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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Digital Library Collections This is a PDF of a folder from our textual collections. Collection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers, 1966-74: Press Unit Folder Title: Press Releases - May 1967 [05/01/1967 - 05/18/1967] Box: P7 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 4.28.67 SCHEDULE MAY 1-7 MONDAY, MAY 1 11:45 am Luncheon: University of Southern California Law Day Banquet; Biltmore Bowl, Biltmore Hotel, Los Angeles. Speech 1:30 pm Depart Biltmore Hotel by car 2:35 pm Depart Los Angeles International Airport, PSA #483 3:25 pm Arrive Sacramento Airport TUESDAY, May 2 9:30 am Press Conference; Room 1190 12:00 Noon Luncheon; Eighth grade class from Pleasant Hill; West lawn of the Capitol WEDNESDAY, May 3 11:45 am Meeting: His Excellency Charles Lucet, French Ambassador to the United States; Governor's Office 6:15 pm Drop-by Kern County Products reception; American Legion Post #61, 15th & H Streets 6:45 pm Depart reception THURSDAY, May 4 10:00 am Meeting: Regional Directors of the Community Action Program; Council Room FRIDAY, May 5 8:30 am Depart Sacramento Airport, chartered plane 9:30 am Arrive Los Angeles International Airport Proceed to Los Angeles Office 6:30 pm Reception: in honor of Bob Beverly, Republican candidate for the 46th Assembly District seat; Hacienda Hotel, 525 North Sepulveda, El Segundo 7:00 pm Depart reception overnight Los Angeles SATURDAY, MAY 6 3:00 pm Dedication of new facilities at Orange County Airport, remarks 7:00 pm Dinner: United Republicans of California Convention Long Beach Arena, 270 E. Seaside Blvd. 8:30 pm Speech overnight Los Angeles SUNDAY, MAY 7 No public appointments scheduled at this time JAK/229 OFFICE OF THE GOVERN Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.1.67 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sacramento--David K. Rowe, 45, a Paso Robles businessman, has been namedemilitary aide to Governor Ronald Reagan. An Air Reserve Lieutenant Colonel, Rowe has 26 years of mili- tary service, active and reserve. A flying officer in both World War II and Korea, he is a member of the 9379th Air Reserve Squadron, headquartered at Camp San Luis Obispo. As military aide he will be concerned with military protocol and serve as liaison officer between the Adjutant General, Head- quarters Military Department and the Governor's Office. A native of Paso Robles, Rowe was educated in Pasadena and Glendale City schools and is a graduate of San Luis Obispo Jr. Col- lege. He has been in business in Paso Robles since 1946 and has been active in community and civic and reserve military affairs. He and his wife, Elizabeth Ann, have three children. They are: David III, in basic training at Ft. Leonard Wood, Missouri; Sue Ann, a student at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo; and Shawn O., a Paso Robles junior high school student. # # # LN/230 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.3.67 FOR RELEASE MAY 4, 1967, 7 a.m. PDT WASHINGTON--California's recommendations for flood control appropriations and reclamation projects for fiscal year 1968 were presented to the Appropriations Subcommittee of the House Public Works Committee today. Governor Ronald Reagan's statement on the recommendations was given by William R. Gianelli, Director of the State Department of Water Resources. The total recommended appropriations of $60,520,000 for flood control and $103,872,000 for reclamation projects represent the unified position of the State of California, Governor Reagan said. Recommendations were arrived at following a series of meetings with local and state agencies and federal representatives. The proposals also were reviewed by the California Water Commission. "Totals are slightly higher than last year's appropriation," the Governor said, "but we feel the recommendations are entirely realistic and have been stripped of all non-essentials." Also representing the State at the Subcommittee hearing were Ira J. Chrisman, Chairman of the California Water Commission, and Edgar Gillenwaters, Deputy Director of Finance. The suggested appropriations follow: PB/231 FEDERAL FLOOD CONTROL PROGRAM IN CALIFORNIA FISCAL YEAR 1967-68 State Project County Recommendation Alameda Creek Alameda $ 4,300,000 Buchanan Dam Madera 500,000 Bullards Bar Dam Yuba 5,040,000 Corte Madera Creek Marin 300,000 Dry Creek Reservoir Sonoma 2,000,000 Eel River Delta Humboldt 250,000 Hidden Dam Madera 500,000 Klamath Relocation Del Norte 750,000 Los Angeles County Drainage Los Angeles 12,900,000 Lower San Joaquin River Several 884,000 Lytle and Warm Creeks San Bernardino 350,000 Martis Creek Placer 700,000 Marysville Dam Yuba 100,000 -2- Federal Flood Control Program in California, FY 1967-68 (Continued) State Project County Recommendation Mojave River Reservoir San Bernardino $ 1,880,000 Mormon Slough San Joaquin 650,000 Napa River Napa 300,000 New Melones Reservoir Calaveras Tuolumne 2,750,000 Oroville Reservoir Butte 13,700,000 Pajaro River Monterey 150,000 Pine Flat Dam and Channel Work. Fresno-Kings 500,000 Redwood Creek Humboldt 2,000,000 Russian River Sonoma Channelization Mendocino 250,000 Sacramento River Bank Protection Several 1,700,000 Sacramento River Tributaries Several 420,000 San Diego River, Mission Valley San Diego 800,000 -3- Federal Flood Control Program in California, FY 1967-68 (Continued) State Project County Recommendation San Francisco Bay to Stockton Several $ 700,000 Scotts Creek Lakeport Reservoir Lake 100,000 Sonoma Creek Sonoma 150,000 Tahquitz Creek Riverside 200,000 Walnut Creek Contra Costa 2,900,000 TOTAL $57,724,000 -4- SURVEYS State Continuing Surveys County Recommendation Bear River, Garden Bar Yuba $ 30,000 Upper Sacramento River Butte - Glenn - and Butte Basin Colusa - Sutter 75,000 Coon Creek Stream Group Placer - Sutter 35,000 Upper Putah Creek Basin Napa - Lake 35,000 Walnut Creek Restudy (Upper Basin) Contra Costa 100,000 Morrison Creek Sacramento 51,000 Northern California Streams Several 175,000 Sacramento-San Joaquin Rivers Delta Several 35,000 Delta Recreation Study Several 12,000 Sacramento Valley Navigation, Star Bend Yuba - Sutter 25,000 San Francisco District Eel River, Comprehensive Several 254,000 Mad River, Butler Valley Dam Humboldt 60,000 -5- Surveys (continued) State Continuing Surveys County Recommendation Novato Creek Marin $ 45,000 Russian River Basin Sonoma - Mendocino 77,000 Klamath River, Comp. Humboldt - Del Norte 75,000 Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta Model and Water Quality Several 500,000 San Francisquito Creek San Mateo - Santa Clara 10,000 Smith River Del Norte 50,000 Pacific Coastal Streams San Mateo 85,000 Los Angeles District Deer, Day, Etiwanda and San Bernardino San Sevaine Creeks Riverside 79,000 San Dieguito River Review Report San Diego 80,000 Santa Ana River and Riverside - Orange - Orange County San Bernardino 280,000 Santa Barbara County Streams Santa Barbara 82,000 -6- Surveys (continued) Los Angeles District (continued) State Continuing Surveys County Recommendation Santa Clara River, Ventura - Comprehensive River Los Angeles $ $ 186,000 Study Whitewater River, Desert Hot Springs and Vicinity (Interim Report) Riverside 80,000 Calleguas Creek Ventura 75,000 TOTAL $ 2,641,000 New Survey Starts Carmel River Monterey 25,000 San Joaquin River Basin Several 25,000 Salinas River Monterey 25,000 San Lorenzo River Upper Basin Santa Cruz 25,000 Antelope Valley Los Angeles 30,000 San Diego County Streams - Pacific Ocean San Diego 15,000 Petaluma River Sonoma Marin 10,000 TOTAL $ 155,000 -7- Suggested Appropriations for Reclamation Items, 1967-68 State Project Program County Recommendation CENTRAL VALLEY PROJECT Trinity River Division Distribution Systems and Cleanup Work Shasta $ 717,000 Sacramento River Division Tehama-Colusa Canal, Fish Facilities and Distribution Systems Glenn 9,966,000 Delta Division Contra Loma Reservoir, Delta-Mendota Canal Rehabilitation Contra Costa 1,470,000 American River Division Auburn Dam, preconstruction Placer-El Dorado- activities on Folsom-South Sacramento-San Canal Joaquin 9,700,000 San Luis Division San Luis Facilities, Pleasant Valley Canal, Westlands Dist. System Additional Amount for Merced - Westlands W. D. System Fresno 55,880,000 Klamath Project Drainage Modoc 269,000 Washoe Project Stampede Reservoir Nevada 4,300,000 Pacific Northwest Power Intertie Transmission I 6,960,000 -8- Suggested Appropriations for Reclamation Items, 1967-68 State Project Program County Recommendation CENTRAL VALLEY PROJECT (continued) Loan Program Local Agency Systems: Arvin- Edison WSD Distribution System Kern $12,980,000 Camarosa County Water District Ventura 9,000,000 Byron-Bethany Irrigation District San Joaquin 2,260,000 Nevada Irrigation District Nevada - Placer 359,000 685,000 Eastern Municipal Water District Riverside 646,000 Banta Carbona San Joaquin 30,000 General Investigations Planning 1,630,000 Total Federal Appropriation $103,872,000 -9- Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofzi r MEMO T "HE PRESS 445=4571 5.2.67 The following bills have been signed by Governor Ronald Reagan: APRIL 25, 1967 SB 11 - Chapter 49 provides additional $206,000 to Dept. of McAteer Veterans Affairs to provide educational S: Unanimous assistance benefits to dependents of dead A: Unanimous or disabled California veterans for the current fiscal year SB 44 - Chapter 50 removes requirement that notary's name be Grunsky typed or printed under his signature on cer- S: 31 Ayes; 1 No tificate of proof of acknowledgement of var- A: Unanimous ious instruments; requires notaries to use seal containing date commission expires; changes maximum size of notary's seal SB 149 - Chapter 51 increases salaries of members of Mendocino Collier County Board of Supervisors to $7,800 a year; S: Unanimous Del Norte Board of Supervisors to $4,200 a A: Unanimous year; Siskiyou Board of Supervisors to $5,400 a year; also increases salary of Siskiyou County Auditor to $11,400 a year SB 275 - Chapter 52 amends Civil Code to require that any agree- Danielson ment to purchase, sell, lease for a period S: Unanimous longer than one year, or find a purchaser or A: Unanimous seller of real property must be in writing. SB 321 - Chapter 53 increases fee charged by notary public for McAteer transcribing a deposition to 55 cents per S: 22 Ayes; 5 Noes hundred words: increased to 20 cents per A: Unanimous hundred words fee charged any party other than the party purchasing the original tran- scription of a deposition for the first copy SB 357 - Chapter 54 provides that all or part of revenues from Grunsky motor vehicle parking facilities set up by S: 30 Ayes; 2 Noes State College Trustees may be pledged as A: Unanimous security for notes or bonds issued pursuant to State College Revenue Bond Act of 1947 AB 53 - Chapter 55 requires a one-half inch margin on two sides H. Johnson of printed forms primarily intended to be S: Unanimous used for recordation purposes; requires top A: Unanimous 2½ inches of first page be reserved for recording information; provides that if printed form does not comply with above, it shall not affect notice otherwise given under the recording act AB 54 - Chapter 56 requiresnames of parties under which an in- H. Johnson strument, paper, or notice is to be indexed S: Unanimous and names of all who execute or witness them A: Unanimous to be legibly signed, typed, or printed thereon; makes various provisions governing methods of indexing of instruments applicable also to paper and notices, and provides that such provisions apply where material is pre- sented for filing; requires separate record- ing fees for instruments, papers or notices attached to each other or serially incorpor- ated. AB 55 - Chapter 57 increases fee to county recorder for each H. Johnson certificate under sea to $1.00; eliminates S: Unanimous $1.00 marriage licens fee AB 56 - Chapter 58 permits board of supervisors of any county, H. Johnson at request of county recorder, to authorize S: Unanimous destruction of any or all of filed papers or A: Unanimous record books created under Land Title Law: records must be microfilmed before destruc- tion AB 107 - Chapter 59 corrects incorrect reference in a Health Veysey and Safety Code provision relating to the S: Unanimous sanitation of vehicles A: Unanimous AB 125 - Chapter 60 establishes procedure whereby a candidate MacDonald & Townsend for municipal office may obtain a recount; S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 154 - Chapter 61 requires criminal case subpoena service to Powers include delivering a copy to the persons S: Unanimous serviced; permits service to a peace officer A: Unanimous to be made personally or to his immediste superior or agent designated by his superior whenever peace officer is required as wit- ness in connection with a matter investi- gated in the course cf his duties; also pro- vides that in specified circumstances such immediate superior may refuse to accept such service or may be excused from delivering a subpoena to peace officer served AB 195 - Chapter 62 provides for exceptions to Water Code pro- Porter visions covering recordation of water extrac- S: Unanimous tions and diversions and statements of water A: Unanimous diversions and use with State Water Rights Bd AB 277 - Chapter 63 corrects incorrect cross-reference in a Knox Business and Professions Code provision re- S: Unanimous lating to subdivision maps A: Unanimous AB 318 - Chapter 64 amends Code of Civil Procedure by increasing Foran to $6.00 fee for filing abstracts of judg- S: Unanimous ment for purposes of supplemental proceed- A: Unanimous ings when filed in superior or municipal court in county other than where judgment roll is filed AB 320 - Chapter 65 increased to 150 miles distance within which Foran person owing debts to a defendant or possess- S: Unanimous ing property of a defendant is required to A: Unanimous attend before the judge or referee outside the county in which such person resides or has place of business, for purposes of exam- ination in attachment proceedings. AB 413 - Chapter 56 changes boundaries of a fire protection dis- Vasconcellos trict as result of detachment of territory S: Unanimous on March 7, 1967, effective for assessment A: Unanimous and taxation purposes if the regional state- ment and map or plat is filed by the district with assessor and State Board of Equaliza- tion on or before March 10, 1967; prohibits district from furnishing such services or levying taxes on property in territory on or after July 1, 1967 AB 470 - Chapter 67 requires that majority of precinct board be Murphy present at all times the case of munici- S: Unanimous pal elections A: Unanimous AB 702 - Chapter 68 amends and repeals certain sections of the Bagley Business and Professions Code. S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 714 - Chapter 69 repeals certain provisions of Revenue and Bagley Taxation Code relative to motor vehicle S: Unanimous fuel tax A: Unanimous AB 718 - Chapter 70 amends and repeals certain sections of the Bagley Water Code S: Unanimous A: Unanimous APRIL 26, 1967 SB 227 - Chapter 71 permits sale of water treatment plant at Teale DeWitt State Hospital to either County of S: Unanimous Placer or Nevada Irrigation District if A: Unanimous terms are in best interests of State and will not result in increase in cost of water to hospital SB 250 - Chapter 72 revises provisions of Code of Civil Proced- Bradley ure relating to new trial on grounds of ex- S: Unanimous cessive damages, insufficiency of evidence A: Unanimous and evidence not justifying verdict or against law; authorizes granting motion for new trial on ground of inadequate damages subject to denial if person against whom verdict is rendered consents to addition of such amount as court determines SB 358 - Chapter 73 increases to $10,000 the maximum amount of Danielson contract which county purchasing agent of a S: Unanimous county with population of more than 900,000 A: 71 Ayes; 1 No may enter into if board of supervisors by ordinance so directs AB 111 - Chapter 74 requires Governor or his designee to receive Porter preliminary reports developed during inves- S: Unanimous tigative phase of proposed federal flood con- A: Unanimous trol and reclamation projects; also requires Governor or his designee to transmit copies of such reports to Legislature for its written comments and requires that such comments be transmitted to appropriate fed- eral agency AB 411 - Chapter 75 provides that vacancy in office of sheriff Biddle shall be filled by assistant sheriff, under- S: Unanimous sheriff, or chief deputy until vacancy is A: Unanimous filled -0- NOTE: Bills signed will be announced at the press briefing each morning; written confirmation will be issued once a week. JAK/232 OFFICE OF THE GOVERN RELEASE: 1 ediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.3.67 Governor Ronald Reagan today urged key state agricultural officials to work closely with other governmental agencies, farmers and the private sector to assess problems created by California's extremely wet spring. He said he has asked the State Board of Agriculture, working with the State Department of Agriculture, to assess the impact of the unusual weather on California's agriculture. The State Board of Agriculture will meet here Thursday. The state board and the department were asked by Governor Reagan to jointly explore with farmers, other state agencies, federal bureaus, financial institutions, insurance companies, suppliers of farm input items, processors and transportation companies to determine what action business and industry take to relieve problems caused by the heavy rainfall. "Earl Coke, director of the Department of Agriculture, and Allan Grant, president of the State Board of Agriculture, have assured me they are making every effort to find out the extent of the damage and to pinpoint areas where assistance can be made available," the governor said, adding: "The number of individual farmers suffering complete or substantial losses of crops or trees, or related production due to lack of feed, is still unknown. "At the same time, the magnitude of the economic losses of farm workers and supporting agricultural industries has not been determined. "It appears that economic losses to agriculture and related industries will involve all sections of the state," he said. "Therefore, it is imperative that all sections of our agricultural economy begin working together to determine not only the extent of the damage but also what can be done to assist farmers and others affected by the adverse weather." # # # PB/233 OFFICE OF THE GOVER R Sacramento, Califor, Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.3.67 FOR IMMEDIATE. RELEASE Sacramento--State Finance Director Gordon P. Smith has signed an order transferring 11.5 million dollars from the state general fund to the health care deposit fund to carry financing of the state's Medi-Cal program through the remainder of this week. The transfer was made at the request of Gov. Ronald Reagan, who said it is necessary to prevent interruptions in the State Medi- Cal Program. In addition, Smith said he is prepared to transfer another 16 million dollars, that ordinarily would be used to pay off year's end medicare bills, to see the program through until May 15. Reason for the transfer of funds is the federal government's failure to come up with its share--equal to the combined state- county share--of medicare funds. A supplemental appropriation has passed the House of Represen- tatives but is still before the Senate. Smith said it is hoped federal funds will be made available by May 15. He pointed out that as of Tuesday the state had only $600,000 in its medical account and had two million dollars worth of bills to pay. Without the federal funds the state will be unable to pay bills from May 15 to May 30. On June 1 another 11.5 million dollars of state funds will become available but Smith said it will not be possible to use this amount any sooner because of the way the law is written. The failure of the Congress to pass the supplemental appro- priation means the state must shoulder the full medical load tem- porarily. Ordinarily the 11.5 million dollars is programmed with federal and county funds to meet the costs of the medicare program through the entire month. # # # LN/234 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger Thurs AMS 445-4571 5.3.67 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sacramento--A transportation committee to recommend a master plan for California transportation was announced today by Gov. Ronald Reagan. "This is an enormous task, and I am asking men with vision and brains to join us in comprehensive transportation planning," Reagan said. "Transportation now and in the future affects every citizen and proper planning is a vital need for California," he said. Gov. Reagan has asked 21 California citizens, mostly involved in the transportation industry or planning groups, to work with Gordon C. Luce, State Administrator of Transportation, and other representatives of government. Expert consultants will be asked to participate at the first meeting planned for May 25 in Sacramento. Luce also will coordinate a Governor's Transportation Conference to include all persons in the State involved in transportation. This conference is being planned for October in Sacramento. The Governor said in a letter to those invited to join the committee that California is a recognized leader in the field of highway transportation. But he noted that effective communication between all trans- portation entities in the State and overall integrated planning is essential. The objectives of the committee will include determining the role of the State, the proper organizational structure to accomplish such a role, the value of existing transportation studies and forms of transportation for the future. Gov. Reagan also pointed out that the Transportation Agency will continue its present role of coordinating the Departments of Public Works, Motor Vehicles, and California Highway Patrol with an eye toward integrated planning with other modes of transportation in the State. The Agency has already recommended a closer and increased role with the Board of Aeronautics. The committee membership is composed of a cross section of California transportation. Airlines, airports, the general aviation industry, railroads, bus companies, maritime shipping and trucking have been asked to provide members. The Southern California Rapid Transit System, Bay Area Rapid Transit System, the Auto Club of Southern California, the Auto Club of Northern California, Transportation Agency of Southern Cali- fornia and the Bay Area Transit Study also are included. In addition, other California cities with planning groups, an architect, an engineer, an academic person and the State Chamber of Commerce have been asked to serve. Advisory members to be invited in addition to Luce are: Chairman, Senate Transportation Committee; Chairman, Assembly Traneportation Committee: representative from the League of California Cities; representative from the County Supervisors Assn.; a repre- sentative from the State Public Utilities Commission; and a repre- sentative from the California Division of Highways. # # # LN/235 HEALTH AND WELFARE AGENCY FOR MEDIATE RELEASE Sacramento, California Contact: Spencer Williams May 3, 1967 "Over my dead body," was the reaction of Spencer Williams, Administrator of the Health and Welfare Agency, to the demand of Assemblyman Charles Warren, Chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee, that Dr. James V. Lowry, Director of the Department of Mental Hygiene, be dismissed by the Reagan Administration. "Dr. Lowry is nationally acclaimed as a top man in the field of mental health," Williams said, "and California is fortunate that he has agreed to continue his service as Director of the State Department.' Dr. Lowry was first appointed to his position by former Governor Brown after a nationwide drive to recruit the best