agreement with France to\nassist in halting the smuggling of heroin from Marseilles.\nHe has added more men to the U.S. Customs Service to\ncheck in-coming baggage more thoroughly. He has stepped-up\narrests of pushers. He is spending 6 times more for\nrehabilitation and 5 times more for drug education than\never before.\nVIETNAM. He has brought home nearly half a million\nAmericans from that communist-battered country, reduced\ncasualties by 95%, and is moving resolutely toward a lasting\npeace, with freedom in that part of the world.\nTHE ECONOMY. The President has taken strong action to\ncurb inflation and avert any semblance of recession.\nHe initiated a necessary--and couragecus--90-day\nwage-price freeze, and then established a wage board and\nprice commission to make sure our future economic growth\nis real and not inflated. He has moved to END America's\nrole as the provider for every nation, and is demanding\nthat other nations begin to pay their fair share of the\nfree world's defense.\nThe President knows that the small business of America\nmust be successful and thriving. He has enabled $1.5\nbillion to be loaned to small businesses since he took\noffice. To make the tax structure fairer and to relieve\nthe tax burden at the State and local levels, he has\nproposed a Federal revenue sharing program. This\nprogram will make more monies available to local\ngovernments by sharing a portion of Federal revenues with\nthem. This will encourage and help finance\nproblem-solving at that same local level by people who\nunderstand local problems best in such areas as schools,\ntransportation and law enforcement.\nENVIRONMENT. President Nixon has established the\nENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY, the first Federal unit ever\nset up to protect our quality of life. He has signed\nthe Water Quality Improvement Act of 1970, and initiated\na Legacy of Parks program to insure that our wilderness\nareas remain \"forever wild\". And he has signed a joint\nagreement with Canada, to recapture the beauty of the\nGreat Lakes. In sum, he has proposed 25 SEPARATE\nENVIRONMENT IMPROVEMENT BILLS.\nHEALTH. The President has earmarked massive amounts\nof money for research efforts to discover CURES FOR\nCANCER AND SICKLE CELL ANEMIA. He has also proposed\na National Health Insurance Standards Act, a Family\nHealth Insurance Plan, and the National Health Education\nFoundation--all geared to assisting more and more\npeople enjoy healthier and longer lives.\nPresident Nixon's philosophy toward senior citizens\nhas been that they can and should play significant\nroles in the future of our country because of their\nVAST EXPERIENCE and ACCUMULATED WISDOM. To help,\nthe President has asked Congress for an increase\nof one-third in Social Security benefits--or, roughly,\n$100 MORE A MONTH per couple.\nThere's much more, but the whole of President Nixon's\nrecord cannot be told in one letter. Enough has been\nsaid here, though, to demonstrate that the President\nhas taken action--real McCoy action-to bring an America\nin shambles (remember the riots and turmoil of 1968?)\nback to its feet. Surely, you will agree with that--\nand with the need to keep SOUND, STABLE, COMMON-SENSE\nleadership at the helm of our country.\nIs the President's re-election the sure thing that\nsome have said it is? In politics, nothing is a\nsure thing without working for it. President Nixon\nneeds help--your help! Please come through for the\nPresident complete the volunteer card that's\nenclosed and mail it in today.\nSincerely,\nRonald Ronald Reagan Reagan\nChairman\nRe-elect\nthe President\nTEAR HERE\nVolunteer Card\nMr. & Mrs. William J. Dunn\n030 0001970\n801 Ronda Mendoza\n38289\nLaguna Hills, Ca 92653\n71\nI want to personally support President\nNixon for re-election by participating\nin the campaign. Please contact me\nright away!\nTelephone\n&\nSignature\nINSTRUCTIONS: Please fill out this volunteer card insert it in the business reply\nenvelope and mail today.\nTELEGRAM\nMRS. C. A. CARLETON\n1625 IDAHO AV.\nESCONDIDO, CA 92025\nAMERICA NEEDS PRESIDENT NIXON AND PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS\nYOU, BOTH AS AN AMERICAN AND AS A FELLOW CALIFORNIAN. ON\nPRIMARY DAY, JUNE 6TH, YOU HAVE THE CHANCE TO SHOW YOUR\nSUPPORT FOR THE PRESIDENT. A REALLY BIG VOTE WILL SIGNAL\nTHE NATION THAT THE PRESIDENT HAS THE UNITED SUPPORT OF\nCALIFORNIA REPUBLICANS. PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS SUCH A VOTE.\nHE NEEDS YOUR VOTE. PLEASE REMEMBER TO VOTE ON JUNE 6TH.\nRONALD REAGAN\nCHAIRMAN, CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE\nFOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE\nPRESIDENT\n1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles. California 00017\nBULK RATE\nU.S. POSTAGE\nPAID\nAddress Correction Requested\nCalifornia Committee\nFor The Re-alection\nof The President\n&\ntelegram\nTELEGRAM\nMR. & MRS. JACK HERING\n3928 ALBERAN AV.\nLONG BEACH, CA 90808\nAMERICA NEEDS PRESIDENT NIXON -- AND PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS\nYOU, BOTH AS AN AMERICAN AND AS A FELLOW CALIFORNIAN. ON\nPRIMARY DAY, JUNE 6TH, YOU HAVE THE CHANCE TO SHOW YOUR\nSUPPORT FOR THE PRESIDENT. A REALLY BIG VOTE WILL SIGNAL\nTHE NATION THAT THE PRESIDENT HAS THE UNITED SUPPORT OF\nCALIFORNIA REPUBLICANS. PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS SUCH A VOTE.\nHE NEEDS YOUR VOTE. PLEASE REMEMBER TO VOTE ON JUNE 6TH.