man available. In reappointing Dr. Lowry, Governor Reagan said, "I am convinced that our state government will be served best by retention of Dr. Lowry." "His reappointment by Governor Reagan was hailed throughout California by Republicans and Democrats alike," Williams said, "and any efforts by Charles Warren or others to force his removal will be over my dead body. Continuing hypocritical efforts by Warren and others to gain political mileage through exaggerated statements and foolish demands concerning the Department of Mental Hygiene can only serve to cause unwarranted alarm among the staff, patients, and patients' families, and cause serious damage to the program itself," Williams said. ####### OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.4.67 Louis J. Kroeger of 64 Pine Street, San Francisco, has been named a member of the Commission on California State Government Organization. He replaces Harold Furst, also of San Francisco. Like Furst, Kroeger is a Democrat. Kroeger is one of three governor's appointees on the commission. A graduate of the University of California, Kroeger has been a consultant on government for the last 22 years. He is a member of the firm of Griffinhagen & Kroeger. He is 58. # # # LN/236 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.4.67 Governor Ronald Reagan announced today the appointment of Virginia Allee, chief of the Division of Industrial Welfare, as his representative to the Washington Conference on the Role of American Women in the War on Poverty. Miss Allee will meet in Washington on Monday, May 8, with other leading representatives of women organizations from throughout the United States, top government officials from the 50 states and the federal government, and officials of the War on Poverty. She was briefed Thursday for her trip, including attendance at the meeting of the California Assn. of Community Action Directors. She heard the governor address the group and stress the importance of the local community in the War on Poverty. Miss Allee talked with several members of the organization about their programs and the activities of women in the War on Poverty and discussed the involvement of various state agencies in the program. In naming Miss Allee as his representative, Governor Reagan asked her to convey the message that local participants in the War on Poverty should have more control over the spending of money in the program. Miss Allee has a long history of working for the interests of people. Prior to being appointed to her present post, she held several top level positions in the retail industry in Southern California. She has been personnel director for Bullock's Department Stores, and was a vice president of J. J. Haggarty's, Inc., of Beverly Hills. She also has been active in many civic and professional organizations in Southern California where her particular interests were in the personnel field. As chief of the Division of Industrial Welfare, Miss Allee is a statutory member of the California Advisory Commission on the Status of Women. For four years prior to her being named to her present position, she served on the California Industrial Welfare Commission. # # # PB/237 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.4.67 PRESS SACRAMENTO - Gov. Ronald Reagan today issued the following statement urging all Californians to celebrate Cinco De Mayo: "Cinco De Mayo is an important Mexican holiday which is widely celebrated throughout California by our citizens of Mexican descent. "On the 5th of May 1862 a poorly equipped Mexican army defeated the regiments of the French Emperor Louis Napoleon. This victory set OUR southern neighbors on the long road leading to independence and the flourishing Republic of Mexico we know today. "Cinco De Mayo should have significance for all Americans, whatever their backgrounds. It commemorates the beginning of one nation's struggle to become free, a desire with which all Americans sympathize. "For this reason, I urge all Californians--regardless of descent to participate in the Cinco De Mayo celebrations being held throughout California this weekend. # # # LN/238 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California PRESS Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.4.67 FOR SUNDAY RELEASE Sacramento--Is capital punishment a deterrent to murder? Those who believe it is have at least two more supporters in the form of an Oakland liquor store operator and his wife. The office of Gov. Ronald Reagan recently received this letter from the wife. It is one of hundreds of letters received supporting the Governor's stand on capital punishment: The Hon. Ronald Reagan, Governor of California State Capitol Building Sacramento, California Dear Sir: By seeing to the enforcement of our law, you saved my husband's life last Sunday, when a Negro bandit knocked him down, sat on him, raised his knife high and shouted, "I am going to kill you!" My husband, struggling to hold his hand away, shouted in reply, "You may kill me, but you will go to the gas chamber for that! Will you like to go to the gas chamber?" My husband said later that upon these words, the hand holding the knife shook, and though the struggle continued for the gun and the money, the knife was put down. Then the police arrested the man and his companion. When my husband stood up again, he said to me, "Governor Reagan saved my life!" It is the life of a very good, honest man who works hard for a living--a life worthy of being saved. The best thing that has happened to us is that you became our Governor. I thank you with all my heart, and I pray that God may bless you. Yours very truly, # # # LN/239 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan announced today PRESS that he will not intervene 5.4.67 in the case of Daniel A. Roberts, scheduled to be executed on May 9 for the murder of a San Francisco landlady in 1962. Roberts was convicted of first degree murder in a jury trial, and the death penalty was unanimously affirmed by the California Supreme Court in December, 1966. Governor Reagan had earlier granted a 20-day stay of execution at the request of Roberts' attorney, Mrs. Nancy Rossi of San Leandro. The governor said that each of the questions raised by Mrs. Rossi has been thoroughly investigated, and that there is no factual basis for upsetting the decisions of the jury and the Supreme Court. "We have fully examined every facet of the case, including any matters in mitigation or extenuation, which might aid in determining whether or not to exercise executive clemency, and have found no justification for intervening in this case," he said. Roberts has had two trials, with the first, in 1963, also resulting in the death sentence by a different jury. The U.S. Supreme Court denied a stay of execution on April 17, 1967. Roberts, now 43, was convicted on November 22, 1965, of killing Mrs. Pearl Popejoy, the landlady of an apartment house on Folsom Street in San Francisco, where Roberts had been living for 3 months prior to the offense. Testimony at the trial revealed that Roberts had planned a robbery of Mrs. Popejoy to obtain the rent money which he thought she had hidden in her apartment. He had planned a subsequent getaway, and had arranged with his brother to move his belongings prior to the robbery attempt. On the night of the murder, Roberts waited until Mrs. Popejoy's husband had left for work, and then entered the apartment. The next morning the landlady's body was found hidden under a bed. Rental documents, a purse and a watch were missing from the apartment. Roberts and a woman who had been living in the apartment with him had fled from San Francisco, and were eventually captured in Oregon. Roberts had previously been twice convicted of felonies, includ- ing check offenses in 1947 and second degree murder in 1954. The 1954 conviction involved a robbery-murder situation, and Roberts was on parole for that crime at the time of the San Francisco murder. # # # LN/240 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Imn. Liate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan today named PRESS* five persons to the Local 5-5-67 Applications Advisory Board, created by the 1965 Legislature to act as a policy body to approve applications for migrant housing, education and health care. Members serve at the pleasure of the governor and are paid travel expenses. Named were: John Ventura, Fresno County Supervisor. A Republican, he succeeds Warren Church of Watsonville. Secondino C. Ramirez, Porterville Democrat, succeeding Eddie N. Perez of Los Angeles. Thomas E. Richardson, secretary to the labor committee of the California Farm Bureau Federation. Richardson, Concord Republican, replaces Ernesto G. Loredo of Poplar. Mike Schultz, associated with the El Centro growers of Mike Schultz & Son, to a new position created by the 1965 Legislature. Schultz is a Republican. Harold C. Livingston, Stanislaus County Housing Authority commissioner and Modesto farmer, also to a new position on the board. Livingston is a Democrat. # # # PB/241 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO. RELEASE: Mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.5.67 Seven persons were named today by Governor Ronald Reagan to the State Social Welfare Board. Board members serve at the pleasure of the governor and receive per diem and travel expenses for meetings. The appointments are sub- ject to Senate confirmation. Announcement of the appointment of Nelson A. Howard, owner of Nelson A. Howard Co., manufacturers representatives, San Marino, was made jointly by Governor Reagan and Assemblyman John L. E. (Bud) Collier (R-South Pasadena). Howard, a Republican who lives in Pasadena, was a director of Family Service in Los Angeles for three years and in Pasadena for two years. He succeeds Curtis C. Aller Jr. of San Francisco. Announcement of the appointment of Mrs. Mary R. Ripley, Los Angeles, was jointly announced by the governor and Senator Robert S. Stevens (R-Los Angeles). Mrs. Ripley is a veteran of many years of civic service in the Southern California area. She is a past president of the Volunteer Bureau of Los Angeles and the Neighborhood Youth Assn., is a member of the Citizens Advisory Committee of the State Welfare Study Commission and is secretary of the Child Welfare League of America. also Mrs. Ripley/is a vice president of the National Social Welfare Assembly, chairman of the Mental Health Division of the Welfare Plan- ning Council, the Advisory Committee of the Los Angeles Area Bureau of Social Work Volunteer Project and vice president of the Welfare Plan- ning Council, Los Angeles region. She replaces Audrey A. Kaslow of Los Angeles. Announcement of the appointment of Raymond E. Lee of Roosevelt Lee Ltd., Beverly Hills real estate investment firm, was made jointly by Governor Reagan and Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R-Los Angeles). Lee, Los Angeles Republican, succeeds Dr. Milton Chernin of Berkeley. Lee, founder of the Rayette Co. and the Toni Home Wave Co., also founded the Lee Pharmacal Co., Los Angeles. He is a member of the Aspen Society of Fellows of the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies and is a member of the board of Boys' Clubs Foundation of Southern California. -1- He is a member Uf the Board of Don Bosco Technical Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Gateways Hospital, Los Angeles County Assn. of Mental Health, the Menninger Foundation and is a member of the board of councilors of the USC Medical School and the Board of Governors af the Welfare Federation of the Los Angeles area. Announcement of the appointment of Dr. Walter W. Dolfini of Eureka was made jointly by Governor Reagan and Assemblyman Frank P. Belotti (R-Eureka). Dr. Dolfini, a Republican, succeeds Percy H. Steele Jr., San Diego. Dr. Dolfini was graduated from Stanford and McGill Universities and is a trustee of the College of the Redwoods, Eureka. He also serves on the Advisory Board of Humboldt State College, Arcata. Announcement of the appointment of J. Steve Williams, San Bernardino attorney, was made jointly by the governor and Senator William E. Coombs (R-Rialto). A Republican, he replaces Arthur Hellender, Oakland. Williams was graduated from Loyola University with a BS and LLB and currently is chairman of the San Bernardino City Police Commission. He is council chairman of the Catholic Committee on Scouting and a member of the executive board of the Arrowhead Area Council of the Boy Scouts and the Downtown San Bernardino YMCA. Williams is engaged in private law practice and is a former San Bernardino County chief deputy district attorney. He is a director of the local Family Service Agency and past president of the Catholic Social Services Agency of San Bernardino. Announcement of the appointment of Arthur R. Tirado, Fresno theater owner, was made jointly by Governor Reagan and Assemblyman Ernest N. Mobley (R-Fresno). Tirado, a Republican, succeeds W. M. Hugh Sill, Bakersfield. Tirado is treasurer of the Fresno Community Service Organization and the Mexican-American Political Assn. and a former president of the Comite Civico Mexico. He is a member of the board of the Pinedale Boys Club and is a member of Mexican-American Educators. He served on the advisory board of the State FEPC and was a member of the Fresno mayor's Human Relations Board. Mrs. Estella W. Dooley, deputy public defender in San Francisco, was named to succeed Mrs. Maxwell E. Greenberg of Beverly Hills. She is a Republican. She was graduated from Howard University, Washington, D.C. and Long Island University and admitted to the bar in 1958, engag- ing in private law practice until 1966 when she became deputy public defender, Mrs. Dooley was employed by the federal government for 15 years in the Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service. # # # PB/242 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan today endorsed PRESS the statewide observance 5.5.67 of May 7 through 13, as "Hire a Veteran Week, = which is being promoted throughout California by community Veterans Employment Committees in cooperation with the California State Employment Service. "This annual observance is particularly significant this year as we note a change in the complexion of our veteran population, with more and more younger veterans of the Vietnam conflict returning home to enter the civilian work force, some for the first time," the governor said. "Jobs must be found for these new veterans, as well as for veterans of World War II and the Korean War, some of whom are out of work through no fault of their own, and many of whom are now in that 'older worker' status where age is often a job barrier," Governor Reagan said. "Hire a Veteran Week" calls to the attention of employers and job applicants the fact that the California Department of Employment provides special services to all veterans in accordance with federal and state laws. These services include priority of referral to open jobs for which veterans qualify, with first priority given qualified disabled veterans. PB/243 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-3417 5.5.67 (Temp.) Harmon G. Scoville, Westminster attorney, PRESS today was named by Governor Ronald Reagan as Municipal Court judge in the Huntington Beach-Seal Beach Judicial District. The post was created by the 1965 Legislature. Scoville, 44, is a Republican who was graduated from UCLA with an AB and from Stanford with an LLB. He has been engaged in private law practice since 1951 and has served as judge pro tem of the Superior Court since 1962. A World War II veteran, Scoville in 1963 and 1964 was bishop of the Garden Grove Ward of the Mormon Church and taught seminary for two years for the church. He served as president of the Westminster Chamber of Commerce for two years and from 1961-66 was a member of the State Bar Committee on Continuing Legal Education. He also is a member of the Orange County Bar Assn. Committee for Administration of Justice. Scoville is married and has five children. # # # PB/244 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-3417 (Temp.) Fifteen persons were named today by PRESS Governor Ronald Reagan to 5.5.67 the Tourism and Visitor Services Commission. The appointments, which require Senate confirmation, are at the pleasure of the governor. Commission members are paid travel expenses. L. W. Lane Jr., Portola Valley Republican, was reappointed to the commission and named its chairman. Lane is publisher of Sunset Magazine, Menlo Park. Others named were: Stuart G. Cross, vice president and general manager, Yosemite Park and Curry Co., Yosemite National Park. Cross, a Republican, lives in Yosemite Valley and replaces Carlton Skinner of Belvedere. Peter Rochen, vice president and general manager, the Senator Hotel, Sacramento. Rochon, a Republican, succeeds John F. Dougherty of Monterey. Walter E. Terry, vice president, D'Arcy Advertising Co., San Francisco. Terry, a Republican from San Rafael, succeeds Bert D. Lynn of Brentwood. Fritz B. Burns, owner of the Airport Marina Hotel and operator of Fritz B. Burns and Associates, land developers. Burns, Los Angeles Republican, succeeds M. Larry Lawrence of San Diego. Mrs. Joan L. Burgan of Burgan Travel Center, West Covina. Mrs. Burgan, a Republican, replaces Arbis (cq) D. Shipley of Lower Lake. Melvin G. Edwards, publicity and promotion coordinator for the San Bernardino County Economic Development Commission. Edwards, of Yucca Valley, is a Republican who succeeds William F. Monaham of Palos Verdes Estates. J. Floyd Andrews, president, Pacific Southwest Airlines, San Diego. Andrews, La Jolla Republican, succeeds Edwin D. Ettinger of Anaheim. Frank H. White, administrative assistant at Knotts Berry Farm, Fullerton. White, a Republican, replaces Charles G. Trombetta of Anaheim. Oliver C. Stivers, operator of Stivers Private Schools, Hayward. Stivers, a Republican, replaces Frank M. Bogert of Palm Springs. -1- Paul Hanson, Jr., president, Marketing and Management Co., San Francisco. Hanson, a Republican, succeeds Theodore Rosequist of Carmichael. Mrs. Lorraine G. Mazzie, Bakersfield Republican who has been active in civic affairs and her husband's produce business. She succeeds Burr Williams of Anaheim. Reappointed to the commission, in addition to Lane, were: Robert J. Sullivan, general manager, San Francisco Convention and Visitors Bureau. Sullivan, of Millbrae, is a Republican. William A. Knight, executive vice president, Gray Line Sight- seeing Tours, Los Angeles. He is a Republican. Robert F. Smith, president, Phillips-Ramsey Inc., San Diego advertising and public relations agency. He is a Republican. # # # PB/245 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.5.67 GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE MAY 8-14 MONDAY, MAY 8 8:20 am Depart Sacramento Airport, chartered plane 9:15 am Arrive Santa Barbara Airport Proceed to Rancheros Vistadores Camp for lunch and ride 4:00 pm Depart Santa Barbara Airport, chartered plane 4:45 pm Arrive Sacramento Airport TUESDAY, MAY 9 10:30 am Meeting: Dr. Lewis Nash, Superintendent of Camarillo State Hospital; Governor's Office 11:15 am Meeting: State Treasurer Ivy Baker Priest Re: Drawing of San Francisco Harbor Improvement Bonds; Governor's Office 1:30 pm Press Conference; Room 1190 2:15 pm Meeting: California Community Television Assn; Senator Hotel. Brief greetings only. WEDNESDAY, MAY 10 12:00 Noon Luncheon: State Women's and Men's Clubs; Elks Club, 11th & "J" Sts. Remarks. Mrs. Reagan will attend. THURSDAY, MAY 11 9:30 am Meeting: Executives' Seminar on California State and Local Government; Council Room 10:30 am Meeting: Dr. Max Rafferty and State Board of Education members Howard Day and Dr. Thomas Harwood; Governor's Office 11:45 am Meeting: South Bay Chamber of Commerce; Council Room. Accompanied by Assemblyman Priolo and Senator Stevens. 3:00 pm Meeting: Governor's Council; Council Room FRIDAY, MAY 12 11:30 am Acceptance of a ticket to EXPO '67, presented by a representative of the Canadian Government; Governor's Office SATURDAY, MAY 13 No public appointments scheduled at this time. SUNDAY, MAY 14 No public appointments scheduled at this time. JAK/246 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan today concurred PRESS in the declaration of a 5.8.67 state of emergency along the San Joaquin River system and announced that he will make a flying tour over the San Joaquin Valley and foot- hills Wednesday morning. State Water Resources Director William R. Gianelli asked for concurrence in the declaration earlier today. The governor said he has asked Gianelli, Earl Coke, director of the State Department of Agriculture, legislators from San Joaquin Valley districts, and representatives of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and the Army Corps of Engineer to accompany him on the flight. The flight will be followed by a press conference in Fresno at 10 a.m. The declaration will enable the State Department of Water Resources to aid local districts along the San Joaquin River in patrol- ing river levees and bypasses and maintaining them during the next 10 weeks of estimated high water flow. The governor directed the Department of Finance to free funds set aside by the Legislature in 1958 for such emergencies under Section 128 of the Water Code. "The San Joaquin Valley is facing a long-term threat along the river," Governor Reagan said. "The Department of Water Resources has warned that unless there is a concerted effort to maintain the strength of the levees, there could be a major break in the system before mid- July. We will do all that is possible to prevent a disaster. "The agricultural economy of the San Joaquin Valley has already suffered from April storms. We must see that farm land adjacent to San Joaquin River levees is protected so that farmers do not suffer further losses. "At this time, our efforts are not in response to a disaster, but rather in response to the needs of a flood-fighting agency -- the Department of Water Resources -- to get on the battle line of pro- tection against serious damage. "We are alerting the people of the San Joaquin Valley, and California, to the fact that the record snowpack in the Sierras above the southern San Joaquin Valley is a potential danger. -1- "We recognize that danger and are deploying men to prevent damage. I know local agencies responsible for maintaining the levees will do their best and the state will do its part to render assistance when that job is beyond their manpower or financial resources." Governor Reagan said the Department of Water Resources has already briefed supervisory personnel and that Division of Forestry conservation crews will be available for levee work if the need arises. # # # (Memo to Editors: The Fresno press conference will be held at 10 a.m. in the pilot's briefing room in the hanger of the California Air National Guard at Fresno airport. Local press can contact Col. Howell at guard head- quarters to make arrangements for attendance.) LN/247 -2- OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger MEMO TO THE PRESS RESS 445-4571 5.8.67 Last week, Governor Ronald Reagan signed the following bills: MAY 2, 1967 SB 116 - Chapter 76 Provides that savings banks may invest Alquist & Bradley in bonds of political subdivision, pub- S: Unanimous lic corporation, or district of State A: Unanimous of California if, among other require- ments, the net direct debt of such entity together with its net overlapping debt does not exceed 25 percent of the assessed valuation of the taxable property within its boundaries. SB 211 - Chapter 77 Provides that in the event of an erro- Deukmejian neous tax sale to the state, the Board S: Unanimous of Supervisors shall make an order can- A: Unanimous celling the deed; the Board of Supervisors shall also record a certified copy of this order and file a copy of it with the auditor who shall also record a certified copy of this order and file a copy of it with the auditor who shall enter the fact of the cancellation on the delinquent role, the abstract, or the electronic data processing records; also provides same procedure for property which is sold for delinquent taxes which are later cancelled AB 314 - Chapter 78 Raises maximum speed limit for trucks, Priolo busses and passenger vehicles drawing S: Unanimous other vehicles to 55 miles per hour. A: 54 ayes; 11 noes MAY 3, 1967 SB 34 - Chapter 79 Authorizes county recorders to microfilm Stiern or photocopy certain documents; provides S: Unanimous that federal tax liens will be filed with A: Unanimous all other documents; makes standard $2.00 filing fee applicable to federal tax liens or redemptions in irrigation districts; establishes uniform size for maps recor- ded by Division of Highways and allows such maps to be microfilmed. SB 42 - Chapter 80 Grants property tax welfare exemption Grunsky to property owned by nonprofit corpora- S: Unanimous tion which would otherwise qualify except A: Unanimous that, on the lien date, its articles of incorporation would not provide that its property was irrevocably dedicated to charitable, scientific or hospital pur- poses; corporation must file affidavit with assessor that its property has been so dedicated and must also amend its arti- cles prior to first Monday in March of 1967 to provide for the required irrevo- cable dedication. AB 55 - Chapter 81 Provides that judgment entered pursuant Grunsky to provisions of code of civil procedure S: Unanimous under which parties agree to judgment to A: Unanimous be taken against defendant is deemed to be a compromise settlement. -MORE- -2- AB 117 - Chapter 82 Provides that notices sent to prosper Alquist & Bradley tive jurors for courts of record and S: Unanimous justice courts may be sent by first- A: Unanimous class mail; notice shall be sent by registered or certified mail upon fail- ure of respond to notice by first-class mail; no fine or attachment shall result until there is failure to respond to second notice. SB 131 - Chapter 83 Authorizes municipal water districts Cologne to (1) compensate director absent from S: Unanimous board meeting if he is on district busi- A: Unanimous ness; (2) pay expenses incurred by Director on district business; (3) con- tract with state employees retirement system for pensions and health accident insurance; (4) employ counsel and pay all fees and expenses to defend actions brought against their agents, employees or officers; (5) pay any judgment, with- out reimbursement by agent, employee or officer, if their liability is based upon acts or ommissions in their official capacity, absent fraud or malice; (6) permit districts to supply water to any property not subject to district tax at special rates and conditions. SB 186 - Chapter 84 Changes name of State Employees Retire- Stiern ment System to Public Employees Retire- S: Unanimous ment System. A: Unanimous SB 209 - Chapter 85 Permits destruction or disposal of Lagomarsino exhibits which conveys title or creates S: Unanimous a lien on real property in civil actions A: Unanimous after three years from final determination of case; prohibits destruction or dispo- sal of evidence until 30 days after notice thereof has been sent to attorneys of record, or parties themselves. SB 347 - Chapter 86 Authorizes urgency ordinances to be passed Bradley at either a regular or special meeting S: Unanimous of city legislative body. A: Unanimous SB 368 - Chapter 87 Authorizes Director of Agriculture, by Stiern regulation, to require immunization of S: Unanimous imported swine against hog cholera when A: Unanimous needed; authorizes establishment of tuberculosis free areas in conjunction with U.S. Dept. of Agriculture. AB 135 - Chapter 88 Prohibits any person from directly or Biddle indirectly representing that State of S: Unanimous California is sponsoring or endorsing A: Unanimous a World's Fair with specific approval by law; violation of same is a misdemeanor. AB 713 - Chapter 89 Amends two sections of putlic utilities Bagley code without making substantive changes. S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 719 - Chapter 90 Amends and renumbers, adds and repeals Bagley various sections of welfare and insti- S: Unanimous tutions code without making substantive A: Unanimous changes. AB 1014 - Chapter 91 Makes additional $125,000 available for Ralph transfer from general fund to county S: Unanimous school service fund contingency account A: Unanimous for current fiscal year. -MORE- -3- SB 73 - Chapter 92 Changes vote requirement for dissolution McCarthy of Union High School library districts to S: Unanimous two-thirds of the votes cast at the elec- A: Unanimous tion called by the library trustees upon the question of dissolution. SB 161 - Chapter 93 Amends commercial code to make fee for Short certificate showing existence of finan- S: Unanimous cing statement and any statement of assignment thereof $5.00. AB 701 - Chapter 94 Codifies sections 6 and 7 of Chapter 3 Bagley of the statutes of 1965 (2nd Ex. Sess.) S: Unanimous relating to the State Legislature A: Unanimous without making substantive change. AB 709 - Chapter 95 Amends insurance code without naking Bagley substantive changes. S: Unanimous A: Unanimous MAY 4, 1967 SB 46 - Chapter 96 Removes administrator of Transportation Agency from California Highway Commission; provides for selection of chairman for one year by majority vote of commission members; prohibits service as chairman for more than two successive years; autho- rizes Director of Public Works to act as chairman in administrative matters and prepare agenda for all meetings; Director of Public Works specifically authorized to comment on recommendations made by Divisions of department when he or com- mission deems it desirable to do SO. SB 115 - Chapter 97 Provides that if unemployed parent is Alquist and Bradley absent from assigned community work or S: 32 ayes; 1 no training project without good cause, aid A: 63 ayes; 6 noes to unemployed parent and his family shall be reduced in amount equal to credited hourly rate for work times number of hours he was absent. SB 157 - Chapter 98 Requires every person who purchases or Lagomarsino receives on consignment avacados for S: 28 ayes; 3 noes processing or sale from persons other than A: Unanimous a grower, licensed dealers, brokers com- mission merchants, agricultural coopera- tives or wholesalers to keep records per- taining to such purchases or consignments for one year; requires commissioner of agriculture of each county to enforce re- cord requirement and makes violation of same a misdemeanor. SB 158 - Chapter 99 Requires school board to provide for a Dymally physical examination, or to pay for or S: Unanimous reimburse a classified employee for cost A: Unanimous of a physical examination it requires him to take; permits school board to reimburse applicant for cost of physical examina- tion if he is subsequently employed by district, or to cause required examina- tion to be given. SB 333 - Chapter 100 Makes the ringtailed cat a fully protec- Cologne ted animal. S: 34 ayes; 1 no A: Unanimous AB 235 - Chapter 101 Provides that amounts appropriated by Dunlap Boards of Supervisors for contingencies S: Unanimous shall be placed in a separate contingency A: Unanimous fund or in the general fund. -4- AB 254 - Chapter 102 Permits hospital district, licensed to Chapel (Townsend) have 85 beds & located in county of S: Unanimous 2,000,000 or more population, to use, A: Unanimous without establishing a capital outlay fund, and without approval of the dis- trict votes, any funds in its possession which were derived from previous tax levies acquired prior to effective date of bill, for the acquisition of addi- tional bed capacity. AB 847 - Chapter 103 Appropriates $2,100 for sidewalk construc- Gonsalves & Dent tion at Dept. of Youth Authority's south- S: Unanimous ern reception center and clinic in Nor- A: Unanimous walk. MAY 6, 1967 AB 583 - Chapter 104 provides as follows: exempts approxi- Veneman mately $140 million in count costs for S: 36 Ayes; 3 Noes indigent from statutory ceiling in A: 76 Ayes; 2 Noes current law; requires Health & Welfare administrator to approve any increase in county hospital services over their June 30, 1967 level which would result in added state costs; state costs for 1967- 68 fiscal year shall not exceed $44 million & shall not exceed specific amounts appropriated by legislature dur- ing secceeding years; requires Health & Welfare administrator to make findings & recommendations as to state responsibil- ity for costs of salary increases in county hospitals; requires counties to file standards for medical aid and state- ment of scope and level of county medi- cal services for indigent in effect as of June 30, 1967; authorizes Health & Welfare administrator to limit rates of payment for all medical services pro- vided in Medi-Cal program. JAK/248 LN/248 OFFICE OF THE GOVER R RELEASE: Ir diate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.8.67 Governor Ronald Reagan has renamed one member of the Contractors' State License Board and named a new member. Alfrel P. Smith, a Democrat of San Francisco was reappointed to a term expiring January 15, 1971. W. Reed Sprinkel, a Cucamonga Republican was named to the board as i replacement for Martin Matich of Modesto whose term expired. Smith is the public member on the board and Sprinkel will be the general engineering member. The four-year terms pay $25 per diems plus travel expenses. Senate confirmation is required. # # # LN/249 OFFICE OF THE GOVE OR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.8.67 RELEASE: T PRESS Governor Ronald Reagan has reappointed two Board of Trustees at Patton State Hospital at San Bernardino. They are Mrs. Ruth St. Aubin Haberkorn of 612 East Ralston Avenue, San Bernardino, and James K. Guthrie, publisher of the San Bernardino Sun-Telegram. Mrs. Haberkorn is a Democrat and Guthrie is a Republican. Terms of both expired Monday (May 8). Their new terms will expire four years from the date of their confirmation by the State Senate. The posts pay no salaries but do pay "necessary travel expenses." # # # LN/250 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Thur ay A.M.'S Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan has reappointed PRESS five persons to the 5.9.67 State Television Advisory Committee and named one new member. Committee members serve at the pleasure of the governor and receive necessary travel expenses. Those renamed: John C. Crabbe, general manager of KVIE, a Sacramento educational television station; Edwin C. Coffin III, superintendent of Monterey County schools; Dr. Herman J. Sheffield, superintendent of the Ventura City Junior College District; Dr. Robert A. Thornton, dean of natural sciences of San Francisco State College and Walter T. Shaford II, Temple City attorney. Dr. Gary N. Hess, coordinator of educational TV at the University of California at Santa Barbara was named to succeed Dean E. McHenry, chancellor of the University of California at Santa Cruz. # # # LN 251 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.9.67 MEMO TO PRESS Fresno Trip May 10 Depart Sacramento Main airport, char- tered plane. Fly over water system 8:00 a.m. in the Valley, Friant Dam and Tule Basin. 9:45 a.m. Arrive Fresno Airport 10:00 a.m. Press Conference; Pilot's briefing room, California Air National Guard Hanger, Fresno airport 10:30 a.m. Depart press conference 10:45 a.m. Depart Fresno airport, chartered plane 11:30 a.m. Arrive Sacramento Airport 0 Note: There are only a limited number of seats available on this flight. Deadline for reservations is 2:00 p.m. Tuesday, May 9. Contact Judith Kernoff, 54571. The plane will depart Sacramento Airport from one of the main gates. JAK/252 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger FOR PRESS 445-4571 5.9.67 Sacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan disclosed today he will support legislation to allow the California Highway Patrol to purchase and use radar equipment in its efforts to control speeding. Reagan said he will make AB 1070, introduced by Assemblyman William Ketchum, a part of his legislative program. The bill authorizes use of radar to measure speed of motor vehicles for the purpose of determining violations of speed laws. It also provides that evidence gathered by radar can be used as evi- dence in court. Reagan called radar "another technological tool in our war against slaughter on highways." He pointed out that moving violations "are not a contest between motorists and police to see whether or not the police can catch the motorists." "Speeding is a violation of the law. If a motorist is not speeding he need have no fear of being 'trapped' by radar." "We cannot continue to seek more and more highway patrolmen while at the same time refusing to give them the otools that will allow them to do their job efficiently and thoroughly," Reagan said. # # # May 8, 1967 A DEFINITIVE STATEMENT OF CALIFORNIA'S GOALS AND PROGRAMS FOR TREATMENT OF THE MENTALLY ILL The goal of this administration in the field of Mental Health is to foster those conditions which will prevent or minimize mental breakdown. In the absence of more specific knowledge about causes and treatment, a practical goal for the Mental Health Program is development, maintenance, and restoration of social and personal equilibrium despite emotional stress. This means that the primary emphasis will be to assist individuals who are mentally ill to achieve a reasonable operating level. For the foreseeable future, therefore, the broad aim is not general emotional well being nor is it complete cure it is to provide such treatment and supportive servicesas will keep a child at home and in school and an adult with his family and on the job with both functioning at a reasonable level. Continued research into causes and treatment will also be pursued. We believe that local mental health programs offer the most feasible and enlightened way to achieve these goals. They afford early detection and prompt treatment with minimum dislocation from home, family, school and job. This is the best assurance for an early and satisfactory return to active participation in society. If the disorder requires removal from the home, placement should be in a facility most suited to treatment of the disorder with early return to the home planned from the outset. We will continue to strive for a reduction in the size of our mental hospitals. While they may never be fully eliminated, they will be used primarily as a back-up resource for the local program -- as efficient intensive treatment centers. Thus, the emphasis of our entire state system for care and treatment of the mentally ill in the future is based on the local programs. At the present time there are 41 of these programs in California, financed by a combination of state and local funds under the Short-Doyle Act. They are now serving areas having 90 percent of the state population and are a very important factor in reducing the admissions to state mental hospitals. In addition to increased emphasis on expansion of these programs we favor an improved system for pre-admission, screening and after-care services that will bring long overdue continuity to the treatment of our mentally ill. The system will have the following features: 1. Mentally ill people will be treated near home by a local physician -2- or through the local mental health program. 2. Treatment will be on a voluntary basis whenever possible. Involuntary commitment should be permitted only if the patient is considered dangerous to himself or others. Whether admission is requested or a petition for involuntary commitment is sought, the individual concerned will be sent to the local mental health program for diagnosis and recommendation. 3. Patients will be referred and admitted to a state mental hospital for inpatient treatment only if the local mental health program determines that the individual has a mental disorder and requires 24 hour hospital care and that such care is not available locally. The state hospitals will operate in support of the local programs. 4. Upon release from state hospitals, patients will be referred back to the local program for aftercare as needed. The recently introduced California Mental Health Act of 1967 (AB 1220) offers the legal basis for the implementation of this program, and to that extent is supported in principal by this administration. RONALD REAGAN Governor State of California OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: IMMEDIATE Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.9.67 SACRAMENTO--Governor Ronald Reagan today revealed his long range goals for California's treatment of the mentally III and at the same time voiced his support, in principle, of AB 1220, the Lanterman-Petris Mental Health Act of 1967. "The Lanterman-Petris Bill, halled by knowledgeable persons in the field of mental health as a giant step forward in the handling of commitments, is a key element in our plans for the future," said Governor Reagan. "It is fortunate that the timing of its first hearing today coincides with this announcement of our long range plans which have been several months in the making. "It is our belief that local mental health programs offer the most feasible and enlightened way to achieve the best results for treatment of our mentally ill. "These programs afford early detection and prompt treatment of persons afflicted with mental illness with the minimum disturbance from home, family, school, or job, and offers the best assurance for their early and satisfactory return to active participation in society," he said. "By increasing state assistance in the development and extension of local programs we hope that we can continue to reduce the size of our mental hospitals and eventually use them primarily as a back-up resource for local efforts. "At the present time there are 41 Short-Doyle programs in California serving areas having 90% of the state's population. In addition to increasing the emphasis on expanding these programs, we favor an improved system for pre- admission, screening, and after-care services that will bring long over~due continuity to the treatment of our mentally ill," Reagan said, "Voluntary and involuntary treatment alike should be by a local physician or through a local program near the home of the individual concerned. Admissions to state hospitals will only be after careful local diagnosis and a determination that the individual has a mental disorder which may result in harm to himself or to others and which requires 24-hour hospital care not available locally. "Furthermore, upon the release of such individuals from state hospitals they will be referred back through the same Short-Doyle services for such after-care as is necessary. -1- "This concept will not only eliminate duplicate and competitive govern- mental services but will introduce the most advanced system for the treatment of the mentally 111 offered anywhere. It is limited, of course, to so-called civil commitments and procedures and will have no effect on or change in the laws of the Penal Code concerning mental disordered persons charged with crimes, criminal sex offenders, narcotic drug addicts, or the like." Governor Reagan noted that studies leading to introduction of the Lanterman-Petris bill were conducted over a period of two years. "This kind of careful study insures that California will continue to lead the nation in mental health advances," Governor Reagan said. # # # -2- LN/254 PRESS MAY 10 1967 MEMO TO THE PRESS Governor Reagan and Lieutenant Governor Finch will join leaders of the California telephone industry May 11 for a ceremony commemorating the nation's 100 millionth telephone. The program will begin at approximately 12:50 P.M. in room 1190, the press conference room. A telephone call from President Johnson at the White House to the nation's governors will be a highlight of the cere- mony. It will be the largest conference call ever placed by a U. S. president. A number of dignitaries will be on hand both in Washington and in Sacramento. The call will be piped into the regular audio system in the press conference room for broadcast pickup. Press releases will be passed out at the ceremony. Lyn Nofziger Communications Director Governor's Office OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO RELEASE: : lediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.11.67 PRESS Governor Ronald Reagan has named three new members to the State Board of Medical Examiners and reappointed a fourth. The new members are Dr. Genest D. de L'Abre of 1201 Argony Drive, Stockton, who succeeds Dr. James V. McNulty of Los Angeles; Dr. Philip S. Geller of 1230 Hopkins Avenue, Redwood City, who succeeds Dr. J. M. de los Reyes, of Glendale, and Dr. Tirso del Junco of 4924 W. Sunset, Los Angeles, who succeeds Dr. Shelby Hicks of Merced. Dr. Forest J. Grunigen of 3919 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles, was reappointed. Dr. Geller is a Democrat. The others are Republicans. Dr. de L'Arbre fills an unexpired term that ends January 15, 1968. The other terms expire January 15, 1971. Membership on the board is unsalaried but pays $25 a day while on official duty plus travel expenses. # # # 961-0462 LN/255 OFFICE OF THE GOVE NOR MEMO TO HE PRESS Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.11.67 PRESS AB 762, carried by Assemblyman Robert Burke, and a part of the governor's program, will be signed tomorrow at 10:20 a.m. in the governor's office. The press and photogs are invited. # # # OFFICE OF THE GOVERN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan has named eight PRESS new members to the 5.12.67 Health Review and Program Council and has reappointed three current members. Members of the Council serve at the pleasure of the governor. Members are unsalaried but receive necessary travel expenses. Reappointed were Gordon R. Cumming, Sacramento County Hospital administrator, a Democrat; Arthur Weissman, director of Medical Economics of the Kaiser Foundation in Oakland, a Democrat, and Robert T. Andersen (cq), administrative officer of Riverside County, a Republican. New members: Dr. Arthur F. Howard, 1542 Wishon, Fresno, a Republican who succeeds Robert D. O'Rear of Los Angeles; Paul C. Mowery, a dentist and Republican of 1011 Charleston Circle, Roseville, who succeeds Bill F. Pridgen of Antioch; Beatrice A. Dumlao, R.N., head of the nursing staff of Bravo Clinic, Los Angeles, a Democrat, who succeeds Dr. Albert G. Miller of San Mateo; Dr. Alex B. Wilcox, of 6 Johns Canyon Road, Rolling Hills, a Democrat, who succeeds Mrs. Lillian H. O'Brien of Chatsworth; Carel E. H. Mulder, director of the Office of Health Care Services of the Health and Welfare Agency, of Sacramento, a non- partisan, who succeeds Morgan S. Odell of Los Angeles; Richard V. Bibbero, president, Medical Management Control of San Francisco, a Republican, who succeeds Einar O. Mohn of Menlo Park; Robert L. Jackson of 4313 N. Brooks, Fresno, a Republican, who succeeds Thomas M. Brigham of Fresno; and James B. Poyer, research director of the Western Conference of Teamsters, a Democrat of 5959 Highwood Road, Castro Valley, who succeeds Charles R. Weidner of Pleasant Hill. # # # LN/256 OFFICE OF THE GOVERI RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.12.67 PRESS Two persons were appointed today by Governor Ronald Reagan to the State Board of Chiropractic Examiners. The terms are for three years. John P. de Heras, San Jose chiropractor, was named to succeed L. Howard Fenton of San Carlos and Ray Henry Quibell, Redding, replaces Westley E. Rodgers of Camp Meeker. De Heras, 55, is a native of Mexico and became a naturalized citizen in 1941. He is a graduate of the Los Angeles College of Chiropractic. He has served on numerous civic agencies and was the recipient of the San Jose City Council's Distinguished Citizen Award in 1961. A Republican, he is the founder and sponsor of the Nilsson Award given each year to the outstanding member of the California Chiropractic Assn. and is the author of numerous articles on chiropractic. Quibell, a graduate of the Los Angeles College of Chiropractic and the Ratledge College of Chiropractic Science, has engaged in the private