\nRONALD REAGAN\nCHAIRMAN, CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE\nFOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE\nPRESIDENT\nBULK RATE\n1670 Wilshire Boulevard Los Angeles. California 90017\nU.S. POSTAGE\nPAID\nCalifornia Committee\nTELEGRAM\nFor The Re-election\nof The President\n4\nAddress Correction Requested\nTELEGRAM\nMRS. MARGARET F. TRIBBEY\n3616 ATLANTIC AV. APT. B\nLONG BEACH, CA 90807\nAMERICA NEEDS PRESIDENT NIXON -- AND PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS\nYOU, BOTH AS AN AMERICAN AND AS A FELLOW CALIFORNIAN. ON\nPRIMARY DAY, JUNE 6TH, YOU HAVE THE CHANCE TO SHOW YOUR\nSUPPORT FOR THE PRESIDENT. A REALLY BIG VOTE WILL SIGNAL\nTHE NATION THAT THE PRESIDENT HAS THE UNITED SUPPORT OF\nCALIFORNIA REPUBLICANS. PRESIDENT NIXON NEEDS SUCH A VOTE.\nHE NEEDS YOUR VOTE. PLEASE REMEMBER TO VOTE ON JUNE 6TH.\nRONALD REAGAN\nCHAIRMAN, CALIFORNIA COMMITTEE\nFOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE\nPRESIDENT\n1670 Wilshire Boulevard / Los Angeles, California 90017\nBULK RATE\nU.S. POSTAGE\nTELEGRAM\nPAID\nCalifornia Committee\nFor The Re-election\nor The President\nAddress Correction Requested\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nJune 26, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR:\nMR. ALEX ARMENDARIS\nMR. MURRAY CHOTINER\nMR. PETER DAILEY\nMR. BERNARD DE LURY\nMR. EDWARD FAILOR\nMR. HARRY FLEMMING\nMR. JON FOUST\nMR. LARRY GOLDBERG\nMRS. PAT HUTAR\nMR. JERRY JONES\nMR. PAUL JONES\nMR. ALLAN KAUPINEN\nMR. PAUL KAYSER\nMR. FRED LA RUE\nMR. ROBERT MARDIAN\nDR. ROBERT MARIK\nMR. RICHARD MC ADOO\nMR. DON MOSIMAN\nMR. FRANK NAYLOR\nMR. EDWARD NIXON\nMISS BETTY NOLAN\nMR. DAN PILIERO\nMR. HERBERT PORTER\nMR. ROBERT REISNER\nMR. KEN RIETZ\nMR. GLENN SEDAM\nMR. CHARLES SHEARER\nMR. DE VAN SHUMWAY\nMR. HUGH SLOAN\nMR. WILLIAM STOVER\nMR. ROBERT TEETER\nMR. DAN TODD\nMR. JOHN WIRTH\nDR. CLAYTON YEUTTER\nFROM:\nROBERT C. ODLE\nCur next staff meeting will be tomorrow, Tuesday, June 27, at 7:30 a.m.\nin the third floor conference room. Material for the weekly report to\nMr. Mitchell is due by the close of business Tuesday.\nThank you.\nCC: Mr. Jeb S. Magruder\nbcc: Mr. Gordon C. Strachan\nCommittee for the Re-election of the President\nMEMORANDUM\nJune 6, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR:\nMR. W. RICHARD HOWARD\nFROM:\nROBERT C. ODLE, JR.\nI hope this doesn't come as too much of a shock, but a\nway has finally been figured out SO we will know each\nmonth how much your mailing program costs --- and how much\nours costs as well. What the RNC has done at our request\nis to apportion all costs associated with both programs\n(White House/Colson and 1701/Shumway) between the two.\nAttached are two documents: your proposed mailing budget\nand the RNC recap sheet. As can be seen, you are well\nwithin your budget for the first four months of 1972 and\nindeed the only time you exceeded it was in February and\nthat was caused by the special insert for FIRST MONDAY.\nYour projected budget for the first four months of 1972\nwas $143,100 and only $104,351 has been spent. But as\nyou pointed out in your May 3 memo, it would be wise to\nsave some funds for a large nationwide mailing which might\nbe requested in the last weeks of the campaign.\nWe'll furnish these reports to you approximately 15 days\nfrom the close of each month. Please let me know if you\nhave any questions.\ncc: Mr. Bruce A. Kehrli\nMr. Jeb S. Magruder\nMr. De Van L. Shumway\nbcc: Mr. Gordon C. Strachan\nCONFIDENTIAL - EYES ONLY\nProposed Mailing Budget for 1972\n(based on imposed limits)\nMonths\nNumber of Mailings\nCost Per\nMonthly Total\nMailing\nJanuary\n25\n$1,500\n$37,500\nFebruary\n21\n$1,500\n$31,500\nMarch\n22\n$1,550\n$34,100\nApril\n25\n$1,600\n$40,000\nMay *\n24\n$1,650\n$39,600\nJune\n29\n$1,700\n$49,300\nJuly **\n28\n$1,750\n$49,000\nAugust\n10\n$1,800\n$18,000\nPre-Convention Total\n$299,000\nAugust\n10\n$1,800\n$18,000\nSeptember\n45\n$1,900\n$85,500\nOctober\n58\n$2,000\n$116,000\nNovember\n16\n$2,000\n$32,000\nPost-Convention Total\n$251,500\nJan. through election\n$550,000\n* President's trip to Russia - less mail generated\n** Includes 4th of July weekend\nCONFIDENTIAL - EYES ONLY\nAdministratively Confidential\nTo: Rob Odle\nFrom: Barry Mountain\nRecap Sheet - Printing and Mailing Expenses\nIncurred by Mr. Chuck Colson's Office\nRNC Account 1000\nJanuary\nFebruary\nMarch\n*April\nIndirect Labor\n1,202.80\n1,202.80\n2,973.20\n3,171.60\nPre-paid Supplies\n1,189.89\n2,264.38\n1,285.32\n2,000.00\nComputer\n2,276.85\n2,765.62\n2,220.08\n3,900.00\nDirect Labor\n-0-\n2,451.95\n1,936.35\n2,000.00\nPre-Paid postage\n4,725.86\n2,977.72\n10,710.75\n5,000.00\nStamps\n8,000.00\n4,416.00\n-0-\n-0-\nSpecial Order Items\n63.00\n1,087.85\n3,715.00\n2,316.75\nAdditional Machines\n(additional capacity needed to serve 1000 and 2000 above\nnormal RNC requirements)\nModel 1870 offset press\n1,243.00\n1,243.00\nModel 1250 offset press\n465.00\n465.00\nModel 2000 Elect Copier\n580.00\n580.00\nMulti 1485 Vaccum Exposure Frame\n139.50\n139.00\nCollator, folder, inserter\n1,231.10\n1,231.10\nFirst Monday Special Inserts\n21,178.63\nTotal Monthly Expenditure 17,458.40\n38,344.95\n26,501.30\n*22,046.95\n1) *No cost figures will be final until after the June 10th GAO report is filed.\nThe RNC accounting department has been spending all of its time and effort on the\nGAO report and computerizing the accounting system at the RNC. After June 10, we\nwill be able to give you exact figures for all expenses after April 6, 1972.\nUnderstanding that you need to have some idea what you are spending on printing and\nmailing services at the RNC, we are submitting this estimated expense sheet.