practice of chiropractic since 1946. A Republican, he served on his local school board for 10 years and has been active in numerous civic and professional groups. Quibell serves on the Chiropractic Research Foundation of Parker Institute, Ft. Worth, and is a staff member of Spears Hospital in Denver. # # # PB/257 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Contact: Lyn Nofziger PRESS Sacramento, California 445-4571 5.12.67 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sacramento--Membership on the Governor's Advisory Committee on Children and Youth was announced today by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Members are: Mrs. Charles P. Gould, Chairman, San Marino Winston S. Carter, California Newspaperboy Foundation, Inc., Glendale Dan Chatman, Madera Dr. Myron C. Cole, Hollywood Beverly Christian Church, Los Angeles Miss Carol Davis, Bakersfield Richard C. Dinkelspiel, Kentfield Wendell T. Handy, Compton Mrs. Walter Harness, Willows Ralph B. Herzog, Beverly Hills Miss Helen MacGregor, Oakland Mrs. W.W. Wood, Marysville Mrs. Laurence B. Martin, President, California Congress of Parents and Teachers, Los Angeles The Rev. John J. O'Connor, Director, Catholic Social Service of Marin County, San Rafael Superior Judge Donald A. Odell, Los Angeles Larry Osborne, Oakland Rev. Cornish Rogers, Wesley Methodist Church, Los Angeles Tom Shanahan, Stanford Stewart C. Smith, Chief County Probation Officer, San Bernadino Dr. Ralph Tyler, Director, Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford Minicipal Judge Benjamin U. Vega, Los Angeles and Salvador T. Vela, Los Angeles # # # PB/258 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger FOR IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE 445-4571 5.12.67 Sacramento--Six persons were reappointed today by Gov. Ronald Reagan to the Governor's Advisory Committee on Tijuana River Pro- blems to the United States Section of the International Boundary and Water Commission. In addition, the Governor named Resources Administrator Norman B. Livermore, Jr. to the committee. Those reappointed: Robert L. Wynn, (Chairman) City Manager, Imperial Beach; Dennis A. O'Leary, (Secretary) Executive Officer, San Diego Regional Water Pollution Control Board; Paul D. Engstrand, La Mesa, Attorney; Herbert B. Foster, Acting Chief, Bureau of Sanitary Engineering, Department of Public Health, Berkeley; Walter H. Hahn, Jr., City Manager, San Diego; and A. F. Poulter, Division Manager, California Water and Telephone Co., Chula Vista. # # # PB/259 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger FOR IMMEDIATE PRESS 445-4571 5.12.67 Sacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today made these appointments as California representatives on the Western Governor's Mining Advisory Council: Philip R. Bradley, State Mining Board, Berkeley; Dr. Ian Campbell, State Geologist, Division of Mines and Geology, San Francisco; J.F. (Jack) Havard, Manager, Mineral Projects Department, Kaiser Engineers, Oakland; Lewis L. Huelsdonk, Downieville; Dr. Evan Just, Department of Mineral Engineering, Stanford University; N. B. Livermore, Jr., Administrator, Resources Agency, Sacramento; D. L. Marlett, Great Lakes Properties, Inc., Los Angeles; George W. Nilsson, President, Mining Assn. of Southern California, Los Angeles; Don Reining, Exe- cutive Secretary, Southern California Rock Products Assn., South Pasadena; James G. Stearns, Director, Department of Conservation, Sacramento; Floyd Wilnoth, Secretary, Mining Assn. of Northern California, Sunset-Whitney. # # # PB/260 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.12.67 It will be a crime to steal industrial secrets or give or take bribes for disclosure of information about secret industrial processes under a bill signed into law today by Governor Reagan. The governor signed SB 69, the "Trade Secrets Measure" which, for the first time in any western state, makes it a crime to walk away from a company with secret scientific information and give it or sell it to other firms or companies. The bill was introduced by Sen. Robert J. Lagomarsino (R-Ventura and Santa Barbara counties). The governor pointed out that industry in California is doing more research in the aerospace, chemical, drug and related fields than any other state. He said the loss of newly discovered products or processes not only affects the owner but also could affect employment in research and manufacturing in California. Governor Reagan said the bill will help encourage research- oriented industry in California and the state should do everything possible to protect companies which have developed research programs. Sen. Lagomarsino, who introduced and co-authored the bill with Sen. Clark L. Bradley (R-San Jose) and Assemblymen J. K. MacDonald (D-Ojai) and Frank Lanterman (R-La Canada), said the trade secrets measure will "act as a deterrent to unscrupulous persons who prey upon and exploit California industry." # # # PB/261 OFFICE OF THE GOVER R MEMO TO IE PRESS Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.12.67 Schedule - May 15-21 Monday, May 15 7:00 pm Santa Maria Barbecue; El Rancho Hotel, West Sacramento. Mrs. Reagan will attend. Tuesday, May 16 9:30 am Press Conference; Room 1190 11:45 am Meeting: Santa Monica Chamber of Commerce; Council Room. Accompanied by Sen. Stevens and Assemblyman Priolo 1:30 pm Meeting: 37th Senatorial District Cham- bers of Commerce; Council Room. Accom- panied by Sen. Deukmejian 4:00 pm Depart Sacramento Airport, PSA Flight 4:50 pm 484; arrive Los Angeles International 7:00 pm Banquet; Merchants and Manufacturers Assn.; Biltmore Bowl, Biltmore Hotel, Los Angeles. Black tie. Remarks. Overnight Los Angeles Wednesday, May 17 12:30 pm Luncheon: Los Angeles Herald-Examiner's Youth Forum; Cocoanut Grove, Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles. Greetings only. 2:15 pm Depart luncheon 3:00 pm Depart Santa Monica Airport, chartered plane; 3:45 pm Arrive Watsonville Airport (San Jose airport if weather closes Watsonville) Overnight Pasatiempo Inn, Santa Cruz Thursday, May 18 all day Meeting: University of Calif. Board of Regents; UC Santa Cruz campus Overnight Pasatiempo Inn, Santa Cruz Friday, May 19 9:30 am Depart Watsonville Airport, chartered 10:00 am plane; Arrive Sacramento Airport 12:00 pm Legislative Golf Tournament; El Macero Country Club, Sacramento Saturday, May 20 9:30 am Depart Sacramento Airport, private plane; 10:15 am Arrive Chico Airport 11:30 am Inaugural Ceremonies for Dr. Robert E. Hill; California State College at Chico. Speech 1:00 pm Luncheon 2:00 pm Depart college 2:15 pm Depart Chico Airport, private plane; 2:45 pm Arrive Sacramento Airport Sunday, May 21 No public appointments scheduled at this time. # # # JK/262 OFFICE OF THE GOVERwOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.12.67 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today proclaimed the week of May 14 to 20, 1967, as CALIFORNIA NURSING HOME WEEK. The proclama- tion follows: WHEREAS Licensed nursing homes and related facilities for the care of the aged and the convalescent in California now number more than 1,200 with over 50,000 beds; and WHEREAS These facilities offer medical, nursing and personal care including rehabilitation, res- toration, recreation, and both occupational and physical therapy along with spiritual programs designed to provide a "fuller life" for the aged and the convalescent; and WHEREAS The California Association of Nursing Homes and its member homes have provided leadership and made important contributions to raising the quality of care and broadening the services offered by nursing homes and related facilities; and WHEREAS The nursing homes and related facilities in this state are participating in National Nursing Home Week May 14 to 20, 1967, and the California Legislature had adopted a resolution urging the Governor to proclaim the week of May 14 to 20, 1967, as California Nursing Home Week; NOW THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA, Do hereby proclaim the week of May 14 to 20, 1967, as CALIFORNIA NURSING HOME WEEK, and I invite the citizens of this state to acquaint themselves with the services offered by licensed nursing homes. # # # JAK/263 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger MEMO TO THE PRESS 445-4571 5.15.67 Sacramento--Last week Governor Ronald Reagan signed the following bills: MAY 9, 1967 SB 125 - Chapter 105 Amends Water Code to liberalize financing Cologne provisions of Municipal Water District At S: Unanimous of 1911 A: Unanimous SB 176 - Chapter 106 Permits any color to be used in a vehicle Bradley reflector device provided that the color S: Unanimous red is not displayed on the front A: 68 aves, 1 no SB 454 - Chapter 107 Permits an officer of an agricultural coopera- Way tive association to be a person other than a S: Unanimous member of the Board of Directors A: Unanimous AB 142 - Chapter 108 Makes permanent state policy to pay one-half Porter & Badham the costs of local participation required by S: Unanimous federal legislation authorizing beach erosion A: Unanimous control projects AB 212 - Chapter 109 Provides for mailing of notice of forfeiture Harvey Johnson of bail directly to authorized corporate S: Unanimous surety insurer surety or depositor of money A: Unanimous shall be released from all obligations of the bond if notice is not mailed within 30 days after entry of the fact of failure to appear the 180 days which the bail has to produce the defendant commences from date of mailing extends to 90 days time within which summary judgement may be entered AB 214 - Chapter 110 Permits investment in corporation shares by H. Johnson and Barnes state employees' retirement system, state S: Unanimous legislators' retirement system, counties in- A: Unanimous cluded in county employees' retirement law of 1937 and school district retirement plans for retirement fund purposes AB 227 - Chapter 111 Authorizes county water district to designate Dent any regular employee who is a deputy sheriff S: Unanimous to issue citations for trespassing or damage A: Unanimous to district property. AB 236 - Chapter 112 Requires county auditor to file final county Dunlap budget with clerk of Board of Supervisors S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 239 - Chapter 113 Requires that county treasurer make settle- Dunlap ment with state only on county warrants S: Unanimous issued by county auditor. A: Unanimous -2- AB 278 - Chapter 114 Technical amendment of government code Knox S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 323 - Chapter 115 Requires no deposit or payment, other than Knox for first day's attendance, for issuance of S: Unanimous subpoena requiring peace officers' attendance A: Unanimous in court- permits such subpoenaed officers to come to an agreement to appear at another time AB 510 - Chapter 116 Requires only one name on ballot argument con- Fenton & Ralph cerning a county or city measure no more than S: Unanimous five names shall appear on any argument sub- A: Unanimous mitted. AB 566 - Chapter 117 Authorizes Placer County Water Agency to Chappie (1) make in-lieu payments on facilities; S: Unanimous (2) incur indebtedness and issue bonds for A: Unanimous any zone of the agency (3) acquire works for benefit of single zones and (4) remove restrictions on denominations of bonds issued by agency AB 696 - Chapter 118 Raises frozen milk products licensing fee to Porter, Belotti & $40 funds from increase shall not be expended Gonsalves unless appropriated S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 703 - Chapter 119 Technical amendment of code of civilprocedure Bagley S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 704 - Chapter 120 Technical changes to education code Bagley S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 705 - Chapter 121 Technical amendments of elections code Bagley S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 706 - Chapter 122 Technical amendments of fish and game code Bagley S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 707 - Chapter 123 Technical amendments of government code Bagley S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 708 - Chapter 124 Technical amendments of health and safety Bagley code S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 710 - Chapter 125 Technical amendments of labor code Bagley S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 712 - Chapter 126 Technical amendments of public resources code Bagley S: Unanimous -3- AB 721 - Chapter 127 Repeals obsolete act relating to war housing Bagley projects S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 724 - Chapter 128 Repeals obsolete act relating to Governor's Bagley advisory commission on housing problems S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 725 - Chapter 129 Repeals obsolete act relating to San Francisco Bagley Bay conservation study commission S: Unanimous A: Unanimous MAY 12, 1967 SB 22 - Chapter 130 Extends advantages of special interdistrict Way agreements for tuition and allowances in lieu S: Unanimous of transportation to junior college students A: Unanimous living more than 90 miles from a junior college who are veterans between the ages of 21 and 25 or who are married and between the ages of 18 and 21: inapplicable to students living in a district with adequate student housing or providing adequate transportation SB 43 - Chapter 131 Amends description of tidelands grant made Grunsky to Moss Landing Harbor District in 1947 S: Unanimous A: Unanimous SB 69 - Chapter 132 Makes it a crime to steal trade secrets, or Lagomarsino & Bradley give ior take a bribe for unauthorized dis- S: Unanimous closure of a trade secret. A: Unanimous SB 230 - Chapter 133 Permits enforcement of support orders by the Lagomarsino & Harmer use of contempt provides that support orders S: Unanimous will survive bankruptcy A: 64 ayes 1 no AB 140 - Chapter 134 Makes false report of an emergency a mis- Knox demeanor false report of an emergency which S: Unanimous results in death or great bodily harm is a A: Unanimous felony AB 153 - Chapter 135 Authorizes court clerk to enter judgment Duffy where defendant defaults in action arising on S: Unanimous judgment of court of this state for recovery A: Unanimous of money or damages AB 302 - Chapter 136 Authorizes Antelope Valley - East Kern Water Russell Agency to exercise power of eminent domain S: Unanimous outside of boundaries of agency if it first A: Unanimous obtains consent of Board of Supervisors in county in which property is located: also authorizes agency to distribute information about its activities. AB 392 - Chapter 137 Sets maximum size for school district election Crandall precinct at 2,500 voters S: Unanimous A: Unanimous AB 412 - Chapter 138 Technical amendments of penal code Biddle S: Unanimous AB 467 - Chapter 139 Raises maximum limit of funds which can be Badham carried in Orange County Water District S: Unanimous gemeral reserve and unappropriated reserve A:: Unanimous in district's general fund. AB 509 - Chapter 140 Permits county election boards or boards of Fenton and Raloh supervisors to begin canvassing at any time S: Unanimous on the Thursday after the election A: Unanimous AB 559 - Chapter 141 Establishes $200 revolving fund for boards Dunlap of recreation and park districts S: Unanimous A: Unanimous SB 647 - Chapter 142 Reduces to three months period that sheriff Schabarum is required to hold unclaimed bicycles and S: Unanimous toys before transferring them to county pro- A: Unanimous bation officer AB 762 - Chapter 143 Requires school district unification elections Burke subsequent to first such election to be held S: 30 ayes 1 no within two year periods from and after July 1, A: Unanimous 1964 provides for cancellation and post- ponement, and later conduct of passed or pending elections states it is intent of legislature to apportion the $15 a.d.a. bonus to unified school districts and districts voting in favor of unification on basis of amended requirement for unification elections AB 79 - Chapter 144 Sets maximum precinct size for school district Elliot elections at 2,500 voters increases to 75 days S: Unanimous period when county superintendent of schools A: Unamimous may set election precincts and polling places if governing board of district fails to act increases to 80 days period during which governing board of district must act AB 339 - Chapter 145 Permits board of supervisors to authorize Milias county park officers and other uniformed S: Unanimous park employees to issue misdemeanor citations A: Unanimous AB 341 - Chapter 146 Revises provisions of education code governing Milias and Crandall ballots, ballot forms, and notice requirements S: Unanimous in school district elections A: Unanimous AB 342 - Chapter 147 Provides that notice to file declarations of Milias candidacy and nominations of candidates for S: Unanimous school district governing board shall be pub- A: Unanimous lished in newspaper published within district or one regularly circulated within district requires first publication not more than 110 days and last publication not less than 70 days prior to election provides that declarations of candidacy and nominations shall be filed with county superintendent of school not less than 54 days prior to election AB 477 - Chapter 148 Requires annual audit of veterans' tax Powers exemptions in counties which elect to utilize S: Unanimous provisions of act: provides procedure for A: Unanimous granting exemptions when improperly denied granted under false information provides procedure for enforting penalty OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, Califo. ia Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.16.67 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan announced today the names of 19 prominent transportation officials in California who will serve on his Transportation Task Force. "Transportation is one of the greatest challenges facing the people of California," Reagan said. "I know these outstanding men will be of immeasurable assistance in helping us create a master plan encompassing all methods of travel." The first meeting of the committee will be held in Sacramento in June. Gordon C. Luce, the Governor S Administrator of Transpor- tation, will serve as interim chairman. " Luce said, "The tremendous growth anticipated in the next 25 years may more than double the demand on existing modes of transpor- tation. Both comprehensive and integrated planning are essential. "The Governor's Task Force will bring the best transportation brains in California together to advise us on the role of the State," said Luce. "The final goal should be a master plan of transportation for California. The committee will evaluate existing reports, utilize the talents of leadingconsultants and recommend a course of action. Luce said, "We also willl study airport facilities to meet the needs of the future the integration of rapid transit and highways and the development of transportation systems designed to move goods to people much faster. "We have invited several outstanding consultants to join with the members of this vital committee at the first meeting in June, Luce said. Several other members will be added to the committee within the next few weeks. Names announced today are: Floyd Andrews, President, Pacific Southwest Airlines, representing intra-state airlines Francis T. Fox, General Manager of the Los Angeles Department of Airports, representing airports MORE Albert W. Bay President, A. W. Bayer m. Associates, representing aviation (general) B.F. Biaggini, President, Southern Pacific, representing railroads John McDonnell, President, Board O. Directors, Alameda-Contra Costa Transit District, representing busses Henry Roloff, Executive Vice President, Pacific Coast Assn. of Port Authorities, representing water transportation Wade Sherrard, Managing Director, California Trucking Assn., re- presenting trucking. Also, Richard R. Brown, El Cajon mayor, representing other city transportation planning Edwin S. Moore, Executive Vice President, California State Automobile Assn., representing Northern California Auto Club Ernani Bernardi, Councilman, City of Los Angeles, representing Transportation Assn. of Southern California Nils O. Eklund, Jr., Vice President, Kaiser Industries, representing Bay Area Transit Study Commission William L. Pereira, Wm. L. Pereira & Associates, representing architects Harmer E. Davis, Director, Institute of Transportation and Traffic Engineering, representing academics. Also, Adrien J. Falk, President, S.F. Bay Area Rapid Transit District, representing rapid transit (San Francisco) A. J. Eyraud, President, Southern California Rapid Transit District, representing rapid transit (Los Angeles) Asa V. Call, President, Automobile Club of Southern California, representing Southern California Auto Club Herbert Hoover, Jr., Board of Directors, Automobile Club of Southern California, representing members at large Dr. Richard D. DeLeur, Vice President and General Manager, Systems Engineer & Integration, TRW Inc., representing members at large, and Dr. Arnold O. Beckman, President, California State Chamber of Commerce, (Chairman of the Board & Chief Exec. Officer, Beckman Instruments Inc.), representing State Chamber of Commerce. The following were invited to act as an Advisory Committee: Sen. Randolph Collier (D-Yreka), chairman, Senate Transportation Committee Assemblyman John F. Foran (D-San Francisco) Chairman, Assembly Committee on Transportation and Commerce Richard Carpenter, Executive Director and General Counsel, League of California Cities, William R. MacDougall, General Counsel and Manager, County Supervisors Assn. Peter E. Mitchell, President, Public Utilities Commission C.G. Beer, Urban Planner, Division of Highways, Department of Public Works, and Luce. # # # OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California PRESS Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.16.67 MEMO TO THE PRESS If you are planning to attend the May 20th Inauguration Cere- monies for Dr. Robert E. Hill as President of California State College at Chico, please contact Judith Kernoff, 54571 the college people need to know how many to expect for the ceremonies and luncheon. We will be unable to supply transportation. JAK OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan today issued a PRESS directive ordering 5.17.67 state departments to give summer jobs to qualified youth having the greatest economic need. However, he tempered this by ordering also that college students needing summer work to finance their educations are "to receive every consideration." The governor named Employment Director Peter Weinberger to head the program. In a statement the governor said: "Employment among youth seeking and needing summer work is of direct concern to this administration. A job with pay is the best way to help any youth become a productive member of society. While provision of summer jobs by private industry and business is vital, state agencies can and should participate in providing these jobs. The program is aimed primarily at providing summer jobs for youth between the ages of 16 and 21. # # # LN/266 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 Governor Ronald Reagan today ordered the PRESS 5.17.67 in a state effort to coordinate and maximize the use of automatic data processing equipment used by state, county and local governments. Initial step will be the naming of a Governor's Intergovern- mental Board on Automatic Data Processing. The 11-man board will draw four members from the state, three from the counties, three from the cities and one from the school districts. Long-range aim is the eventual achievement of a statewide federated information system. The committee is expected to propose any legislation that may be needed to coordinate the data processing systems. Ronald Frankum, the governor's Special Assistant for Local Government, said it is hoped that "eventually all levels of government will be in a position to pool their resources and to control the growth of their data processing staffs and reduce their investments in equipment." Frankum said the governor's office is aware of work being done in the same area by the County Supervisors Assn., the League of California Cities and under a study authorized by the Legislature last year. He said the governor's office intends to work with these groups "on a partnership basis." # # # LN/267 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California Contact: Lyn Nofziger FOR IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE 445-4571 5.18.67 Sacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today announced that he has pro- claimed Friday, May 19, 1967 as NATIONAL DEFENSE TRANSPORTATION DAY and the week beginning May 14, 1967, as NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION WEEK. The proclamation follows: WHEREAS Our national and state transportation systems are modern day networks of railroads, highways and airlines which are essential to commerce and industry- and WHEREAS The several modes of passenger transportation which are fully developed in this country make us the most mobile society in history; and WHEREAS Our way of life and our national defense depend upon our efficient and modern transportation complex; and WHEREAS The Congress of the United States has requested the President to proclaim annually the third Friday of each month of May as National Defense Transportation Day, and also requested the President to proclaim annually the week of May in which the third Friday falls as National Transportation Week, as a tribute to the men and women who move the goods and the people throughout our land; and WHEREAS The President has designated Friday, May 19, 1967 as National Defense Transportation Day, and the week beginning May 14, 1967, as National Transportation Week; and WHEREAS The California Legislature has requested the Governor to proclaim Friday, May 19, 1967, as National Defense Transportation Day and the week beginning May 14, 1967, as National Transportation Week in California NOW THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA, do hereby proclaim Friday, May 19, 1967, as NATIONAL DEFENSE TRANSPORTATION DAY and the week beginning May 14, 1967, as NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION WEEK in Cali ornia, and I urge all Californians to observe these occasions through appropriate ceremonies. # # # JAK/268 OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR Sacramento, California PRESS Contact: Lyn Nofziger 445-4571 5.18.67 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Sacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today announced that he has proclaimed the month of May, 1967, as ANTI-LITTER MONTH. The proclamation follows: WHEREAS The natural beauty of California is marred when litter is strewn along our highways, parks and other public places; and WHEREAS Californians have every right to be proud of our state's scenic beauty, and we should make an extra effort to avoid littering it with carelessly tossed away trash and debris; and WHEREAS Complacency toward this defacement of California's beauty must not be tolerated; and WHEREAS The California Anti-Litter League is conducting a campaign to heighten the appreciation of the need to deposit trash in waste containers instead of on streets, sidewalks, highways, parks and other pub- lic places; and WHEREAS The California Legislature has requested the Governor to proclaim the month of May as "Anti-Litter Month"; NOW THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA, do hereby proclaim the month of May, 1967, as ANTI-LITTER MONTH, and I urge all citizens to support this effort to keep California beautiful. # # # JAK/269

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    "ocrText": "Ronald Reagan Presidential Library\nDigital Library Collections\nThis is a PDF of a folder from our textual\ncollections.\nCollection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers,\n1966-74: Press Unit\nFolder Title: Press Releases - May 1967\n[05/01/1967 - 05/18/1967]\nBox: P7\nTo see more digitized collections visit:\nhttps://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library\nTo see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories\nvisit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection\nContact a reference archivist at: [email protected]\nCitation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing\nNational Archives Catalogue:\nhttps://catalog.archives.gov/\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n4.28.67\nSCHEDULE MAY 1-7\nMONDAY, MAY 1\n11:45 am\nLuncheon: University of Southern California Law\nDay Banquet; Biltmore Bowl, Biltmore Hotel,\nLos Angeles.\nSpeech\n1:30 pm\nDepart Biltmore Hotel by car\n2:35 pm\nDepart Los Angeles International Airport, PSA #483\n3:25 pm\nArrive Sacramento Airport\nTUESDAY, May 2\n9:30 am\nPress Conference; Room 1190\n12:00 Noon\nLuncheon; Eighth grade class from Pleasant Hill;\nWest lawn of the Capitol\nWEDNESDAY, May 3\n11:45 am\nMeeting: His Excellency Charles Lucet, French\nAmbassador to the United States; Governor's Office\n6:15 pm\nDrop-by Kern County Products reception; American\nLegion Post #61, 15th & H Streets\n6:45 pm\nDepart reception\nTHURSDAY, May 4\n10:00 am\nMeeting: Regional Directors of the Community\nAction Program; Council Room\nFRIDAY, May 5\n8:30 am\nDepart Sacramento Airport, chartered plane\n9:30 am\nArrive Los Angeles International Airport\nProceed to Los Angeles Office\n6:30 pm\nReception: in honor of Bob Beverly, Republican\ncandidate for the 46th Assembly District seat;\nHacienda Hotel, 525 North Sepulveda, El Segundo\n7:00 pm\nDepart reception\novernight\nLos Angeles\nSATURDAY, MAY 6\n3:00 pm\nDedication of new facilities at Orange County\nAirport, remarks\n7:00 pm\nDinner: United Republicans of California Convention\nLong Beach Arena, 270 E. Seaside Blvd.\n8:30 pm\nSpeech\novernight\nLos Angeles\nSUNDAY, MAY 7\nNo public appointments scheduled at this time\nJAK/229\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.1.67\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE\nSacramento--David K. Rowe, 45, a Paso Robles businessman, has\nbeen namedemilitary aide to Governor Ronald Reagan.\nAn Air Reserve Lieutenant Colonel, Rowe has 26 years of mili-\ntary service, active and reserve. A flying officer in both World\nWar II and Korea, he is a member of the 9379th Air Reserve Squadron,\nheadquartered at Camp San Luis Obispo.\nAs military aide he will be concerned with military protocol\nand serve as liaison officer between the Adjutant General, Head-\nquarters Military Department and the Governor's Office.\nA native of Paso Robles, Rowe was educated in Pasadena and\nGlendale City schools and is a graduate of San Luis Obispo Jr. Col-\nlege. He has been in business in Paso Robles since 1946 and has\nbeen active in community and civic and reserve military affairs.\nHe and his wife, Elizabeth Ann, have three children. They are:\nDavid III, in basic training at Ft. Leonard Wood, Missouri; Sue\nAnn, a student at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo; and Shawn O., a Paso\nRobles junior high school student.\n# # #\nLN/230\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.3.67\nFOR RELEASE MAY 4, 1967, 7 a.m. PDT\nWASHINGTON--California's recommendations for flood control\nappropriations and reclamation projects for fiscal year 1968 were\npresented to the Appropriations Subcommittee of the House Public\nWorks Committee today.\nGovernor Ronald Reagan's statement on the recommendations\nwas given by William R. Gianelli, Director of the State Department\nof Water Resources.\nThe total recommended appropriations of $60,520,000 for\nflood control and $103,872,000 for reclamation projects represent\nthe unified position of the State of California, Governor Reagan\nsaid.\nRecommendations were arrived at following a series of\nmeetings with local and state agencies and federal representatives.\nThe proposals also were reviewed by the California Water Commission.\n\"Totals are slightly higher than last year's appropriation,\"\nthe Governor said, \"but we feel the recommendations are entirely\nrealistic and have been stripped of all non-essentials.\"\nAlso representing the State at the Subcommittee hearing\nwere Ira J. Chrisman, Chairman of the California Water Commission,\nand Edgar Gillenwaters, Deputy Director of Finance.\nThe suggested appropriations follow:\nPB/231\nFEDERAL FLOOD CONTROL PROGRAM IN CALIFORNIA\nFISCAL YEAR 1967-68\nState\nProject\nCounty\nRecommendation\nAlameda Creek\nAlameda\n$ 4,300,000\nBuchanan Dam\nMadera\n500,000\nBullards Bar Dam\nYuba\n5,040,000\nCorte Madera Creek\nMarin\n300,000\nDry Creek Reservoir\nSonoma\n2,000,000\nEel River Delta\nHumboldt\n250,000\nHidden Dam\nMadera\n500,000\nKlamath Relocation\nDel Norte\n750,000\nLos Angeles County Drainage\nLos Angeles\n12,900,000\nLower San Joaquin River\nSeveral\n884,000\nLytle and Warm Creeks\nSan Bernardino\n350,000\nMartis Creek\nPlacer\n700,000\nMarysville Dam\nYuba\n100,000\n-2-\nFederal Flood Control Program in California, FY 1967-68\n(Continued)\nState\nProject\nCounty\nRecommendation\nMojave River Reservoir\nSan Bernardino\n$ 1,880,000\nMormon Slough\nSan Joaquin\n650,000\nNapa River\nNapa\n300,000\nNew Melones Reservoir\nCalaveras\nTuolumne\n2,750,000\nOroville Reservoir\nButte\n13,700,000\nPajaro River\nMonterey\n150,000\nPine Flat Dam and\nChannel Work.\nFresno-Kings\n500,000\nRedwood Creek\nHumboldt\n2,000,000\nRussian River\nSonoma\nChannelization\nMendocino\n250,000\nSacramento River Bank\nProtection\nSeveral\n1,700,000\nSacramento River\nTributaries\nSeveral\n420,000\nSan Diego River,\nMission Valley\nSan Diego\n800,000\n-3-\nFederal Flood Control Program in California, FY 1967-68\n(Continued)\nState\nProject\nCounty\nRecommendation\nSan Francisco Bay to\nStockton\nSeveral\n$ 700,000\nScotts Creek\nLakeport Reservoir\nLake\n100,000\nSonoma Creek\nSonoma\n150,000\nTahquitz Creek\nRiverside\n200,000\nWalnut Creek\nContra Costa\n2,900,000\nTOTAL\n$57,724,000\n-4-\nSURVEYS\nState\nContinuing Surveys\nCounty\nRecommendation\nBear River, Garden Bar\nYuba\n$ 30,000\nUpper Sacramento River\nButte - Glenn -\nand Butte Basin\nColusa - Sutter\n75,000\nCoon Creek Stream Group\nPlacer - Sutter\n35,000\nUpper Putah Creek Basin\nNapa - Lake\n35,000\nWalnut Creek Restudy\n(Upper Basin)\nContra Costa\n100,000\nMorrison Creek\nSacramento\n51,000\nNorthern California\nStreams\nSeveral\n175,000\nSacramento-San Joaquin\nRivers Delta\nSeveral\n35,000\nDelta Recreation Study\nSeveral\n12,000\nSacramento Valley\nNavigation, Star Bend\nYuba - Sutter\n25,000\nSan Francisco District\nEel River, Comprehensive\nSeveral\n254,000\nMad River, Butler\nValley Dam\nHumboldt\n60,000\n-5-\nSurveys (continued)\nState\nContinuing Surveys\nCounty\nRecommendation\nNovato Creek\nMarin\n$ 45,000\nRussian River Basin\nSonoma - Mendocino\n77,000\nKlamath River, Comp.\nHumboldt - Del Norte\n75,000\nSacramento-San Joaquin\nDelta Model and Water\nQuality\nSeveral\n500,000\nSan Francisquito Creek\nSan Mateo - Santa Clara\n10,000\nSmith River\nDel Norte\n50,000\nPacific Coastal Streams\nSan Mateo\n85,000\nLos Angeles District\nDeer, Day, Etiwanda and\nSan Bernardino\nSan Sevaine Creeks\nRiverside\n79,000\nSan Dieguito River\nReview Report\nSan Diego\n80,000\nSanta Ana River and\nRiverside - Orange -\nOrange County\nSan Bernardino\n280,000\nSanta Barbara County\nStreams\nSanta Barbara\n82,000\n-6-\nSurveys (continued)\nLos Angeles District (continued)\nState\nContinuing Surveys\nCounty\nRecommendation\nSanta Clara River,\nVentura -\nComprehensive River\nLos Angeles\n$ $ 186,000\nStudy\nWhitewater River, Desert\nHot Springs and Vicinity\n(Interim Report)\nRiverside\n80,000\nCalleguas Creek\nVentura\n75,000\nTOTAL\n$ 2,641,000\nNew Survey Starts\nCarmel River\nMonterey\n25,000\nSan Joaquin River Basin\nSeveral\n25,000\nSalinas River\nMonterey\n25,000\nSan Lorenzo River\nUpper Basin\nSanta Cruz\n25,000\nAntelope Valley\nLos Angeles\n30,000\nSan Diego County\nStreams - Pacific Ocean\nSan Diego\n15,000\nPetaluma River\nSonoma Marin\n10,000\nTOTAL\n$ 155,000\n-7-\nSuggested Appropriations for Reclamation Items, 1967-68\nState\nProject\nProgram\nCounty\nRecommendation\nCENTRAL VALLEY PROJECT\nTrinity River Division\nDistribution Systems and\nCleanup Work\nShasta\n$ 717,000\nSacramento River Division\nTehama-Colusa Canal,\nFish Facilities and\nDistribution Systems\nGlenn\n9,966,000\nDelta Division\nContra Loma Reservoir,\nDelta-Mendota Canal\nRehabilitation\nContra Costa\n1,470,000\nAmerican River Division\nAuburn Dam, preconstruction\nPlacer-El Dorado-\nactivities on Folsom-South\nSacramento-San\nCanal\nJoaquin\n9,700,000\nSan Luis Division\nSan Luis Facilities, Pleasant\nValley Canal, Westlands Dist.\nSystem Additional Amount for\nMerced -\nWestlands W. D. System\nFresno\n55,880,000\nKlamath Project\nDrainage\nModoc\n269,000\nWashoe Project\nStampede Reservoir\nNevada\n4,300,000\nPacific Northwest\nPower Intertie\nTransmission\nI\n6,960,000\n-8-\nSuggested Appropriations for Reclamation Items, 1967-68\nState\nProject\nProgram\nCounty\nRecommendation\nCENTRAL VALLEY PROJECT (continued)\nLoan Program\nLocal Agency Systems: Arvin-\nEdison WSD Distribution\nSystem\nKern\n$12,980,000\nCamarosa County Water\nDistrict\nVentura\n9,000,000\nByron-Bethany Irrigation\nDistrict\nSan Joaquin\n2,260,000\nNevada Irrigation District\nNevada - Placer\n359,000\n685,000\nEastern Municipal Water\nDistrict\nRiverside\n646,000\nBanta Carbona\nSan Joaquin\n30,000\nGeneral Investigations\nPlanning\n1,630,000\nTotal Federal Appropriation\n$103,872,000\n-9-\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofzi r\nMEMO T \"HE PRESS\n445=4571\n5.2.67\nThe following bills have been signed by Governor Ronald Reagan:\nAPRIL 25, 1967\nSB 11 - Chapter 49\nprovides additional $206,000 to Dept. of\nMcAteer\nVeterans Affairs to provide educational\nS: Unanimous\nassistance benefits to dependents of dead\nA: Unanimous\nor disabled California veterans for the\ncurrent fiscal year\nSB 44 - Chapter 50\nremoves requirement that notary's name be\nGrunsky\ntyped or printed under his signature on cer-\nS: 31 Ayes; 1 No\ntificate of proof of acknowledgement of var-\nA: Unanimous\nious instruments; requires notaries to use\nseal containing date commission expires;\nchanges maximum size of notary's seal\nSB 149 - Chapter 51\nincreases salaries of members of Mendocino\nCollier\nCounty Board of Supervisors to $7,800 a year;\nS: Unanimous\nDel Norte Board of Supervisors to $4,200 a\nA: Unanimous\nyear; Siskiyou Board of Supervisors to\n$5,400 a year; also increases salary of\nSiskiyou County Auditor to $11,400 a year\nSB 275 - Chapter 52\namends Civil Code to require that any agree-\nDanielson\nment to purchase, sell, lease for a period\nS: Unanimous\nlonger than one year, or find a purchaser or\nA: Unanimous\nseller of real property must be in writing.\nSB 321 - Chapter 53\nincreases fee charged by notary public for\nMcAteer\ntranscribing a deposition to 55 cents per\nS: 22 Ayes; 5 Noes\nhundred words: increased to 20 cents per\nA: Unanimous\nhundred words fee charged any party other\nthan the party purchasing the original tran-\nscription of a deposition for the first copy\nSB 357 - Chapter 54\nprovides that all or part of revenues from\nGrunsky\nmotor vehicle parking facilities set up by\nS: 30 Ayes; 2 Noes\nState College Trustees may be pledged as\nA: Unanimous\nsecurity for notes or bonds issued pursuant\nto State College Revenue Bond Act of 1947\nAB 53 - Chapter 55\nrequires a one-half inch margin on two sides\nH. Johnson\nof printed forms primarily intended to be\nS: Unanimous\nused for recordation purposes; requires top\nA: Unanimous\n2½ inches of first page be reserved for\nrecording information; provides that if\nprinted form does not comply with above, it\nshall not affect notice otherwise given\nunder the recording act\nAB 54 - Chapter 56\nrequiresnames of parties under which an in-\nH. Johnson\nstrument, paper, or notice is to be indexed\nS: Unanimous\nand names of all who execute or witness them\nA: Unanimous\nto be legibly signed, typed, or printed\nthereon; makes various provisions governing\nmethods of indexing of instruments applicable\nalso to paper and notices, and provides that\nsuch provisions apply where material is pre-\nsented for filing; requires separate record-\ning fees for instruments, papers or notices\nattached to each other or serially incorpor-\nated.\nAB 55 - Chapter 57\nincreases fee to county recorder for each\nH. Johnson\ncertificate under sea to $1.00; eliminates\nS: Unanimous\n$1.00 marriage licens\nfee\nAB 56 - Chapter 58\npermits board of supervisors of any county,\nH. Johnson\nat request of county recorder, to authorize\nS: Unanimous\ndestruction of any or all of filed papers or\nA: Unanimous\nrecord books created under Land Title Law:\nrecords must be microfilmed before destruc-\ntion\nAB 107 - Chapter 59\ncorrects incorrect reference in a Health\nVeysey\nand Safety Code provision relating to the\nS: Unanimous\nsanitation of vehicles\nA: Unanimous\nAB 125 - Chapter 60\nestablishes procedure whereby a candidate\nMacDonald & Townsend\nfor municipal office may obtain a recount;\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 154 - Chapter 61\nrequires criminal case subpoena service to\nPowers\ninclude delivering a copy to the persons\nS: Unanimous\nserviced; permits service to a peace officer\nA: Unanimous\nto be made personally or to his immediste\nsuperior or agent designated by his superior\nwhenever peace officer is required as wit-\nness in connection with a matter investi-\ngated in the course cf his duties; also pro-\nvides that in specified circumstances such\nimmediate superior may refuse to accept such\nservice or may be excused from delivering a\nsubpoena to peace officer served\nAB 195 - Chapter 62\nprovides for exceptions to Water Code pro-\nPorter\nvisions covering recordation of water extrac-\nS: Unanimous\ntions and diversions and statements of water\nA: Unanimous\ndiversions and use with State Water Rights Bd\nAB 277 - Chapter 63\ncorrects incorrect cross-reference in a\nKnox\nBusiness and Professions Code provision re-\nS: Unanimous\nlating to subdivision maps\nA: Unanimous\nAB 318 - Chapter 64\namends Code of Civil Procedure by increasing\nForan\nto $6.00 fee for filing abstracts of judg-\nS: Unanimous\nment for purposes of supplemental proceed-\nA: Unanimous\nings when filed in superior or municipal\ncourt in county other than where judgment\nroll is filed\nAB 320 - Chapter 65\nincreased to 150 miles distance within which\nForan\nperson owing debts to a defendant or possess-\nS: Unanimous\ning property of a defendant is required to\nA: Unanimous\nattend before the judge or referee outside\nthe county in which such person resides or\nhas place of business, for purposes of exam-\nination in attachment proceedings.\nAB 413 - Chapter 56\nchanges boundaries of a fire protection dis-\nVasconcellos\ntrict as result of detachment of territory\nS: Unanimous\non March 7, 1967, effective for assessment\nA: Unanimous\nand taxation purposes if the regional state-\nment and map or plat is filed by the district\nwith assessor and State Board of Equaliza-\ntion on or before March 10, 1967; prohibits\ndistrict from furnishing such services or\nlevying taxes on property in territory on\nor after July 1, 1967\nAB 470 - Chapter 67\nrequires that majority of precinct board be\nMurphy\npresent at all times\nthe case of munici-\nS: Unanimous\npal elections\nA: Unanimous\nAB 702 - Chapter 68\namends and repeals certain sections of the\nBagley\nBusiness and Professions Code.\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 714 - Chapter 69\nrepeals certain provisions of Revenue and\nBagley\nTaxation Code relative to motor vehicle\nS: Unanimous\nfuel tax\nA: Unanimous\nAB 718 - Chapter 70\namends and repeals certain sections of the\nBagley\nWater Code\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAPRIL 26, 1967\nSB 227 - Chapter 71\npermits sale of water treatment plant at\nTeale\nDeWitt State Hospital to either County of\nS: Unanimous\nPlacer or Nevada Irrigation District if\nA: Unanimous\nterms are in best interests of State and\nwill not result in increase in cost of water\nto hospital\nSB 250 - Chapter 72\nrevises provisions of Code of Civil Proced-\nBradley\nure relating to new trial on grounds of ex-\nS: Unanimous\ncessive damages, insufficiency of evidence\nA: Unanimous\nand evidence not justifying verdict or\nagainst law; authorizes granting motion for\nnew trial on ground of inadequate damages\nsubject to denial if person against whom\nverdict is rendered consents to addition of\nsuch amount as court determines\nSB 358 - Chapter 73\nincreases to $10,000 the maximum amount of\nDanielson\ncontract which county purchasing agent of a\nS: Unanimous\ncounty with population of more than 900,000\nA: 71 Ayes; 1 No\nmay enter into if board of supervisors by\nordinance so directs\nAB 111 - Chapter 74\nrequires Governor or his designee to receive\nPorter\npreliminary reports developed during inves-\nS: Unanimous\ntigative phase of proposed federal flood con-\nA: Unanimous\ntrol and reclamation projects; also requires\nGovernor or his designee to transmit copies\nof such reports to Legislature for its\nwritten comments and requires that such\ncomments be transmitted to appropriate fed-\neral agency\nAB 411 - Chapter 75\nprovides that vacancy in office of sheriff\nBiddle\nshall be filled by assistant sheriff, under-\nS: Unanimous\nsheriff, or chief deputy until vacancy is\nA: Unanimous\nfilled\n-0-\nNOTE: Bills signed will be announced at the press briefing each\nmorning; written confirmation will be issued once a week.\nJAK/232\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nRELEASE: 1 ediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.3.67\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today urged key state agricultural\nofficials to work closely with other governmental agencies, farmers\nand the private sector to assess problems created by California's\nextremely wet spring.\nHe said he has asked the State Board of Agriculture, working\nwith the State Department of Agriculture, to assess the impact of the\nunusual weather on California's agriculture. The State Board of\nAgriculture will meet here Thursday.\nThe state board and the department were asked by Governor Reagan\nto jointly explore with farmers, other state agencies, federal bureaus,\nfinancial institutions, insurance companies, suppliers of farm input\nitems, processors and transportation companies to determine what\naction business and industry take to relieve problems caused by the\nheavy rainfall.\n\"Earl Coke, director of the Department of Agriculture, and Allan\nGrant, president of the State Board of Agriculture, have assured me\nthey are making every effort to find out the extent of the damage and\nto pinpoint areas where assistance can be made available,\" the governor\nsaid, adding:\n\"The number of individual farmers suffering complete or substantial\nlosses of crops or trees, or related production due to lack of feed,\nis still unknown.\n\"At the same time, the magnitude of the economic losses of farm\nworkers and supporting agricultural industries has not been determined.\n\"It appears that economic losses to agriculture and related\nindustries will involve all sections of the state,\" he said.\n\"Therefore, it is imperative that all sections of our agricultural\neconomy begin working together to determine not only the extent of the\ndamage but also what can be done to assist farmers and others affected\nby the adverse weather.\"\n# # #\nPB/233\nOFFICE OF THE GOVER\nR\nSacramento, Califor,\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.3.67\nFOR IMMEDIATE. RELEASE\nSacramento--State Finance Director Gordon P. Smith has signed\nan order transferring 11.5 million dollars from the state general\nfund to the health care deposit fund to carry financing of the\nstate's Medi-Cal program through the remainder of this week.\nThe transfer was made at the request of Gov. Ronald Reagan,\nwho said it is necessary to prevent interruptions in the State Medi-\nCal Program.