\n2 We will provide re-cap sheets to you within 15 days from the close of each month.\n3) Users will receive detailed worksheets of their operation's monthly activity\nwithin 5 days of the closing O f:the month.\nCC: Tom Evans\nChuck Colson Account 1000\nSpecial Order Items\nFebruary\nDunhill List Rental\n63.85\nAero Mailing Service\n844.00\nPromise and Performance\n24.00\nKodak Microfilm Viewer\n156.00\n1,087.85\nSpecial Inserts Monday and First Monday\nMonday February 7\nLanman\n4,680.00\n(Mrs. Nixon in Africa)\nDesign Assoc.\n1,521.11\nFontana Litho 7,804.37\nMonday February 14\nTrade Type\n37.96\nHarbinger\n633.99\nDesign Assoc.\n2,600.00\nFontana\n3,801.20\n21,178.63\nSpecial Order Items\nMarch\nDesign Associates (Summons to Greatness)\n2,600.00\nNational Crusader Newspaper (Bill Blair)\n275.00\nFritz Hofheimer List Rental\n840.00\n3,715.00\nSpecial Order Items\nApril *\nSuperintendent Of Documents\n2,000.00\n(State of the World Message)\nTemporary Employment Agency (Print Shop)\n316.75\nsub-total 2,316.75\nCOMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\nJuner 29, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR MR. GORDON 10% STRACHAN\nFROM:\nJEB S. MAGRUDER\nAttached are forwarded for your information.\nAttachments (2)\n&\nCommittee for the Re-election of the Presiden\nMEMORANDUM\nJune 26, 1972\nMEMORANDUM FOR: MR. JEB S. MAGRUDER foust\nFROM:\nJON A. FOUST\nSUBJECT:\nAppearances by Mr. Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero in\nSan Antonio, Texas on June 24\nMr. Ed Nixon and actor Cesar Romero appeared in San Antonio last Satur-\nday, June 24 at events sponsored by the National Hispanic Finance Com-\nmittee for the Re-election of the President. The schedule consisted of\na leadership breakfast at which Cesar Romero appeared, and a visit to\na new Mexican-American owned bank, an appearance at a \"Tamalada\"\nfestival, and an appearance at a $1,000 per plate fund raising dinner\nby both Mr. Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero.\nThe breakfast, the visit to the bank, and the dinner went very well\nfrom the standpoint of the appearances by our speakers. At the bank,\nMr. Ed Nixon and Cesar Romero opened accounts and the lobby was packed\nwith guests. The \"Tamalada\" festival was not well attended due to the\nfact that the tickets were purchased in blocks of 500 and the purchasers\ndid not give the tickets to people who would attend. The temperature\nwas 100° which also may have affected the attendance.\nThere was very favorable coverage on WOAI-TV (NBC) which mentioned that\nthe day's events would be climaxed by a $1,000 per plate dinner. The\npress clippings are attached.\nAttachment\nSAN Antonio EXPRESS/NEWS\nSuniong,June25,1927\n1927\nGOP Contributors Meet\np.2.B\nEd Nixon, Cesar Romero\nTwenty-five persons attending a\nSpanish-speaking have headed an effort of\n$1,000-a-plate dinner Saturday night climaxed\nthis type to re-elect the President.\na day of activities to raise funds for the Re-\nD.J. Lee, chairman of the Bexar County\npublican Party's presidential campaign. Mov-\nFinance Committee, said more than 1,200 per-\nie-stage-television star Cesar Romero and\nsons attended a tamalada during the after-\nPresident Nixon's brother, Ed. were featured\nnoon. Ed Nixon and Romero briefly attended\nat the dinner which was held at the St. Antho-\nthe event which was held at V.I. Keefe Field.\nny Hotel.\nIn the morning, 44 persons a nd e d a\nThe day's activities were sponsored by the\nbreakfast and a short time later, Ed Nixon\nNational Hispanic Finance Committee.\nand Romero opened savings accounts at the\nA spokesman said the dinner is a \"first of\nMission Federal Savings and Loan Associa-\nits kind\" because it marks the first time the\ntion, 1006 S.W. Military Dr., Lee said.\nPage 2-B * * San Antonio EXPRESS/NEWS - - Sunday, June 25, 1972\nGOP Fund Raisers\nActor Cesar Romero and Ed Nixon, brother of President Nixon, leave the Hilton\nPalacio del Rio Hotel, cn route to the $1,000-a-plate dinner Saturday night to\nraise funds for the Republican Partyis presidential campaign.-Staff Photo by\nRon Jones.\n2-A\nSunday, June 25, 1972\nMovie Star Attends\nTamalada Attracts Small Crowd\nBy SHARON WATKINS\nAlthough 7,000 tickets report-\nedly had been sold in advance,\nSaturday's Tamalada to raise\nfunds for the re-election of Pres-\nident Nixon failed to muster a\ncrowd.\nFewer than 50 people - in-\ncluding mariachi musicians and\ncampaign workers -- had ar-\nrived at V.I. Keele Field by the\ntime the official M of 0 rcad e\nbrought Ed Nixon, brother of\nthe President, and movie actor\nCesar Romero for a scheduled 2\np.m. appearance.\nSCRAP PLANS\nPlans were scrapped for a for-\nmal rally in the grandstand\narea. and the lebrities\nemerged from the fieldhouse at\nabout 2:15 p.m. for an informal\nhandshaking and autograph ses-\nsion.\nOnly 40 tickets had been sold\nat the gate by the time Romero\nCESAR ROMERO, veteran actor\nand Nixon left at 2:45 p.m.\nof stage, films and television.\nIf the crowd was small, it was\ngives a solid wink to one of his\nalso enthusiastic -- at least in\nfans at St. Mary's Keefe Field.\nseeking Romero's autograph.\nThe handsome, 65-year-old\nmovie veteran strolled through\nPRESIDENT NINON'S brother, Ed Nixon, signs au-\nthe crowd, stepping in time to\ntograph for Tony Kindla, 10, as Terri Lujan, 16, looks\nthe Latin rhythm and munching\non. Nixon attended \"Tamalada\" at Kcele Field Satu-\na ho: dog.