\nIn addition, Smith said he is prepared to transfer another\n16 million dollars, that ordinarily would be used to pay off\nyear's end medicare bills, to see the program through until May 15.\nReason for the transfer of funds is the federal government's\nfailure to come up with its share--equal to the combined state-\ncounty share--of medicare funds.\nA supplemental appropriation has passed the House of Represen-\ntatives but is still before the Senate.\nSmith said it is hoped federal funds will be made available\nby May 15.\nHe pointed out that as of Tuesday the state had only $600,000\nin its medical account and had two million dollars worth of bills\nto pay.\nWithout the federal funds the state will be unable to pay\nbills from May 15 to May 30. On June 1 another 11.5 million dollars\nof state funds will become available but Smith said it will not\nbe possible to use this amount any sooner because of the way the\nlaw is written.\nThe failure of the Congress to pass the supplemental appro-\npriation means the state must shoulder the full medical load tem-\nporarily.\nOrdinarily the 11.5 million dollars is programmed with\nfederal and county funds to meet the costs of the medicare program\nthrough the entire month.\n# # #\nLN/234\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nThurs AMS\n445-4571\n5.3.67\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE\nSacramento--A transportation committee to recommend a master\nplan for California transportation was announced today by Gov.\nRonald Reagan.\n\"This is an enormous task, and I am asking men with vision and\nbrains to join us in comprehensive transportation planning,\" Reagan\nsaid.\n\"Transportation now and in the future affects every citizen\nand proper planning is a vital need for California,\" he said.\nGov. Reagan has asked 21 California citizens, mostly involved\nin the transportation industry or planning groups, to work with\nGordon C. Luce, State Administrator of Transportation, and other\nrepresentatives of government. Expert consultants will be asked to\nparticipate at the first meeting planned for May 25 in Sacramento.\nLuce also will coordinate a Governor's Transportation Conference\nto include all persons in the State involved in transportation.\nThis\nconference is being planned for October in Sacramento.\nThe Governor said in a letter to those invited to join the\ncommittee that California is a recognized leader in the field of\nhighway transportation.\nBut he noted that effective communication between all trans-\nportation entities in the State and overall integrated planning is\nessential.\nThe objectives of the committee will include determining the\nrole of the State, the proper organizational structure to accomplish\nsuch a role, the value of existing transportation studies and forms\nof transportation for the future.\nGov. Reagan also pointed out that the Transportation Agency will\ncontinue its present role of coordinating the Departments of Public\nWorks, Motor Vehicles, and California Highway Patrol with an eye\ntoward integrated planning with other modes of transportation in\nthe State. The Agency has already recommended a closer and increased\nrole with the Board of Aeronautics.\nThe committee membership is composed of a cross section of\nCalifornia transportation. Airlines, airports, the general aviation\nindustry, railroads, bus companies, maritime shipping and trucking\nhave been asked to provide members.\nThe Southern California Rapid Transit System, Bay Area Rapid\nTransit System, the Auto Club of Southern California, the Auto\nClub of Northern California, Transportation Agency of Southern Cali-\nfornia and the Bay Area Transit Study also are included.\nIn addition, other California cities with planning groups, an\narchitect, an engineer, an academic person and the State Chamber\nof Commerce have been asked to serve.\nAdvisory members to be invited in addition to Luce are:\nChairman, Senate Transportation Committee; Chairman, Assembly\nTraneportation Committee: representative from the League of California\nCities; representative from the County Supervisors Assn.; a repre-\nsentative from the State Public Utilities Commission; and a repre-\nsentative from the California Division of Highways.\n#\n#\n#\nLN/235\nHEALTH AND WELFARE AGENCY\nFOR MEDIATE RELEASE\nSacramento, California\nContact: Spencer Williams\nMay 3, 1967\n\"Over my dead body,\" was the reaction of Spencer Williams,\nAdministrator of the Health and Welfare Agency, to the demand of\nAssemblyman Charles Warren, Chairman of the Democratic State Central\nCommittee, that Dr. James V. Lowry, Director of the Department of\nMental Hygiene, be dismissed by the Reagan Administration.\n\"Dr. Lowry is nationally acclaimed as a top man in the\nfield of mental health,\" Williams said, \"and California is fortunate\nthat he has agreed to continue his service as Director of the State\nDepartment.'\nDr. Lowry was first appointed to his position by former\nGovernor Brown after a nationwide drive to recruit the best man\navailable. In reappointing Dr. Lowry, Governor Reagan said, \"I am\nconvinced that our state government will be served best by retention\nof Dr. Lowry.\"\n\"His reappointment by Governor Reagan was hailed throughout\nCalifornia by Republicans and Democrats alike,\" Williams said, \"and\nany efforts by Charles Warren or others to force his removal will be\nover my dead body. Continuing hypocritical efforts by Warren and\nothers to gain political mileage through exaggerated statements and\nfoolish demands concerning the Department of Mental Hygiene can only\nserve to cause unwarranted alarm among the staff, patients, and\npatients' families, and cause serious damage to the program\nitself,\" Williams said.\n#######\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.4.67\nLouis J. Kroeger of 64 Pine Street, San Francisco,\nhas been named a member of the Commission on California\nState Government Organization.\nHe replaces Harold Furst, also of San Francisco.\nLike Furst, Kroeger is a Democrat.\nKroeger is one of three governor's appointees on\nthe commission.\nA graduate of the University of California, Kroeger\nhas been a consultant on government for the last 22 years.\nHe is a member of the firm of Griffinhagen & Kroeger.\nHe is 58.\n# # #\nLN/236\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.4.67\nGovernor Ronald Reagan announced today the appointment of\nVirginia Allee, chief of the Division of Industrial Welfare, as his\nrepresentative to the Washington Conference on the Role of American\nWomen in the War on Poverty.\nMiss Allee will meet in Washington on Monday, May 8, with other\nleading representatives of women organizations from throughout the\nUnited States, top government officials from the 50 states and the\nfederal government, and officials of the War on Poverty.\nShe was briefed Thursday for her trip, including attendance at\nthe meeting of the California Assn. of Community Action Directors.\nShe heard the governor address the group and stress the importance of\nthe local community in the War on Poverty.\nMiss Allee talked with several members of the organization about\ntheir programs and the activities of women in the War on Poverty and\ndiscussed the involvement of various state agencies in the program.\nIn naming Miss Allee as his representative, Governor Reagan\nasked her to convey the message that local participants in the War\non Poverty should have more control over the spending of money in the\nprogram.\nMiss Allee has a long history of working for the interests of\npeople. Prior to being appointed to her present post, she held several\ntop level positions in the retail industry in Southern California.\nShe has been personnel director for Bullock's Department Stores,\nand was a vice president of J. J. Haggarty's, Inc., of Beverly Hills.\nShe also has been active in many civic and professional organizations\nin Southern California where her particular interests were in the\npersonnel field.\nAs chief of the Division of Industrial Welfare, Miss Allee is\na statutory member of the California Advisory Commission on the Status\nof Women. For four years prior to her being named to her present\nposition, she served on the California Industrial Welfare Commission.\n# # #\nPB/237\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nContact:\nLyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.4.67\nPRESS\nSACRAMENTO - Gov. Ronald Reagan today issued the following\nstatement urging all Californians to celebrate Cinco De Mayo:\n\"Cinco De Mayo is an important Mexican holiday which is\nwidely celebrated throughout California by our citizens of Mexican\ndescent.\n\"On the 5th of May 1862 a poorly equipped Mexican army\ndefeated the regiments of the French Emperor Louis Napoleon. This\nvictory set OUR southern neighbors on the long road leading to\nindependence and the flourishing Republic of Mexico we know today.\n\"Cinco De Mayo should have significance for all Americans,\nwhatever their backgrounds. It commemorates the beginning of one\nnation's struggle to become free, a desire with which all Americans\nsympathize.\n\"For this reason, I urge all Californians--regardless of\ndescent to participate in the Cinco De Mayo celebrations being\nheld throughout California this weekend.\n# # #\nLN/238\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nPRESS\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.4.67\nFOR SUNDAY RELEASE\nSacramento--Is capital punishment a deterrent to murder?\nThose who believe it is have at least two more supporters in the\nform of an Oakland liquor store operator and his wife.\nThe office of Gov. Ronald Reagan recently received this letter\nfrom the wife. It is one of hundreds of letters received supporting\nthe Governor's stand on capital punishment:\nThe Hon. Ronald Reagan, Governor of California\nState Capitol Building\nSacramento, California\nDear Sir:\nBy seeing to the enforcement of our law, you saved my\nhusband's life last Sunday, when a Negro bandit knocked him\ndown, sat on him, raised his knife high and shouted, \"I am\ngoing to kill you!\" My husband, struggling to hold his hand\naway, shouted in reply, \"You may kill me, but you will go to\nthe gas chamber for that! Will you like to go to the gas\nchamber?\"\nMy husband said later that upon these words, the hand\nholding the knife shook, and though the struggle continued for\nthe gun and the money, the knife was put down. Then the police\narrested the man and his companion. When my husband stood up\nagain, he said to me, \"Governor Reagan saved my life!\"\nIt is the life of a very good, honest man who works hard\nfor a living--a life worthy of being saved.\nThe best thing that has happened to us is that you became\nour Governor. I thank you with all my heart, and I pray that\nGod may bless you.\nYours very truly,\n#\n#\n#\nLN/239\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan announced today PRESS that he will not intervene\n5.4.67\nin the case of Daniel A. Roberts, scheduled to be executed on May 9\nfor the murder of a San Francisco landlady in 1962. Roberts was\nconvicted of first degree murder in a jury trial, and the death penalty\nwas unanimously affirmed by the California Supreme Court in December,\n1966.\nGovernor Reagan had earlier granted a 20-day stay of execution\nat the request of Roberts' attorney, Mrs. Nancy Rossi of San Leandro.\nThe governor said that each of the questions raised by Mrs. Rossi has\nbeen thoroughly investigated, and that there is no factual basis for\nupsetting the decisions of the jury and the Supreme Court.\n\"We have fully examined every facet of the case, including any\nmatters in mitigation or extenuation, which might aid in determining\nwhether or not to exercise executive clemency, and have found no\njustification for intervening in this case,\" he said.\nRoberts has had two trials, with the first, in 1963, also\nresulting in the death sentence by a different jury. The U.S. Supreme\nCourt denied a stay of execution on April 17, 1967.\nRoberts, now 43, was convicted on November 22, 1965, of killing\nMrs. Pearl Popejoy, the landlady of an apartment house on Folsom Street\nin San Francisco, where Roberts had been living for 3 months prior to\nthe offense. Testimony at the trial revealed that Roberts had planned\na robbery of Mrs. Popejoy to obtain the rent money which he thought\nshe had hidden in her apartment. He had planned a subsequent getaway,\nand had arranged with his brother to move his belongings prior to the\nrobbery attempt. On the night of the murder, Roberts waited until\nMrs. Popejoy's husband had left for work, and then entered the apartment.\nThe next morning the landlady's body was found hidden under a bed.\nRental documents, a purse and a watch were missing from the apartment.\nRoberts and a woman who had been living in the apartment with him had\nfled from San Francisco, and were eventually captured in Oregon.\nRoberts had previously been twice convicted of felonies, includ-\ning check offenses in 1947 and second degree murder in 1954. The\n1954 conviction involved a robbery-murder situation, and Roberts was\non parole for that crime at the time of the San Francisco murder.\n# # #\nLN/240\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Imn. Liate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today named PRESS* five persons to the Local\n5-5-67\nApplications Advisory Board, created by the 1965 Legislature to act\nas a policy body to approve applications for migrant housing, education\nand health care.\nMembers serve at the pleasure of the governor and are paid travel\nexpenses.\nNamed were:\nJohn Ventura, Fresno County Supervisor. A Republican, he\nsucceeds Warren Church of Watsonville.\nSecondino C. Ramirez, Porterville Democrat, succeeding Eddie\nN. Perez of Los Angeles.\nThomas E. Richardson, secretary to the labor committee of the\nCalifornia Farm Bureau Federation. Richardson, Concord Republican,\nreplaces Ernesto G. Loredo of Poplar.\nMike Schultz, associated with the El Centro growers of Mike\nSchultz & Son, to a new position created by the 1965 Legislature.\nSchultz is a Republican.\nHarold C. Livingston, Stanislaus County Housing Authority\ncommissioner and Modesto farmer, also to a new position on the board.\nLivingston is a Democrat.\n# # #\nPB/241\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO.\nRELEASE: Mediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.5.67\nSeven persons were named today by Governor Ronald Reagan to the\nState Social Welfare Board.\nBoard members serve at the pleasure of the governor and receive\nper diem and travel expenses for meetings. The appointments are sub-\nject to Senate confirmation.\nAnnouncement of the appointment of Nelson A. Howard, owner of\nNelson A. Howard Co., manufacturers representatives, San Marino, was\nmade jointly by Governor Reagan and Assemblyman John L. E. (Bud) Collier\n(R-South Pasadena). Howard, a Republican who lives in Pasadena, was a\ndirector of Family Service in Los Angeles for three years and in\nPasadena for two years.\nHe succeeds Curtis C. Aller Jr. of San Francisco.\nAnnouncement of the appointment of Mrs. Mary R. Ripley, Los\nAngeles, was jointly announced by the governor and Senator Robert S.\nStevens (R-Los Angeles). Mrs. Ripley is a veteran of many years of\ncivic service in the Southern California area.\nShe is a past president of the Volunteer Bureau of Los Angeles\nand the Neighborhood Youth Assn., is a member of the Citizens Advisory\nCommittee of the State Welfare Study Commission and is secretary of\nthe Child Welfare League of America.\nalso\nMrs. Ripley/is a vice president of the National Social Welfare\nAssembly, chairman of the Mental Health Division of the Welfare Plan-\nning Council, the Advisory Committee of the Los Angeles Area Bureau of\nSocial Work Volunteer Project and vice president of the Welfare Plan-\nning Council, Los Angeles region.\nShe replaces Audrey A. Kaslow of Los Angeles.\nAnnouncement of the appointment of Raymond E. Lee of Roosevelt\nLee Ltd., Beverly Hills real estate investment firm, was made jointly\nby Governor Reagan and Assemblyman Paul Priolo (R-Los Angeles). Lee,\nLos Angeles Republican, succeeds Dr. Milton Chernin of Berkeley.\nLee, founder of the Rayette Co. and the Toni Home Wave Co., also\nfounded the Lee Pharmacal Co., Los Angeles. He is a member of the\nAspen Society of Fellows of the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies\nand is a member of the board of Boys' Clubs Foundation of Southern\nCalifornia.\n-1-\nHe is a member Uf the Board of Don Bosco Technical Institute,\nCedars-Sinai Medical Center, Gateways Hospital, Los Angeles County\nAssn. of Mental Health, the Menninger Foundation and is a member of\nthe board of councilors of the USC Medical School and the Board of\nGovernors af the Welfare Federation of the Los Angeles area.\nAnnouncement of the appointment of Dr. Walter W. Dolfini of\nEureka was made jointly by Governor Reagan and Assemblyman Frank P.\nBelotti (R-Eureka). Dr. Dolfini, a Republican, succeeds Percy H.\nSteele Jr., San Diego.\nDr. Dolfini was graduated from Stanford and McGill Universities\nand is a trustee of the College of the Redwoods, Eureka. He also\nserves on the Advisory Board of Humboldt State College, Arcata.\nAnnouncement of the appointment of J. Steve Williams, San\nBernardino attorney, was made jointly by the governor and Senator\nWilliam E. Coombs (R-Rialto). A Republican, he replaces Arthur\nHellender, Oakland.\nWilliams was graduated from Loyola University with a BS and LLB\nand currently is chairman of the San Bernardino City Police Commission.\nHe is council chairman of the Catholic Committee on Scouting and\na member of the executive board of the Arrowhead Area Council of the\nBoy Scouts and the Downtown San Bernardino YMCA.\nWilliams is engaged in private law practice and is a former\nSan Bernardino County chief deputy district attorney. He is a director\nof the local Family Service Agency and past president of the Catholic\nSocial Services Agency of San Bernardino.\nAnnouncement of the appointment of Arthur R. Tirado, Fresno\ntheater owner, was made jointly by Governor Reagan and Assemblyman\nErnest N. Mobley (R-Fresno). Tirado, a Republican, succeeds W. M. Hugh\nSill, Bakersfield.\nTirado is treasurer of the Fresno Community Service Organization\nand the Mexican-American Political Assn. and a former president of the\nComite Civico Mexico. He is a member of the board of the Pinedale\nBoys Club and is a member of Mexican-American Educators.\nHe served on the advisory board of the State FEPC and was a member\nof the Fresno mayor's Human Relations Board.\nMrs. Estella W. Dooley, deputy public defender in San Francisco,\nwas named to succeed Mrs. Maxwell E. Greenberg of Beverly Hills. She\nis a Republican. She was graduated from Howard University, Washington,\nD.C. and Long Island University and admitted to the bar in 1958, engag-\ning in private law practice until 1966 when she became deputy public\ndefender,\nMrs. Dooley was employed by the federal government for 15 years\nin the Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service.\n# # #\nPB/242\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today endorsed PRESS the statewide observance\n5.5.67\nof May 7 through 13, as \"Hire a Veteran Week, = which is being\npromoted throughout California by community Veterans Employment\nCommittees in cooperation with the California State Employment\nService.\n\"This annual observance is particularly significant this year\nas we note a change in the complexion of our veteran population,\nwith more and more younger veterans of the Vietnam conflict\nreturning home to enter the civilian work force, some for the\nfirst time,\" the governor said.\n\"Jobs must be found for these new veterans, as well as for\nveterans of World War II and the Korean War, some of whom are out\nof work through no fault of their own, and many of whom are now\nin that 'older worker' status where age is often a job barrier,\"\nGovernor Reagan said.\n\"Hire a Veteran Week\" calls to the attention of employers and\njob applicants the fact that the California Department of Employment\nprovides special services to all veterans in accordance with\nfederal and state laws.\nThese services include priority of referral to open jobs for\nwhich veterans qualify, with first priority given qualified disabled\nveterans.\nPB/243\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-3417\n5.5.67\n(Temp.)\nHarmon G. Scoville, Westminster attorney, PRESS today was named\nby Governor Ronald Reagan as Municipal Court judge in the Huntington\nBeach-Seal Beach Judicial District.\nThe post was created by the 1965 Legislature.\nScoville, 44, is a Republican who was graduated from UCLA\nwith an AB and from Stanford with an LLB. He has been engaged in\nprivate law practice since 1951 and has served as judge pro tem of\nthe Superior Court since 1962.\nA World War II veteran, Scoville in 1963 and 1964 was bishop\nof the Garden Grove Ward of the Mormon Church and taught seminary\nfor two years for the church.\nHe served as president of the Westminster Chamber of Commerce\nfor two years and from 1961-66 was a member of the State Bar Committee\non Continuing Legal Education. He also is a member of the Orange\nCounty Bar Assn. Committee for Administration of Justice.\nScoville is married and has five children.\n# # #\nPB/244\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-3417\n(Temp.)\nFifteen persons were named today by PRESS Governor Ronald Reagan to\n5.5.67\nthe Tourism and Visitor Services Commission.\nThe appointments, which require Senate confirmation, are at the\npleasure of the governor. Commission members are paid travel expenses.\nL. W. Lane Jr., Portola Valley Republican, was reappointed to\nthe commission and named its chairman. Lane is publisher of Sunset\nMagazine, Menlo Park.\nOthers named were:\nStuart G. Cross, vice president and general manager, Yosemite\nPark and Curry Co., Yosemite National Park. Cross, a Republican, lives\nin Yosemite Valley and replaces Carlton Skinner of Belvedere.\nPeter Rochen, vice president and general manager, the Senator\nHotel, Sacramento. Rochon, a Republican, succeeds John F. Dougherty of\nMonterey.\nWalter E. Terry, vice president, D'Arcy Advertising Co., San\nFrancisco. Terry, a Republican from San Rafael, succeeds Bert D. Lynn\nof Brentwood.\nFritz B. Burns, owner of the Airport Marina Hotel and operator\nof Fritz B. Burns and Associates, land developers. Burns, Los Angeles\nRepublican, succeeds M. Larry Lawrence of San Diego.\nMrs. Joan L. Burgan of Burgan Travel Center, West Covina. Mrs.\nBurgan, a Republican, replaces Arbis (cq) D. Shipley of Lower Lake.\nMelvin G. Edwards, publicity and promotion coordinator for the\nSan Bernardino County Economic Development Commission. Edwards, of\nYucca Valley, is a Republican who succeeds William F. Monaham of Palos\nVerdes Estates.\nJ. Floyd Andrews, president, Pacific Southwest Airlines, San\nDiego. Andrews, La Jolla Republican, succeeds Edwin D. Ettinger of\nAnaheim.\nFrank H. White, administrative assistant at Knotts Berry Farm,\nFullerton. White, a Republican, replaces Charles G. Trombetta of Anaheim.\nOliver C. Stivers, operator of Stivers Private Schools, Hayward.\nStivers, a Republican, replaces Frank M. Bogert of Palm Springs.\n-1-\nPaul Hanson, Jr., president, Marketing and Management Co.,\nSan Francisco. Hanson, a Republican, succeeds Theodore Rosequist of\nCarmichael.\nMrs. Lorraine G. Mazzie, Bakersfield Republican who has been\nactive in civic affairs and her husband's produce business. She\nsucceeds Burr Williams of Anaheim.\nReappointed to the commission, in addition to Lane, were:\nRobert J. Sullivan, general manager, San Francisco Convention\nand Visitors Bureau. Sullivan, of Millbrae, is a Republican.\nWilliam A. Knight, executive vice president, Gray Line Sight-\nseeing Tours, Los Angeles. He is a Republican.\nRobert F. Smith, president, Phillips-Ramsey Inc., San Diego\nadvertising and public relations agency. He is a Republican.\n# # #\nPB/245\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.5.67\nGOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE MAY 8-14\nMONDAY, MAY 8\n8:20 am\nDepart Sacramento Airport, chartered plane\n9:15 am\nArrive Santa Barbara Airport\nProceed to Rancheros Vistadores Camp for\nlunch and ride\n4:00 pm\nDepart Santa Barbara Airport, chartered plane\n4:45 pm\nArrive Sacramento Airport\nTUESDAY, MAY 9\n10:30 am\nMeeting: Dr. Lewis Nash, Superintendent of\nCamarillo State Hospital; Governor's Office\n11:15 am\nMeeting: State Treasurer Ivy Baker Priest\nRe: Drawing of San Francisco Harbor Improvement\nBonds; Governor's Office\n1:30 pm\nPress Conference; Room 1190\n2:15 pm\nMeeting: California Community Television Assn;\nSenator Hotel. Brief greetings only.\nWEDNESDAY, MAY 10\n12:00 Noon\nLuncheon: State Women's and Men's Clubs; Elks\nClub, 11th & \"J\" Sts. Remarks. Mrs. Reagan\nwill attend.\nTHURSDAY, MAY 11\n9:30 am\nMeeting: Executives' Seminar on California State\nand Local Government; Council Room\n10:30 am\nMeeting: Dr. Max Rafferty and State Board of\nEducation members Howard Day and Dr. Thomas\nHarwood; Governor's Office\n11:45 am\nMeeting: South Bay Chamber of Commerce; Council\nRoom. Accompanied by Assemblyman Priolo and\nSenator Stevens.\n3:00 pm\nMeeting: Governor's Council; Council Room\nFRIDAY, MAY 12\n11:30 am\nAcceptance of a ticket to EXPO '67, presented\nby a representative of the Canadian Government;\nGovernor's Office\nSATURDAY, MAY 13\nNo public appointments scheduled at this time.\nSUNDAY, MAY 14\nNo public appointments scheduled at this time.\nJAK/246\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today concurred PRESS in the declaration of a\n5.8.67\nstate of emergency along the San Joaquin River system and announced\nthat he will make a flying tour over the San Joaquin Valley and foot-\nhills Wednesday morning.\nState Water Resources Director William R. Gianelli asked for\nconcurrence in the declaration earlier today.\nThe governor said he has asked Gianelli, Earl Coke, director of\nthe State Department of Agriculture, legislators from San Joaquin\nValley districts, and representatives of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation\nand the Army Corps of Engineer to accompany him on the flight.\nThe flight will be followed by a press conference in Fresno at\n10 a.m.\nThe declaration will enable the State Department of Water\nResources to aid local districts along the San Joaquin River in patrol-\ning river levees and bypasses and maintaining them during the next 10\nweeks of estimated high water flow.\nThe governor directed the Department of Finance to free funds\nset aside by the Legislature in 1958 for such emergencies under\nSection 128 of the Water Code.\n\"The San Joaquin Valley is facing a long-term threat along the\nriver,\" Governor Reagan said. \"The Department of Water Resources has\nwarned that unless there is a concerted effort to maintain the strength\nof the levees, there could be a major break in the system before mid-\nJuly. We will do all that is possible to prevent a disaster.\n\"The agricultural economy of the San Joaquin Valley has already\nsuffered from April storms. We must see that farm land adjacent to\nSan Joaquin River levees is protected so that farmers do not suffer\nfurther losses.\n\"At this time, our efforts are not in response to a disaster,\nbut rather in response to the needs of a flood-fighting agency -- the\nDepartment of Water Resources -- to get on the battle line of pro-\ntection against serious damage.\n\"We are alerting the people of the San Joaquin Valley, and\nCalifornia, to the fact that the record snowpack in the Sierras above\nthe southern San Joaquin Valley is a potential danger.\n-1-\n\"We recognize that danger and are deploying men to prevent\ndamage. I know local agencies responsible for maintaining the levees\nwill do their best and the state will do its part to render assistance\nwhen that job is beyond their manpower or financial resources.\"\nGovernor Reagan said the Department of Water Resources has\nalready briefed supervisory personnel and that Division of Forestry\nconservation crews will be available for levee work if the need\narises.\n# # #\n(Memo to Editors: The Fresno press conference will be held at 10 a.m.\nin the pilot's briefing room in the hanger of the\nCalifornia Air National Guard at Fresno airport.\nLocal press can contact Col. Howell at guard head-\nquarters to make arrangements for attendance.)\nLN/247\n-2-\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nMEMO TO THE PRESS RESS\n445-4571\n5.8.67\nLast week, Governor Ronald Reagan signed the following bills:\nMAY 2, 1967\nSB 116 - Chapter 76\nProvides that savings banks may invest\nAlquist & Bradley\nin bonds of political subdivision, pub-\nS: Unanimous\nlic corporation, or district of State\nA: Unanimous\nof California if, among other require-\nments, the net direct debt of such entity\ntogether with its net overlapping debt\ndoes not exceed 25 percent of the assessed\nvaluation of the taxable property within\nits boundaries.\nSB 211 - Chapter 77\nProvides that in the event of an erro-\nDeukmejian\nneous tax sale to the state, the Board\nS: Unanimous\nof Supervisors shall make an order can-\nA: Unanimous\ncelling the deed; the Board of Supervisors\nshall also record a certified copy of this\norder and file a copy of it with the\nauditor who shall also record a certified\ncopy of this order and file a copy of it\nwith the auditor who shall enter the fact\nof the cancellation on the delinquent\nrole, the abstract, or the electronic data\nprocessing records; also provides same\nprocedure for property which is sold for\ndelinquent taxes which are later cancelled\nAB 314 - Chapter 78\nRaises maximum speed limit for trucks,\nPriolo\nbusses and passenger vehicles drawing\nS: Unanimous\nother vehicles to 55 miles per hour.\nA: 54 ayes; 11 noes\nMAY 3, 1967\nSB 34 - Chapter 79\nAuthorizes county recorders to microfilm\nStiern\nor photocopy certain documents; provides\nS: Unanimous\nthat federal tax liens will be filed with\nA: Unanimous\nall other documents; makes standard $2.00\nfiling fee applicable to federal tax liens\nor redemptions in irrigation districts;\nestablishes uniform size for maps recor-\nded by Division of Highways and allows\nsuch maps to be microfilmed.\nSB 42 - Chapter 80\nGrants property tax welfare exemption\nGrunsky\nto property owned by nonprofit corpora-\nS: Unanimous\ntion which would otherwise qualify except\nA: Unanimous\nthat, on the lien date, its articles of\nincorporation would not provide that its\nproperty was irrevocably dedicated to\ncharitable, scientific or hospital pur-\nposes; corporation must file affidavit\nwith assessor that its property has been\nso dedicated and must also amend its arti-\ncles prior to first Monday in March of\n1967 to provide for the required irrevo-\ncable dedication.\nAB 55 - Chapter 81\nProvides that judgment entered pursuant\nGrunsky\nto provisions of code of civil procedure\nS: Unanimous\nunder which parties agree to judgment to\nA: Unanimous\nbe taken against defendant is deemed to\nbe a compromise settlement.\n-MORE-\n-2-\nAB 117 - Chapter 82\nProvides that notices sent to prosper\nAlquist & Bradley\ntive jurors for courts of record and\nS: Unanimous\njustice courts may be sent by first-\nA: Unanimous\nclass mail; notice shall be sent by\nregistered or certified mail upon fail-\nure of respond to notice by first-class\nmail; no fine or attachment shall result\nuntil there is failure to respond to\nsecond notice.\nSB 131 - Chapter 83\nAuthorizes municipal water districts\nCologne\nto (1) compensate director absent from\nS: Unanimous\nboard meeting if he is on district busi-\nA: Unanimous\nness; (2) pay expenses incurred by\nDirector on district business; (3) con-\ntract with state employees retirement\nsystem for pensions and health accident\ninsurance; (4) employ counsel and pay\nall fees and expenses to defend actions\nbrought against their agents, employees\nor officers; (5) pay any judgment, with-\nout reimbursement by agent, employee or\nofficer, if their liability is based\nupon acts or ommissions in their official\ncapacity, absent fraud or malice; (6)\npermit districts to supply water to any\nproperty not subject to district tax at\nspecial rates and conditions.\nSB 186 - Chapter 84\nChanges name of State Employees Retire-\nStiern\nment System to Public Employees Retire-\nS: Unanimous\nment System.\nA: Unanimous\nSB 209 - Chapter 85\nPermits destruction or disposal of\nLagomarsino\nexhibits which conveys title or creates\nS: Unanimous\na lien on real property in civil actions\nA: Unanimous\nafter three years from final determination\nof case; prohibits destruction or dispo-\nsal of evidence until 30 days after notice\nthereof has been sent to attorneys of\nrecord, or parties themselves.\nSB 347 - Chapter 86\nAuthorizes urgency ordinances to be passed\nBradley\nat either a regular or special meeting\nS: Unanimous\nof city legislative body.\nA: Unanimous\nSB 368 - Chapter 87\nAuthorizes Director of Agriculture, by\nStiern\nregulation, to require immunization of\nS: Unanimous\nimported swine against hog cholera when\nA: Unanimous\nneeded; authorizes establishment of\ntuberculosis free areas in conjunction\nwith U.S. Dept. of Agriculture.\nAB 135 - Chapter 88\nProhibits any person from directly or\nBiddle\nindirectly representing that State of\nS: Unanimous\nCalifornia is sponsoring or endorsing\nA: Unanimous\na World's Fair with specific approval by\nlaw; violation of same is a misdemeanor.\nAB 713 - Chapter 89\nAmends two sections of putlic utilities\nBagley\ncode without making substantive changes.\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 719 - Chapter 90\nAmends and renumbers, adds and repeals\nBagley\nvarious sections of welfare and insti-\nS: Unanimous\ntutions code without making substantive\nA: Unanimous\nchanges.\nAB 1014 - Chapter 91\nMakes additional $125,000 available for\nRalph\ntransfer from general fund to county\nS: Unanimous\nschool service fund contingency account\nA: Unanimous\nfor current fiscal year.\n-MORE-\n-3-\nSB 73 - Chapter 92\nChanges vote requirement for dissolution\nMcCarthy\nof Union High School library districts to\nS: Unanimous\ntwo-thirds of the votes cast at the elec-\nA: Unanimous\ntion called by the library trustees upon\nthe question of dissolution.\nSB 161 - Chapter 93\nAmends commercial code to make fee for\nShort\ncertificate showing existence of finan-\nS: Unanimous\ncing statement and any statement of\nassignment thereof $5.00.\nAB 701 - Chapter 94\nCodifies sections 6 and 7 of Chapter 3\nBagley\nof the statutes of 1965 (2nd Ex. Sess.)\nS: Unanimous\nrelating to the State Legislature\nA: Unanimous\nwithout making substantive change.\nAB 709 - Chapter 95\nAmends insurance code without naking\nBagley\nsubstantive changes.\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nMAY 4, 1967\nSB 46 - Chapter 96\nRemoves administrator of Transportation\nAgency from California Highway Commission;\nprovides for selection of chairman for\none year by majority vote of commission\nmembers; prohibits service as chairman\nfor more than two successive years; autho-\nrizes Director of Public Works to act as\nchairman in administrative matters and\nprepare agenda for all meetings; Director\nof Public Works specifically authorized\nto comment on recommendations made by\nDivisions of department when he or com-\nmission deems it desirable to do SO.\nSB 115 - Chapter 97\nProvides that if unemployed parent is\nAlquist and Bradley\nabsent from assigned community work or\nS: 32 ayes; 1 no\ntraining project without good cause, aid\nA: 63 ayes; 6 noes\nto unemployed parent and his family shall\nbe reduced in amount equal to credited\nhourly rate for work times number of hours\nhe was absent.\nSB 157 - Chapter 98\nRequires every person who purchases or\nLagomarsino\nreceives on consignment avacados for\nS: 28 ayes; 3 noes\nprocessing or sale from persons other than\nA: Unanimous\na grower, licensed dealers, brokers com-\nmission merchants, agricultural coopera-\ntives or wholesalers to keep records per-\ntaining to such purchases or consignments\nfor one year; requires commissioner of\nagriculture of each county to enforce re-\ncord requirement and makes violation of\nsame a misdemeanor.\nSB 158 - Chapter 99\nRequires school board to provide for a\nDymally\nphysical examination, or to pay for or\nS: Unanimous\nreimburse a classified employee for cost\nA: Unanimous\nof a physical examination it requires him\nto take; permits school board to reimburse\napplicant for cost of physical examina-\ntion if he is subsequently employed by\ndistrict, or to cause required examina-\ntion to be given.\nSB 333 - Chapter 100\nMakes the ringtailed cat a fully protec-\nCologne\nted animal.\nS: 34 ayes; 1 no\nA: Unanimous\nAB 235 - Chapter 101\nProvides that amounts appropriated by\nDunlap\nBoards of Supervisors for contingencies\nS: Unanimous\nshall be placed in a separate contingency\nA: Unanimous\nfund or in the general fund.\n-4-\nAB 254 - Chapter 102\nPermits hospital district, licensed to\nChapel (Townsend)\nhave 85 beds & located in county of\nS: Unanimous\n2,000,000 or more population, to use,\nA: Unanimous\nwithout establishing a capital outlay\nfund, and without approval of the dis-\ntrict votes, any funds in its possession\nwhich were derived from previous tax\nlevies acquired prior to effective date\nof bill, for the acquisition of addi-\ntional bed capacity.\nAB 847 - Chapter 103\nAppropriates $2,100 for sidewalk construc-\nGonsalves & Dent\ntion at Dept. of Youth Authority's south-\nS: Unanimous\nern reception center and clinic in Nor-\nA: Unanimous\nwalk.\nMAY 6, 1967\nAB 583 - Chapter 104\nprovides as follows: exempts approxi-\nVeneman\nmately $140 million in count costs for\nS: 36 Ayes; 3 Noes\nindigent from statutory ceiling in\nA: 76 Ayes; 2 Noes\ncurrent law; requires Health & Welfare\nadministrator to approve any increase in\ncounty hospital services over their June\n30, 1967 level which would result in\nadded state costs; state costs for 1967-\n68 fiscal year shall not exceed $44\nmillion & shall not exceed specific\namounts appropriated by legislature dur-\ning secceeding years; requires Health &\nWelfare administrator to make findings &\nrecommendations as to state responsibil-\nity for costs of salary increases in\ncounty hospitals; requires counties to\nfile standards for medical aid and state-\nment of scope and level of county medi-\ncal services for indigent in effect as\nof June 30, 1967; authorizes Health &\nWelfare administrator to limit rates of\npayment for all medical services pro-\nvided in Medi-Cal program.\nJAK/248\nLN/248\nOFFICE OF THE GOVER\nR\nRELEASE: Ir diate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.8.67\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has renamed one member of the\nContractors' State License Board and named a new member.\nAlfrel P. Smith, a Democrat of San Francisco was reappointed\nto a term expiring January 15, 1971.\nW. Reed Sprinkel, a Cucamonga Republican was named to the\nboard as i replacement for Martin Matich of Modesto whose term\nexpired.\nSmith is the public member on the board and Sprinkel will\nbe the general engineering member.\nThe four-year terms pay $25 per diems plus travel expenses.\nSenate confirmation is required.\n# # #\nLN/249\nOFFICE OF THE GOVE\nOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.8.67\nRELEASE: T PRESS\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has reappointed two\nBoard of Trustees at Patton State Hospital at San Bernardino.\nThey are Mrs. Ruth St. Aubin Haberkorn of 612 East Ralston\nAvenue, San Bernardino, and James K. Guthrie, publisher of the\nSan Bernardino Sun-Telegram.\nMrs. Haberkorn is a Democrat and Guthrie is a Republican.\nTerms of both expired Monday (May 8). Their new terms will\nexpire four years from the date of their confirmation by the\nState Senate.\nThe posts pay no salaries but do pay \"necessary travel\nexpenses.\"\n# # #\nLN/250\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Thur ay A.M.'S\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has reappointed PRESS five persons to the\n5.9.67\nState Television Advisory Committee and named one new member.\nCommittee members serve at the pleasure of the governor and\nreceive necessary travel expenses.\nThose renamed: John C. Crabbe, general manager of KVIE, a\nSacramento educational television station; Edwin C. Coffin III,\nsuperintendent of Monterey County schools; Dr. Herman J. Sheffield,\nsuperintendent of the Ventura City Junior College District; Dr. Robert\nA. Thornton, dean of natural sciences of San Francisco State College\nand Walter T. Shaford II, Temple City attorney.\nDr. Gary N. Hess, coordinator of educational TV at the\nUniversity of California at Santa Barbara was named to succeed Dean\nE. McHenry, chancellor of the University of California at Santa Cruz.\n# # #\nLN 251\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.9.67\nMEMO TO PRESS\nFresno Trip May 10\nDepart Sacramento Main airport, char-\ntered plane. Fly over water system\n8:00 a.m.\nin the Valley, Friant Dam and Tule Basin.\n9:45 a.m.\nArrive Fresno Airport\n10:00 a.m.\nPress Conference; Pilot's briefing room,\nCalifornia Air National Guard Hanger,\nFresno airport\n10:30 a.m.\nDepart press conference\n10:45 a.m.\nDepart Fresno airport, chartered plane\n11:30 a.m.\nArrive Sacramento Airport\n0\nNote: There are only a limited number of seats available on this\nflight. Deadline for reservations is 2:00 p.m. Tuesday, May 9.\nContact Judith Kernoff, 54571. The plane will depart Sacramento\nAirport from one of the main gates.\nJAK/252\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nFOR PRESS\n445-4571\n5.9.67\nSacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan disclosed today he will support\nlegislation to allow the California Highway Patrol to purchase and\nuse radar equipment in its efforts to control speeding.\nReagan said he will make AB 1070, introduced by Assemblyman\nWilliam Ketchum, a part of his legislative program.\nThe bill authorizes use of radar to measure speed of motor\nvehicles for the purpose of determining violations of speed laws.\nIt also provides that evidence gathered by radar can be used as evi-\ndence in court.\nReagan called radar \"another technological tool in our war\nagainst slaughter on highways.\"\nHe pointed out that moving violations \"are not a contest between\nmotorists and police to see whether or not the police can catch the\nmotorists.\"\n\"Speeding is a violation of the law. If a motorist is not\nspeeding he need have no fear of being 'trapped' by radar.\"\n\"We cannot continue to seek more and more highway patrolmen\nwhile at the same time refusing to give them the otools that will allow\nthem to do their job efficiently and thoroughly,\" Reagan said.\n# # #\nMay 8, 1967\nA DEFINITIVE STATEMENT OF CALIFORNIA'S GOALS\nAND PROGRAMS FOR TREATMENT OF THE MENTALLY ILL\nThe goal of this administration in the field of Mental Health is to\nfoster those conditions which will prevent or minimize mental breakdown. In the\nabsence of more specific knowledge about causes and treatment, a practical goal for\nthe Mental Health Program is development, maintenance, and restoration of social\nand personal equilibrium despite emotional stress. This means that the primary\nemphasis will be to assist individuals who are mentally ill to achieve a reasonable\noperating level. For the foreseeable future, therefore, the broad aim is not\ngeneral emotional well being nor is it complete cure\nit is to provide such\ntreatment and supportive servicesas will keep a child at home and in school and an\nadult with his family and on the job with both functioning at a reasonable level.\nContinued research into causes and treatment will also be pursued.\nWe believe that local mental health programs offer the most feasible and\nenlightened way to achieve these goals. They afford early detection and prompt\ntreatment with minimum dislocation from home, family, school and job. This is\nthe best assurance for an early and satisfactory return to active participation\nin society.\nIf the disorder requires removal from the home, placement should be in\na facility most suited to treatment of the disorder with early return to the\nhome planned from the outset.\nWe will continue to strive for a reduction in the size of our mental\nhospitals. While they may never be fully eliminated, they will be used primarily\nas a back-up resource for the local program -- as efficient intensive treatment\ncenters.\nThus, the emphasis of our entire state system for care and treatment of\nthe mentally ill in the future is based on the local programs. At the present time\nthere are 41 of these programs in California, financed by a combination of state\nand local funds under the Short-Doyle Act. They are now serving areas having\n90 percent of the state population and are a very important factor in reducing\nthe admissions to state mental hospitals.\nIn addition to increased emphasis on expansion of these programs we favor\nan improved system for pre-admission, screening and after-care services that will\nbring long overdue continuity to the treatment of our mentally ill. The system\nwill have the following features:\n1. Mentally ill people will be treated near home by a local physician\n-2-\nor through the local mental health program.\n2. Treatment will be on a voluntary basis whenever possible. Involuntary\ncommitment should be permitted only if the patient is considered dangerous to\nhimself or others. Whether admission is requested or a petition for involuntary\ncommitment is sought, the individual concerned will be sent to the local mental\nhealth program for diagnosis and recommendation.\n3. Patients will be referred and admitted to a state mental hospital for\ninpatient treatment only if the local mental health program determines that the\nindividual has a mental disorder and requires 24 hour hospital care and that such\ncare is not available locally. The state hospitals will operate in support of the\nlocal programs.\n4. Upon release from state hospitals, patients will be referred back\nto the local program for aftercare as needed.\nThe recently introduced California Mental Health Act of 1967 (AB 1220)\noffers the legal basis for the implementation of this program, and to that extent\nis supported in principal by this administration.\nRONALD REAGAN\nGovernor\nState of California\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: IMMEDIATE\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.9.67\nSACRAMENTO--Governor Ronald Reagan today revealed his long range goals\nfor California's treatment of the mentally III and at the same time voiced his\nsupport, in principle, of AB 1220, the Lanterman-Petris Mental Health Act of 1967.\n\"The Lanterman-Petris Bill, halled by knowledgeable persons in the field\nof mental health as a giant step forward in the handling of commitments, is a key\nelement in our plans for the future,\" said Governor Reagan. \"It is fortunate that\nthe timing of its first hearing today coincides with this announcement of our\nlong range plans which have been several months in the making.\n\"It is our belief that local mental health programs offer the most\nfeasible and enlightened way to achieve the best results for treatment of our\nmentally ill.\n\"These programs afford early detection and prompt treatment of persons\nafflicted with mental illness with the minimum disturbance from home, family,\nschool, or job, and offers the best assurance for their early and satisfactory\nreturn to active participation in society,\" he said.\n\"By increasing state assistance in the development and extension of\nlocal programs we hope that we can continue to reduce the size of our mental\nhospitals and eventually use them primarily as a back-up resource for local\nefforts.\n\"At the present time there are 41 Short-Doyle programs in California\nserving areas having 90% of the state's population. In addition to increasing\nthe emphasis on expanding these programs, we favor an improved system for pre-\nadmission, screening, and after-care services that will bring long over~due\ncontinuity to the treatment of our mentally ill,\" Reagan said,\n\"Voluntary and involuntary treatment alike should be by a local\nphysician or through a local program near the home of the individual concerned.