\nday as part of a Re-elect Nixon campaign visit to\nNixon, 17 years younger than\nSan Antonio. Nixon, who attended a cocktail party Sat-\nthe President and an oceano-\nurday evening, left town after the event.\ngraphic engineer. had arrived in\nSan Antonio just in time for the\nsparsely attended tamalada. He\nwas to make another appear-\nance at a Saturday-evening\ncocktail reception before con-\nSAN ANTONIO LIGHT\ntinuing on the \"Re-Elect Nixon\"\ncampaign trail.\nPAGE 2-A\nTHREE EVENTS\nThe a m alada was one of\nthree Saturday events sponsored\nby the National Hispanic Fi-\nnance Committee for Re-clection\nof the President. A breakfast at\nthe Hilton Palaco del Rio Hotel\nwas attended by about 40 local\nRepublicans, and the final event\nwas a $1.000 per plate dinner\nSaferday night at the St. An-\nthony Hotei.\nOther officials at the tamalada\nwere Antonio Rodriguez, con-\nsultant for Spanish-American Af-\nfairs at the White House: Alex\nArmendariz, director of Nixon's\nSpartsh-speaking C a 111 pai n\ncommittee, and Eloy Rodriguez,\nTexas chairman for the His-\npanic Finance Committee.\nA\n$1,000 PLATE\nBy CHARLES DECKER\nSAN Antonio LIGHT\nTwenty-five persons paid\n$1,000 'ach Saturday night for\nPAGE 2-A\nthe opportunity to eat a meal\nconsisting of tenderloin of beef\nand for the chance to contribute\nSUNDAY, JUNE 25 1972\nto the Re-elect the President\ncampaign fund.\nThe dinner at the St. Anthony\nHotel, sponsored by the National\nStrolling\nHispanic Finance Committee,\nwas to climax the San Antonio\nvisits of Edward C. Nixon, the\nPresident's younger brother,\nDown River\nand screen star Cesar Romero,\na veteran Republican cam-\nCesar Romero, handsome star of the\npaigner.\nNIXON CAMPAIGNER\nmovies, became a typical tourist for a\nRomero, who has campaigned\nshort time Saturday morning, leaving his\nfor Nixon since his first presi-\nroom at the Hilton Palacio del Rio Hotel\ndential bid in 1960, told the\nand taking a stroll on the downtown riv-\ngroup, \"I am a Republican from\nway back. I've been with the\nerwalk.\nPresident since 1960 and I am\nFriends and aides with the Latin actor\nconvinced he is a great man.\"\nRomero said that \"God will-\ncampaigning for President Nixon didn't\ning\" Nixon would be in office\nknow where he'd gone, but Romero said,\nanother four years.\n\"You can't come to San Antonio and not\nEVERY AREA\nBenjamin Fernandez, national\nsee the Alamo, So I just went.\"\nchairman of the Hispanic So-\nThe 65-year-old entertainer, tanned as\nciety, said, \"We will actively\ndarkly as his brown, loosely woven shirt,\nparticipate in every area of Re-\nwas impressed with the river and restau-\npublican politics.\"\nrants. \"The river is very beautiful,\" he\nOther Republican officials who\nFuentes, California state chair-\nsaid. \"San Antonio is certainly flavorful.\nman of the NHFC; and Mrs.\nattended were Van Henry\nStella Elizondo, executive secre-\nIt's almost like you're in a foreign coun-\nArcher, Bexar County Republi-\ntary to the state director of the\ntry.\"\ncan chairman; Alex Mendares,\nthe national campaign chairman\nsociety. City Councilman Alvin\nAlthough Romero easily stood out in\nfor Mexican-Americans; R u d y\nPadilla, who was introduced as\ncrowds, he was not bothered on the river\n\"Mr. Republican\" also attended.\nand spent a leisurely time getting, as he\nsaid, \"a little air.\"\nTHE SAN ANTONIO LIGHT\nNixon's Brother\nComing to S.A.\nEdward C. Nixon, President\nNixon's brother, will attend the\nfund-raising activities of the Na-\ntional Hispanic Finance Com-\nmittee in San Antonio Saturday.\nThe committee, whose purpose\nis to collect funds for the re-\nelection of the P resident, Is\nholding R 1-6 p.m. tamalada at\nV.J. Kecle Field and a $1,000-a-\nplate dinner at St. Anthony\nHotel Saturday night.\nSaturday, June 24, 1972\n8.A\nSAN ANTONIO, TEXAS\nPAGE 34\nThursday, June 22, 1972\nTHE SUN\nTamalada This Saturday\nDr. Oscar E. Gutierrez, right, buys first 500 tickets to the National Hispanic Finance\nCommittee's Tamalada this Saturday from 1 to 6 p.m. at V.J. Keefe Field on the St.\nMary's University Campus. Receiving the check for $625 is David Lee, county chair-\nman of the NHFC. The tamalada will have as special guests movie actor Cesar Rom-\nero and National Office of Economic Opportunity Director Phillip Sanchez. Also pre-\nsent will he Robert Martian, deputy on the Committee to Re-elect the President;\nAlex Armendariz, director of Spanish-speaking Campaign Committee for the Re-el-\nection of the Committee; and Benjamin Fernandez, national NHFC chairman. Tickets\nat $1.25 each are available at the NHFC office, 711 E. Houston St. Telephone num-\nber is 223-1818.\nCOMMITTEE FOR THE RE-ELECTION OF THE PRESIDENT\n1701 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE NW\nWASHINGTON D C 20006\nJune 27, 1972\n(202) 333.0920\nMEMORANDUM FOR:\nFRED MALEK\nJEB MAGRUDER\nFROM:\nKEN RIETZ\nSUBJECT:\nSummary of Press Coverage\nfor Youth Functions\nToward the end of May, two youth events were held which\nreceived quite a bit of publicity: the Neighbors for Nixon/Tower\nregistration drive on May 20 in Dallas, Ft. Worth and Beaumont;\nand the announcement of the formation of the Student Leaders for\nthe President on May 22 in Los Angeles. I thought you would be\ninterested in the publicity generated by these events:\nNEIGHBORS FOR NIXON/TOWER (May 20):\nMay 19 - Ken Rietz was interviewed by:\nDallas Times Herald - clipping attached\nWFAA Radio Station - aired May 19 (at least 3 times)\nDallas Morning News - clipping attached (two other\nsmall articles taken from the press release are\nattached)\nKERA-TV (PBS) - aired May 19\nKTVT-TV (Independent) - aired May 19\nWBAP-TV (NBC) - news interview, aired May 19\nKDFW-TV - Aired Crossroads '70s 30 minute talk show\non May 20.\n-2-\nMay 20 - Press conference with Ed Nixon was attended by:\nDallas Times Herald - ran on May 20 (no clipping)\nDallas Morning News - ran on May 21 (no clipping)\nKTVT and KDFW Television Stations - ran May 20\nunidentified radio station - no feedback\nMay 20 - Registration drive was covered by:\nKBAP-TV - Filmed young people going door to door,\naired on May 20\nNational Public Television covered the entire event\nfor a Sander Vanocur special on June 23.\nBEAUMONT REGISTRATION EVENT - May 20 Celebrity Jock Mahoney\n(Tarzan, Rangerider) attended this event in behalf of the\nYoung Voters for the President. He was covered by:\nTelevision - Channel 6 (interview and actual footage\nof him going door to door - no feedback)\nChannel 4 (5 minute video tape - aired May 20)\nRadio - KAYC (10 minute show)\nKLVI (45 minute talk show)\nNewspaper - Picture story appeared on May 21 in\nBeaumont Enterprise (clipping being sent)\nANNOUNCEMENT OF STUDENT LEADERS FOR THE PRESIDENT - May 22\nIn attendance at press conference (no feedback on actual usuage,\nalthough reports are that most media carried something):\nTelevision: KTTV, KTLA, KNBC (NBC), KHJ, KABC (ABC), KCOP and\nTheta Cable television\n*We provided color film to the students' hometowns (10).\n*We provided color sound film to 17 California stations.\nNewspapers - Los Angeles Times (clipping attached), Los Angeles\nHerald-Examiner (clipping attached), Christian Science\nMonitor, UPI, and AP\n*We provided to all hometown newspapers (of the\nparticipants) with photographs and individualized\npress releases (one clipping attached, no feedback\non others)\n-3-\nRadio - Radio News West (25 stations in Calif.), Mutual Broad-\ncasting (27 Calif., 50 national), KNX-CBS, KBVQ, KHJ,\nKFI, KRLA, Western International News Service (30 stations)\n*We made audio telephone feeds to 50 California stations\nand to hometown stations in all national regions.\nPallas Morning\nGOP Plans Big Pu\nTo Register Voters\nFriday, May 19, 1972\n5\n4/13/72\nThe Ballas florning Nrms\nFort Worth Bureau\nPolitics\nFORT WORTH -The\npublican party is planning\nReturn\nDI\nCost\nData\nIntensive\nin in re\nter vorers the Nov\nber general crion.\nAustin Bureau\nconvention in San Antonio\nIN THE lieutenant gover-\ning support to the Democrat-\nsor-collector Reed Ster\nAUSTIN-County chairmen\nthis week.\nnor's race, Bill Hobby said\nic contince for president\ntold county commissio\nif political parties have been\nSigners 0 (the Briscoe en-\n\"I have always opposed\nU.S. SEN. JOHN TOWER\nFriday.\nrged by Secretary of State\nforced busing\" in schools and\nwill parricipate in a special\nStewart said GOP too\nBob Bullock to get their esti-\ndorsement include city man-\nhe denounced opponent\nWayne Connally for trying to\nvoter registration drive in\nhave asked him to COT\nnates of June 3 election ex-\nager Scott McDonald of Dal-\nraise this as an issue.\nDallas Saturday after mak-\n300 persons to register\nenses to him pemptly.\nlas, Mayors George Boyce of\nBullock said costs of the\nMesquire. William H. Larkin 1\nHobby also charged that\ning a fire ant inspection tour\ners. The assessor-coll\nthe \"infamous Parr ma-\nthrough Southeast Texas with\nsaid they plan to begin\nunoff should be less than the\nof Waxahachie, Vernon\nn.\nCowning of Lancaster, Joe\nchine\" had supported Con-\nundersecretary of agricul-\nrst primary because of the\nnally in the first primary. He\nture J. Phil Campbell.\nspected lighter vote. Fewer\nRamsey of Greenville, Bill\nian half the county chair-\nNeu of Denton and John Gat-\ncited Connaily's 4.017 votes\nTower and Camphell will\nnen have returned their C.6.i-\nin Duval County to 160 for\ntour the Eagle Lake and\n11 of San Antonio. More than\nates for the runoff. War-\nHobby. 74 for sen. Joe Chris-\nWharton area Saturday\n200 city officials signed the\nants are issued on the basis\nendorsement.\ntie and 30 for Sen. Ralph\nmorning to inspect a special\n( three-fourths the estimat-\nHall. Hobby also accused\nfire ant eradication program.\nd cost of holding the elec-\nFRANCES FARENTHOLD,\nConnally of signing the\nThe voter registration\nion.\nBriscoe's opponent. talked of\n\"scandalous\" Sharptstown\ndrive in Dallas is being spon-\nAfter the election, pay-\ntaxes on a hedgehopping air-\nbanking legislation SO it\nsored jointly by the Com-\nnents are made on the basis\nplane tour from Denton to\ncould come up in the Scnate.\nmittee to re-elect the Presi-\nof a sworn statement plus\nTexarkana and Tyler. She\nConnally charged Hobby\ndent, Texans for Tower and\nancelled checks.\npromised to exercise frugal-\nwith fonce-straddling on\nthe state Republican parry.\nity iin government, and to\nschool busing, support of par-\nTower will appear at a cnf-\nDOLPH BRISCOE'S head-\nseek taxes on corporate prof-\nty nominces for president\nfee for workers in the voter\njuarters announced endorse-\nits if more revenue is need-\nand other questions. The can-\nregistration \"blitz\" at the\nnent of the gubernatorial\ned. She said no tax increase\ndidate quoted from Hobby's\nPromenade Shopping Center,\nandidate by a number of\nwould be levied on individ-\nnewspaper, the Houston\nBeltline and Coit Road. Also\nity officials attending their\nuals or homeowners.\nPost, as saying the ony cir-\nparticipating in the ceremony\ncumstance under which Hob-\nwill be Edward Nixon. broth-\nby would support Richard\ner of the President, Dallas\nNixon for president this year\nCongressman Jim Collins and,\nis if George Wallace won the\nRobert Fuller, television star\nDemocratic nomination.\nstar.\nLabor's Committee on Po-\nSaturday night Tower will\nlitical Education endorsed\nattend the Dallas gridiron\nHobby on the basis of pledg-\ndinner.\nMorning\nliws 5/20/12\nDallas Times Herald\nNixon younn error\nclaimed success\nPresident Nixon is not about per cent of the mock elections\nto concede anything on the so-\nand conventions that have\ncalled \"youth vote,\" says Ken\nbeen held at colleges and high\nRietz. national director of the\nschools.\"\nYoung Voters for the Presi-\nWhat has Nixon got to offer\ndent.\nthe young?\nSinatra\n\"A decision was made to go\n\"We are running on the\nafter the youth vote. got\nPresident's record, whether\nsings one\n25 million new voters and to\nit's an older person or a young\nsit back and say we can't get\nperson,\" Rietz said. \"We are\nfor Agnew\nany of them is pretty ridicu-\nstressing the President helped\nlous,\" Rietz said.\nthe 18-year-old get the vote.\nthat he endorsed it as a candi-\nHe was in Dallas Saturday\nBALTIMORE (UPI)-Sunger\nfor a voter registration drive\ndate and signed it into law.\n-Dallas News Staff Photo.\nFrank Sinatra came out of a\nin behalf of Nixon and Sen.\n\"He is ending the draft and\nen Rictz\n\"What\n14-month returement Friday to\nJohn Tower.\nhas put in a lottery system\ne're trying to do is in-\nsing at an extravaganza honor-\nHe said in the 10 months\nwhich affects every single\nde young people in a\ning Vice President Spiro T.\nsince the Young Voters cam-\nyoung American. The Presi-\nAgrew.\npaign was initiated \"we have\ndont's winding down of the\neaningful way.\n\"I feel like haven't worked\nbeen more successful than\nwar has been a very popular\n1 years, Sinatra told the\nissue with them.\nPresident's Forces\nanybody ever thought we\nlack-tic audience at the state\nwould be.\"\n\"A third of the White House\ntepublican fund-raiser \"A Sa-\nPresident Nixon, he claimed,\nstaff is under 30 years old and\nite to Ted Agnew Night.'\nhad more youngsters working\nmost of the young people are\nbeek Young Voters\nSinatra retired March 23,\nfor him in the New Hampshire\nin key positions, not just mes-\n971, and had not sung in pub-\nprimary \"than McCarthy in\nsengers.\"\nc since. Sinatra said back-\nBy CAROLYN BARTA\n1968 or McGovern in 1972.\"\nRietz said alothough college\nmany of these new voters are\ntage following the perform-\n\"The President has won 90\ncampuses are tough grounds to\nKen Rietz, the man who\ngoing to vote in November,\nnce that this was his last\nplow for the President, sur-\nccessfully engineered a\nRietz said, but he noted that ublic song. even at Republi-\n.*\nveys show him leading other\nnning U.S. senatorial cam-\nNixon is running ahead in\nan fund raising occasions.\nhopefuls, including George\nign in Tennessee two years\nTailoring a rendition of \"The\nMcGovern, the Democratic\ncollege\npolls\nand\nsuccess\nady is a Tramp\" from the\nfrontrunner of the moment.\n0. partly by involving\nupg people. is now mar-\nmay depend on how many of show \"Pal Joey,\" Sinatra paid\nSurveys also show most\naling the youth vote for\nthe young people are regis- ribute to the former Maryland\nyoungsters are going along\nesident Nixon,\ntered.\ngovernor.\nwith the President's bombing\nNational director of Young\n\"He has the gall to call the\nThirty per cent of the eligi-\nand mining decision in Viet-\nters for the President.\npress a mess, that's this gen-\nnam, at least for the \"short\nble new young voters are tleman He's champ.'\nterm.\"\n212 is going after the 25\nnow registered. Rictz expects\nllion new voters in the 18\nBut he emphasized nobody\n21-year-old range-firs: to\nthat number to reach 60 per\non the Nixon team was \"fcol-\ncent by election day. which is\nish enough\" to believe Nixen\nt them registered and SPC-\nwould remain as popular as he\nd convince them to vote\nthe national average of all\nis now if the Vietnam situa\nNixon and get involved in\nvoters.\ntion deteriorated.\ncampaign.\nNow on Icave of absence\n\"If the situation is real bad\n'No one can predict Fow\nfrom the advertising public\nin November the President is\nin trouble with all voters, not\nrelations firm of Allison. Tre-\njust young voters,\" Rictz said.\nleaven and Rictz, the 30-\nyear-old Rietz was campaign\nmanager for Bill Brock in\nthe Tennessee contest for\nU.S. Senate in 1970.\nHe is in Dallas to help kick\noff a giant voter registration\nblitz Saturday, which begins\nat 10 a.m. at Promenade\nShopping Center. More than\n300 volunteers will be sworn\nin as deputy registrars for\nthe 1-day drive.\nAngle\nHurris\nER- of 05/24/72\nA-12. THE SAN DIEGO UNION\nNixon Supported\nBy College Group\nSon Diego Union Staff Dispotch\nSACRAMENTO - Lt. Gov. release of American prisoners\nEd Reinocke, saying protesters\nof war.\nagainst President Nixon's deci-\nJuel Piasta, student president\nat the University of San Fran-\nsign 10 mine Halphong harber:\ncisco. announced formation of a\nwere not representative of the similar group. Student Leaders\nmajority, yesterday introduced for the President.\nleaders of Students for Peace in\nNIXON'S TRIPS CITED\nVietnam to a press conference.\nPiasta said Mr. Nixon, \"by\nHe- said the newly formed\ngoing to China and Russia has\ngroup was typical of a majority\ngone farther than other Ameri-\nof the nation's students who\ncan presidents toward building\nhave \"demonstrated they're\nthe structure of peace.\"\ntired of violence. tired of pró-\nHe said student presidents at\ntest for the sake of protest.\nEast Los Angeles College. Call-I\n1,000 SIGN PETITION\nfornia State College at Fuller-\nA spokesman for about 40 stu-\nton. Pepperdine University and\ndents accompanying Reinecke\nothers will visit California\n- Steve Block, a freshman in\ncampuses \"to speak to stu-\ndents, 10 try to organize them\"\ninternational studies at the Uni-\nin support ni the Nixon admin-i\nversity of California at Davis\nistration's Vietnam policies.\nsaid about 1.000 students on his:\nBill Feeney, another UC Davis\ncampus signed a petition sup-\nfreshman. said antiwar stu-\nporting Mr. Nixon's Victnam\ndents utilizing \"sensational tac-\nties\" have garnered more head-\npolicies, and that copies of the\nlines from the nation's medial\npetition were being sent to all than these who quietly support\nother campuses in the state.\nthe President.\nThe student group. Block \"But remember.\" he said,\nsaid, \"organized 10 openly sup- \"the 1,000 students who signedi\nport the President for ins ac- petitions at CC Davis were 800\ntions for obtainment of a sin- more than the 200 who sat on\ncere peace.\"\nthe railroad tracks\" recently in\n\"We.do not advocate war, he a student-organized demonstra-\nadded.: \"We feel President Nix- tion to delay trains.\non's recent offer to the North:\nVietnamese was fair and real\nsonable, and should be accept-\ned.\"\nBlock said U.S. military 3C-\nLions against North Vietnam\nwere accompanied by a \"gener-\nous\" peace offer - withdrawal\nof all American troops four\nmonths after a cease-fure and\nReinecke,\nStudents\nfeet in Sn6dgrass Slough south of the\nElliott Ranch property - is proof of\nFor Nixon\nnavigability.\nSF chronicing\nSac\nER\ngy\nSSacramento 5/24/72\nAbout 30 students and\nStudents Who\nLieutenant Governor Ed\nReinecke announced a\nstatewide petition dirve\nBack Nixon 5/23/22\nyesterday to show that\nmany students support\nPresident Nixon's Viet-\nnam policy.\nPolicy Speak\nDisplaying about 1000 sig-\nnatures of students backing\nRepresentatives of two groups of\nMr. Nixon, Steve Block, a\nstudents supporting President Nix-\nDemocrat and a student at\non's policies in Indochina held a news\nthe University of California,\nconference today in the Capitol, seek-\nDavis, told newsmen he\ning \"to dispel the myth that all stu-\nthought Mr. Nixon's last\ndents are against the President.\"\npeace offer was \"very gen-\nerons\" and called on U. S.\nThey conceded they have an uphill\ncitizens to unite behind the\nfight. But Joe Piasta, student body\npresident.\npresident at the University of San\n\"We do not think dissent is\nFrancisco and representing the \"Stu-\nwrong,\" he said, \"hut the\ndent Leaders for Nixon,\" argued:\nmore dissent the less the\n\"The only thing students are unani-\nchances are for peace in\nmous on is that they want peace in\nVietnam.\"\nVietnam.\" He predicted Nixon will\nBlock, who initiated the\nget a large number of student votes,\npetition drive last week. said\ncontending that when students go to\ndespite \"peer pressure\" that\nthe polls in November \"in the last\nmakes students \"afraid to\nanalysis, they will judge him (Nixon)\ntalk against\" protest leaders\non whether peace has arrived, not on\nhe has found that many stu-\nthe mining of Halphong Harbor or\ndents support the President.\nthe invasion of Cambodia.\"\nThe students formed a\nnew group called Students\nSteve Block, a student on the Davis\nfor Peace in Victnam to col-\ncampus of the University of Califor-\nlect the signatures from Cal-\nnia and a representative of \"Students\nMornia compuses.\nfor Peace In Vietnam.\" said be and\n\"It's pretty hard to get\nothers have circulated petitions sup-\n(news) coverage if you don't\nporting Nixon and have guthered 1,-\nsit on railroad tracks or tern\n000 signatures on the Davis campus\nover a few ears,\" Chick\nalone. He said plans are under way to\nsaid. Nonetheless, he said\ncirculate the petitions on other cam-\nthere was widespread sta-\npuses.\ndent support for Mr. Nixon's\nBut, he added, it is difficult to get\npolicies.\npress coverage at Davis \"unless we sit.\n\"Students on entiplises to-\non the railroad tracks or turn over\nday are demonstrating that\ncars.\"\nthey are tired of violent pro-\ntest,\" said Reinecke, who\narranged the news confer-\nence.\nUnited Press\nMetro Page\nThe Sacramento Union\nWednesday Morning, May 24, 1972\nPage A3\nAssist From Reinecke\nTwo Campus Movements\nBack Nixon Peace Plan\nBy JACK WOODARD\ncommittee, headed by USC student body\nTim Brockman, East Los Angeles Col-\nPolitical Writer\npresident Kent Clemence.\nlege student body president and a former\nPiasta said the committe backs both\nhelicopter pilot in Vietnam. said the\nWith an assist from Lt. Gov. Ed Re-\nNixon's foreign policy and his domestic\nNixon administration's coals are just\nInecke, leaders of two campus move-\nprograms, including revenue sharing. the\nHe said the President wants only an\nments in support of President Nixon's\n18-year-old vote and draft reforms.\nhonorable peace and to guarantee the\nVietnam peace plan met the press Tues-\n'We'll speak to students on our cam-\nright of self-determination of t.e people\nday in the Capitol.\npuses and urge them to vote for President\nof South Victnam.\n\"We had to do something drastic to get\nNixon,\" he said.\nSeveral of the students complained of\non the news,\" explained Steve Block, a\nBlock and Fency said they hope to ex-\nsystematic bias by the news media to-\nUniversity of California at Davis student.\npand the petition drive in support of\nward those who commit acts of violent\nwhen asked why Reinecke's help was\nNixon's peace proposal to other campus-\nprotest and said campus newspapers are\nsought.\nes.\nradically oriented.\n\"We didn't want to pop a fire hydrant\n\"We do not advocate wor. but we think\nor sit on the railroad tracks.\nPresident Nixon's peace offer IS most fair\nTIM MORGAN, a student senstor at\nBlock and fellow UC-Davis freshman\nand should be accepted.\" said Block. \"We\nUC-Davis. said the Cal Assie newspaper\nBill Fency. both Democrats. are organiz-\ndo not feel dissent is wrong. but now it\nthere is \"devoted 100 per cent to violent\ners of Students for Peace in Victnom.\nmay jeopardize chances for peace.\nantiwar protesters.\nAlso represented at the news confer-\nA student senator from UC-Derkeley\nence arranged by Reinecke was Student\nFENEY SAID Nixon's plan was\nechood the complaint and said \".. 15 at\nLeaders for the President. a nationwide\n\"drawn to put a quick end to the war. not\nmost impossible to fet elected tastudent\ncommittee formed Monday in Los Ange-\nas a means to escalate or expand it.\" He\noffice if you support Pressdent Name\nles.\nadded that dissenters are civing and and\nThey said their only hope ni forning the\ncomfort to North Victnam and Red China\nUC papers to give non-radicats equal\nJOE PIASTA, student body president\nAbout 40 students. including members\ntreatment is by means of appeals to \" C\nof the University of San Francisco, 15\nof the student senates at UC-Davis and\nmedia boards that govern the compus\nwestern region representative on the\nUC-Berkeley, attended the gathering.\npublications.\nFYI: Teri ann from 6. Carton\nDallas Morning news\n,Thers\n5/24/72\nStudents Back\n5124\nNixon Campaign\nLOS ANGELES (Sp.) -\nEleven student body presi-\ndents representing 10 regions\nthroughout the nation an-\nnounced the formation of\nStudent Leaders for Presi-\ndent Committee. Th commit-\ntee will thelp organize cam-\npus support for President\nNixon's re-election cam-\npaign.\nCommittee chairman Kent\nClemence, president of the\nUniversity of Southern Cali-\nfornia student body. pledged\n\"a vigorous effort to get the\nPresident's message to the\nAmerican students and mobi-\nlize maximum support for\nhim on every college campus\nin the United tates.\"\nccry =2 =\nNational group formed\nThursday, May 25, 1972\nThe Grattle Times A 11\nU. W. student is Pro-Nixon leader\nRalph Anderson, former\nThe committee was\nmestic policy problems and\nlege Republicans.\nUniversity of Washington\nformed Monday in Los Ange-\nhe is the best man for the\nA political-science major,\nstudent-body president, is\nles. Anderson will serve as\njob.\"\nAnderson hopes to go into\none of 11 national student\nthe committee's representa-\nAnderson said he Is work-\nlaw. He is a senior.\nleaders who have formed the\ntive for the Pacific North-\nStudent Leaders for the\ning to set up a local organi-\nThe committee's national\nwest.\nPresident Committee to help\nAnderson said the Presi-\nzation that will embrace\nchairman is Kent Clemence,\norganize campus support for\ndent has \"exhibited great\nyoung people, 18 to 25, and\npresident of the student body\nthe re-election of President\nproficiency and courage in\nnot just collegians. He is\nat the University of Califor-\nNixon.\ndealing with foreign and do-\npresident of the U. W. Col-\nnia.\n$\nA Los Angeles Herald-Examiner, Tuesday, May 23, 1972\nA-11\nHerald-Examiner Photo\nPRESIDENT NIXON'S RE-ELECTION BOOSTED BY 11 COLLEGE STUDENT BODY LEADERS\nClaim that all the students' were against the President's policies is labeled 'hogwash'\nSTUDENT LEADERS BOOST NIXON\nPresident Richard Nixen's hody president at the University Nixon is \"moving to meet ourltens to them.\"\nre-election has been given a of Washington, said h? is im-\ndomestic needs,\" and Roger\nL. Patrick Mosher. 2. of the\nboost by 11 college student bods pressed with Nixon's domestic\nleaders from across the coun- and foreign policies.\nLee, 22, of the University of Al-\nUniversity of Texas. said the\ntry, who said there is much Gregg Adams, 20, of Wabash\nabama, said the people of the\nPresident's stands on economic\nmore backing for the Chief Ex- University in Indiana. said he\nSouth realize the President \"lis-\ncontrols impress him.\necutive on the nation's campus--agrees with the President's for-\nes than most people realize.\n(eign policies, while Jeff- Wis-\nThe young leaders, who said well, 21, of the University of\nthey have the backing of more\nWisconsin, saw the trip to China\nthan 100 student leaders across\nas a stroke of \"diplomatic gen-\nthe nation, outlined their rea-lius.\"\nsons for supporting the Presi-\nMark Tulis, 21, of Brandeis\ndent during a news conference\nUniversity, said the President is\nyesterday at the Los Angeles\npresponsive to the needs of\nPress Club.\nAmericans,\" and Joe Plasta, 20.\nKent Clemence, 22. student nf the University of San Fran-\nbody president at the Universityleisco, lauded the President's\nof Southern California, sandiforeign and domestic stands.\nclaims that \"all the students\" Bruce Bishop. 20. of Old Do-\nwere against Mr. Nixon's poli- minion College in Virginia, said\ncies were \"hogwash\" and that!\nthere was \"strong\" support for\nthe President at USC.\nJohn Ramay. 22, student body\npresident at South Dakota State\nUniversity, said a recent mock\nelection on his campus in the\nhome state of Sen. George Mc-\nGovern was won by President\nNixon.\nRaiph Anderson. 11, It. student"
}