\nAdmissions to state hospitals will only be after careful local diagnosis and a\ndetermination that the individual has a mental disorder which may result in harm\nto himself or to others and which requires 24-hour hospital care not available\nlocally.\n\"Furthermore, upon the release of such individuals from state hospitals\nthey will be referred back through the same Short-Doyle services for such\nafter-care as is necessary.\n-1-\n\"This concept will not only eliminate duplicate and competitive govern-\nmental services but will introduce the most advanced system for the treatment of\nthe mentally 111 offered anywhere. It is limited, of course, to so-called civil\ncommitments and procedures and will have no effect on or change in the laws of\nthe Penal Code concerning mental disordered persons charged with crimes, criminal\nsex offenders, narcotic drug addicts, or the like.\"\nGovernor Reagan noted that studies leading to introduction\nof the Lanterman-Petris bill were conducted over a period of two\nyears.\n\"This kind of careful study insures that California will\ncontinue to lead the nation in mental health advances,\" Governor\nReagan said.\n# # #\n-2-\nLN/254\nPRESS\nMAY 10 1967\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nGovernor Reagan and Lieutenant Governor Finch will join\nleaders of the California telephone industry May 11 for a ceremony\ncommemorating the nation's 100 millionth telephone.\nThe program will begin at approximately 12:50 P.M. in\nroom 1190, the press conference room.\nA telephone call from President Johnson at the White\nHouse to the nation's governors will be a highlight of the cere-\nmony. It will be the largest conference call ever placed by a\nU. S. president. A number of dignitaries will be on hand both\nin Washington and in Sacramento.\nThe call will be piped into the regular audio system in\nthe press conference room for broadcast pickup.\nPress releases will be passed out at the ceremony.\nLyn Nofziger\nCommunications Director\nGovernor's Office\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO\nRELEASE:\n:\nlediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.11.67\nPRESS\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has named three new members to the\nState Board of Medical Examiners and reappointed a fourth.\nThe new members are Dr. Genest D. de L'Abre of 1201 Argony\nDrive, Stockton, who succeeds Dr. James V. McNulty of Los Angeles;\nDr. Philip S. Geller of 1230 Hopkins Avenue, Redwood City, who\nsucceeds Dr. J. M. de los Reyes, of Glendale, and Dr. Tirso del Junco\nof 4924 W. Sunset, Los Angeles, who succeeds Dr. Shelby Hicks of\nMerced.\nDr. Forest J. Grunigen of 3919 Beverly Boulevard, Los Angeles,\nwas reappointed.\nDr. Geller is a Democrat. The others are Republicans.\nDr. de L'Arbre fills an unexpired term that ends\nJanuary 15, 1968. The other terms expire January 15, 1971.\nMembership on the board is unsalaried but pays $25 a day\nwhile on official duty plus travel expenses.\n# # #\n961-0462\nLN/255\nOFFICE OF THE GOVE NOR\nMEMO TO HE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.11.67\nPRESS\nAB 762, carried by Assemblyman Robert Burke,\nand a part of the governor's program, will be signed\ntomorrow at 10:20 a.m. in the governor's office.\nThe press and photogs are invited.\n# # #\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has named eight PRESS new members to the\n5.12.67\nHealth Review and Program Council and has reappointed three current\nmembers.\nMembers of the Council serve at the pleasure of the governor.\nMembers are unsalaried but receive necessary travel expenses.\nReappointed were Gordon R. Cumming, Sacramento County\nHospital administrator, a Democrat; Arthur Weissman, director of\nMedical Economics of the Kaiser Foundation in Oakland, a Democrat,\nand Robert T. Andersen (cq), administrative officer of Riverside\nCounty, a Republican.\nNew members: Dr. Arthur F. Howard, 1542 Wishon, Fresno, a\nRepublican who succeeds Robert D. O'Rear of Los Angeles; Paul C.\nMowery, a dentist and Republican of 1011 Charleston Circle, Roseville,\nwho succeeds Bill F. Pridgen of Antioch;\nBeatrice A. Dumlao, R.N., head of the nursing staff of\nBravo Clinic, Los Angeles, a Democrat, who succeeds Dr. Albert G.\nMiller of San Mateo;\nDr. Alex B. Wilcox, of 6 Johns Canyon Road, Rolling Hills,\na Democrat, who succeeds Mrs. Lillian H. O'Brien of Chatsworth;\nCarel E. H. Mulder, director of the Office of Health Care\nServices of the Health and Welfare Agency, of Sacramento, a non-\npartisan, who succeeds Morgan S. Odell of Los Angeles;\nRichard V. Bibbero, president, Medical Management Control of\nSan Francisco, a Republican, who succeeds Einar O. Mohn of Menlo Park;\nRobert L. Jackson of 4313 N. Brooks, Fresno, a Republican,\nwho succeeds Thomas M. Brigham of Fresno; and\nJames B. Poyer, research director of the Western Conference\nof Teamsters, a Democrat of 5959 Highwood Road, Castro Valley, who\nsucceeds Charles R. Weidner of Pleasant Hill.\n# # #\nLN/256\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERI\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.12.67\nPRESS\nTwo persons were appointed today by Governor Ronald Reagan\nto the State Board of Chiropractic Examiners. The terms are for\nthree years.\nJohn P. de Heras, San Jose chiropractor, was named to succeed\nL. Howard Fenton of San Carlos and Ray Henry Quibell, Redding,\nreplaces Westley E. Rodgers of Camp Meeker.\nDe Heras, 55, is a native of Mexico and became a naturalized\ncitizen in 1941. He is a graduate of the Los Angeles College of\nChiropractic. He has served on numerous civic agencies and was the\nrecipient of the San Jose City Council's Distinguished Citizen Award\nin 1961.\nA Republican, he is the founder and sponsor of the Nilsson\nAward given each year to the outstanding member of the California\nChiropractic Assn. and is the author of numerous articles on\nchiropractic.\nQuibell, a graduate of the Los Angeles College of Chiropractic\nand the Ratledge College of Chiropractic Science, has engaged in the\nprivate practice of chiropractic since 1946.\nA Republican, he served on his local school board for 10 years\nand has been active in numerous civic and professional groups.\nQuibell serves on the Chiropractic Research Foundation of Parker\nInstitute, Ft. Worth, and is a staff member of Spears Hospital in\nDenver.\n# # #\nPB/257\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nPRESS\nSacramento, California\n445-4571\n5.12.67\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE\nSacramento--Membership on the Governor's Advisory Committee\non Children and Youth was announced today by Gov. Ronald Reagan.\nMembers are:\nMrs. Charles P. Gould, Chairman, San Marino\nWinston S. Carter, California Newspaperboy Foundation, Inc.,\nGlendale\nDan Chatman, Madera\nDr. Myron C. Cole, Hollywood Beverly Christian Church, Los Angeles\nMiss Carol Davis, Bakersfield\nRichard C. Dinkelspiel, Kentfield\nWendell T. Handy, Compton\nMrs. Walter Harness, Willows\nRalph B. Herzog, Beverly Hills\nMiss Helen MacGregor, Oakland\nMrs. W.W. Wood, Marysville\nMrs. Laurence B. Martin, President, California Congress of\nParents and Teachers, Los Angeles\nThe Rev. John J. O'Connor, Director, Catholic Social Service\nof Marin County, San Rafael\nSuperior Judge Donald A. Odell, Los Angeles\nLarry Osborne, Oakland\nRev. Cornish Rogers, Wesley Methodist Church, Los Angeles\nTom Shanahan, Stanford\nStewart C. Smith, Chief County Probation Officer, San Bernadino\nDr. Ralph Tyler, Director, Center for Advanced Study in the\nBehavioral Sciences, Stanford\nMinicipal Judge Benjamin U. Vega, Los Angeles and\nSalvador T. Vela, Los Angeles\n# # #\nPB/258\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nFOR IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE\n445-4571\n5.12.67\nSacramento--Six persons were reappointed today by Gov. Ronald\nReagan to the Governor's Advisory Committee on Tijuana River Pro-\nblems to the United States Section of the International Boundary\nand Water Commission.\nIn addition, the Governor named Resources Administrator Norman\nB. Livermore, Jr. to the committee. Those reappointed:\nRobert L. Wynn, (Chairman) City Manager, Imperial Beach;\nDennis A. O'Leary, (Secretary) Executive Officer, San Diego\nRegional Water Pollution Control Board; Paul D. Engstrand, La Mesa,\nAttorney; Herbert B. Foster, Acting Chief, Bureau of Sanitary\nEngineering, Department of Public Health, Berkeley; Walter H. Hahn,\nJr., City Manager, San Diego; and A. F. Poulter, Division Manager,\nCalifornia Water and Telephone Co., Chula Vista.\n# # #\nPB/259\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nFOR IMMEDIATE PRESS\n445-4571\n5.12.67\nSacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today made these appointments\nas California representatives on the Western Governor's Mining\nAdvisory Council:\nPhilip R. Bradley, State Mining Board, Berkeley; Dr. Ian Campbell,\nState Geologist, Division of Mines and Geology, San Francisco; J.F.\n(Jack) Havard, Manager, Mineral Projects Department, Kaiser Engineers,\nOakland; Lewis L. Huelsdonk, Downieville; Dr. Evan Just, Department\nof Mineral Engineering, Stanford University; N. B. Livermore, Jr.,\nAdministrator, Resources Agency, Sacramento; D. L. Marlett, Great\nLakes Properties, Inc., Los Angeles; George W. Nilsson, President,\nMining Assn. of Southern California, Los Angeles; Don Reining, Exe-\ncutive Secretary, Southern California Rock Products Assn., South\nPasadena; James G. Stearns, Director, Department of Conservation,\nSacramento; Floyd Wilnoth, Secretary, Mining Assn. of Northern\nCalifornia, Sunset-Whitney.\n# # #\nPB/260\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.12.67\nIt will be a crime to steal industrial secrets or give or\ntake bribes for disclosure of information about secret industrial\nprocesses under a bill signed into law today by Governor Reagan.\nThe governor signed SB 69, the \"Trade Secrets Measure\"\nwhich, for the first time in any western state, makes it a crime to\nwalk away from a company with secret scientific information and give\nit or sell it to other firms or companies.\nThe bill was introduced by Sen. Robert J. Lagomarsino\n(R-Ventura and Santa Barbara counties).\nThe governor pointed out that industry in California is\ndoing more research in the aerospace, chemical, drug and related\nfields than any other state.\nHe said the loss of newly discovered products or processes\nnot only affects the owner but also could affect employment in\nresearch and manufacturing in California.\nGovernor Reagan said the bill will help encourage research-\noriented industry in California and the state should do everything\npossible to protect companies which have developed research programs.\nSen. Lagomarsino, who introduced and co-authored the bill\nwith Sen. Clark L. Bradley (R-San Jose) and Assemblymen J. K. MacDonald\n(D-Ojai) and Frank Lanterman (R-La Canada), said the trade secrets\nmeasure will \"act as a deterrent to unscrupulous persons who prey upon\nand exploit California industry.\"\n# # #\nPB/261\nOFFICE OF THE GOVER\nR\nMEMO TO IE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.12.67\nSchedule - May 15-21\nMonday, May 15\n7:00 pm\nSanta Maria Barbecue; El Rancho Hotel,\nWest Sacramento. Mrs. Reagan will attend.\nTuesday, May 16\n9:30 am\nPress Conference; Room 1190\n11:45 am\nMeeting: Santa Monica Chamber of Commerce;\nCouncil Room. Accompanied by Sen.\nStevens and Assemblyman Priolo\n1:30 pm\nMeeting: 37th Senatorial District Cham-\nbers of Commerce; Council Room. Accom-\npanied by Sen. Deukmejian\n4:00 pm\nDepart Sacramento Airport, PSA Flight\n4:50 pm\n484; arrive Los Angeles International\n7:00 pm\nBanquet; Merchants and Manufacturers\nAssn.; Biltmore Bowl, Biltmore Hotel,\nLos Angeles. Black tie. Remarks.\nOvernight\nLos Angeles\nWednesday, May 17\n12:30 pm\nLuncheon: Los Angeles Herald-Examiner's\nYouth Forum; Cocoanut Grove, Ambassador\nHotel, Los Angeles. Greetings only.\n2:15 pm\nDepart luncheon\n3:00 pm\nDepart Santa Monica Airport, chartered\nplane;\n3:45 pm\nArrive Watsonville Airport (San Jose\nairport if weather closes Watsonville)\nOvernight\nPasatiempo Inn, Santa Cruz\nThursday, May 18\nall day\nMeeting: University of Calif. Board of\nRegents; UC Santa Cruz campus\nOvernight\nPasatiempo Inn, Santa Cruz\nFriday, May 19\n9:30 am\nDepart Watsonville Airport, chartered\n10:00 am\nplane; Arrive Sacramento Airport\n12:00 pm\nLegislative Golf Tournament; El Macero\nCountry Club, Sacramento\nSaturday, May 20\n9:30 am\nDepart Sacramento Airport, private plane;\n10:15 am\nArrive Chico Airport\n11:30 am\nInaugural Ceremonies for Dr. Robert E.\nHill; California State College at Chico.\nSpeech\n1:00 pm\nLuncheon\n2:00 pm\nDepart college\n2:15 pm\nDepart Chico Airport, private plane;\n2:45 pm\nArrive Sacramento Airport\nSunday, May 21\nNo public appointments scheduled at this\ntime.\n# # #\nJK/262\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERwOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.12.67\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE\nSacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today proclaimed the week of\nMay 14 to 20, 1967, as CALIFORNIA NURSING HOME WEEK. The proclama-\ntion follows:\nWHEREAS\nLicensed nursing homes and related facilities\nfor the care of the aged and the convalescent\nin California now number more than 1,200 with\nover 50,000 beds; and\nWHEREAS\nThese facilities offer medical, nursing and\npersonal care including rehabilitation, res-\ntoration, recreation, and both occupational\nand physical therapy along with spiritual\nprograms designed to provide a \"fuller life\"\nfor the aged and the convalescent; and\nWHEREAS\nThe California Association of Nursing Homes\nand its member homes have provided leadership\nand made important contributions to raising\nthe quality of care and broadening the services\noffered by nursing homes and related facilities;\nand\nWHEREAS\nThe nursing homes and related facilities in\nthis state are participating in National\nNursing Home Week May 14 to 20, 1967, and\nthe California Legislature had adopted a\nresolution urging the Governor to proclaim\nthe week of May 14 to 20, 1967, as California\nNursing Home Week;\nNOW THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA,\nDo hereby proclaim the week of May 14 to 20, 1967, as\nCALIFORNIA NURSING HOME WEEK, and I invite the citizens\nof this state to acquaint themselves with the services\noffered by licensed nursing homes.\n# # #\nJAK/263\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\n445-4571\n5.15.67\nSacramento--Last week Governor Ronald Reagan signed the following\nbills:\nMAY 9, 1967\nSB 125 - Chapter 105\nAmends Water Code to liberalize financing\nCologne\nprovisions of Municipal Water District At\nS: Unanimous\nof 1911\nA: Unanimous\nSB 176 - Chapter 106\nPermits any color to be used in a vehicle\nBradley\nreflector device provided that the color\nS: Unanimous\nred is not displayed on the front\nA: 68 aves, 1 no\nSB 454 - Chapter 107\nPermits an officer of an agricultural coopera-\nWay\ntive association to be a person other than a\nS: Unanimous\nmember of the Board of Directors\nA: Unanimous\nAB 142 - Chapter 108\nMakes permanent state policy to pay one-half\nPorter & Badham\nthe costs of local participation required by\nS: Unanimous\nfederal legislation authorizing beach erosion\nA: Unanimous\ncontrol projects\nAB 212 - Chapter 109\nProvides for mailing of notice of forfeiture\nHarvey Johnson\nof bail directly to authorized corporate\nS: Unanimous\nsurety insurer surety or depositor of money\nA: Unanimous\nshall be released from all obligations of\nthe bond if notice is not mailed within 30\ndays after entry of the fact of failure to\nappear the 180 days which the bail has to\nproduce the defendant commences from date\nof mailing extends to 90 days time within\nwhich summary judgement may be entered\nAB 214 - Chapter 110\nPermits investment in corporation shares by\nH. Johnson and Barnes\nstate employees' retirement system, state\nS: Unanimous\nlegislators' retirement system, counties in-\nA: Unanimous\ncluded in county employees' retirement law of\n1937 and school district retirement plans for\nretirement fund purposes\nAB 227 - Chapter 111\nAuthorizes county water district to designate\nDent\nany regular employee who is a deputy sheriff\nS: Unanimous\nto issue citations for trespassing or damage\nA: Unanimous\nto district property.\nAB 236 - Chapter 112\nRequires county auditor to file final county\nDunlap\nbudget with clerk of Board of Supervisors\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 239 - Chapter 113\nRequires that county treasurer make settle-\nDunlap\nment with state only on county warrants\nS: Unanimous\nissued by county auditor.\nA: Unanimous\n-2-\nAB 278 - Chapter 114\nTechnical amendment of government code\nKnox\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 323 - Chapter 115\nRequires no deposit or payment, other than\nKnox\nfor first day's attendance, for issuance of\nS: Unanimous\nsubpoena requiring peace officers' attendance\nA: Unanimous\nin court- permits such subpoenaed officers\nto come to an agreement to appear at another\ntime\nAB 510 - Chapter 116\nRequires only one name on ballot argument con-\nFenton & Ralph\ncerning a county or city measure no more than\nS: Unanimous\nfive names shall appear on any argument sub-\nA: Unanimous\nmitted.\nAB 566 - Chapter 117\nAuthorizes Placer County Water Agency to\nChappie\n(1) make in-lieu payments on facilities;\nS: Unanimous\n(2) incur indebtedness and issue bonds for\nA: Unanimous\nany zone of the agency (3) acquire works\nfor benefit of single zones and (4) remove\nrestrictions on denominations of bonds issued\nby agency\nAB 696 - Chapter 118\nRaises frozen milk products licensing fee to\nPorter, Belotti &\n$40 funds from increase shall not be expended\nGonsalves\nunless appropriated\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 703 - Chapter 119\nTechnical amendment of code of civilprocedure\nBagley\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 704 - Chapter 120\nTechnical changes to education code\nBagley\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 705 - Chapter 121\nTechnical amendments of elections code\nBagley\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 706 - Chapter 122\nTechnical amendments of fish and game code\nBagley\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 707 - Chapter 123\nTechnical amendments of government code\nBagley\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 708 - Chapter 124\nTechnical amendments of health and safety\nBagley\ncode\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 710 - Chapter 125 Technical amendments of labor code\nBagley\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 712 - Chapter 126\nTechnical amendments of public resources code\nBagley\nS: Unanimous\n-3-\nAB 721 - Chapter 127\nRepeals obsolete act relating to war housing\nBagley\nprojects\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 724 - Chapter 128\nRepeals obsolete act relating to Governor's\nBagley\nadvisory commission on housing problems\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 725 - Chapter 129\nRepeals obsolete act relating to San Francisco\nBagley\nBay conservation study commission\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nMAY 12, 1967\nSB 22 - Chapter 130\nExtends advantages of special interdistrict\nWay\nagreements for tuition and allowances in lieu\nS: Unanimous\nof transportation to junior college students\nA: Unanimous\nliving more than 90 miles from a junior college\nwho are veterans between the ages of 21 and\n25 or who are married and between the ages of\n18 and 21: inapplicable to students living in\na district with adequate student housing or\nproviding adequate transportation\nSB 43 - Chapter 131\nAmends description of tidelands grant made\nGrunsky\nto Moss Landing Harbor District in 1947\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nSB 69 - Chapter 132\nMakes it a crime to steal trade secrets, or\nLagomarsino & Bradley\ngive ior take a bribe for unauthorized dis-\nS: Unanimous\nclosure of a trade secret.\nA: Unanimous\nSB 230 - Chapter 133\nPermits enforcement of support orders by the\nLagomarsino & Harmer\nuse of contempt provides that support orders\nS: Unanimous\nwill survive bankruptcy\nA: 64 ayes 1 no\nAB 140 - Chapter 134\nMakes false report of an emergency a mis-\nKnox\ndemeanor false report of an emergency which\nS: Unanimous\nresults in death or great bodily harm is a\nA: Unanimous\nfelony\nAB 153 - Chapter 135\nAuthorizes court clerk to enter judgment\nDuffy\nwhere defendant defaults in action arising on\nS: Unanimous\njudgment of court of this state for recovery\nA: Unanimous\nof money or damages\nAB 302 - Chapter 136\nAuthorizes Antelope Valley - East Kern Water\nRussell\nAgency to exercise power of eminent domain\nS: Unanimous\noutside of boundaries of agency if it first\nA: Unanimous\nobtains consent of Board of Supervisors in\ncounty in which property is located: also\nauthorizes agency to distribute information\nabout its activities.\nAB 392 - Chapter 137\nSets maximum size for school district election\nCrandall\nprecinct at 2,500 voters\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nAB 412 - Chapter 138\nTechnical amendments of penal code\nBiddle\nS: Unanimous\nAB 467 - Chapter 139\nRaises maximum limit of funds which can be\nBadham\ncarried in Orange County Water District\nS: Unanimous\ngemeral reserve and unappropriated reserve\nA:: Unanimous\nin district's general fund.\nAB 509 - Chapter 140\nPermits county election boards or boards of\nFenton and Raloh\nsupervisors to begin canvassing at any time\nS: Unanimous\non the Thursday after the election\nA: Unanimous\nAB 559 - Chapter 141\nEstablishes $200 revolving fund for boards\nDunlap\nof recreation and park districts\nS: Unanimous\nA: Unanimous\nSB 647 - Chapter 142\nReduces to three months period that sheriff\nSchabarum\nis required to hold unclaimed bicycles and\nS: Unanimous\ntoys before transferring them to county pro-\nA: Unanimous\nbation officer\nAB 762 - Chapter 143\nRequires school district unification elections\nBurke\nsubsequent to first such election to be held\nS: 30 ayes 1 no\nwithin two year periods from and after July 1,\nA: Unanimous\n1964 provides for cancellation and post-\nponement, and later conduct of passed or\npending elections states it is intent of\nlegislature to apportion the $15 a.d.a. bonus\nto unified school districts and districts\nvoting in favor of unification on basis of\namended requirement for unification elections\nAB 79 - Chapter 144\nSets maximum precinct size for school district\nElliot\nelections at 2,500 voters increases to 75 days\nS: Unanimous\nperiod when county superintendent of schools\nA: Unamimous\nmay set election precincts and polling places\nif governing board of district fails to act\nincreases to 80 days period during which\ngoverning board of district must act\nAB 339 - Chapter 145\nPermits board of supervisors to authorize\nMilias\ncounty park officers and other uniformed\nS: Unanimous\npark employees to issue misdemeanor citations\nA: Unanimous\nAB 341 - Chapter 146\nRevises provisions of education code governing\nMilias and Crandall\nballots, ballot forms, and notice requirements\nS: Unanimous\nin school district elections\nA: Unanimous\nAB 342 - Chapter 147\nProvides that notice to file declarations of\nMilias\ncandidacy and nominations of candidates for\nS: Unanimous\nschool district governing board shall be pub-\nA: Unanimous\nlished in newspaper published within district\nor one regularly circulated within district\nrequires first publication not more than 110\ndays and last publication not less than 70 days\nprior to election provides that declarations\nof candidacy and nominations shall be filed\nwith county superintendent of school not less\nthan 54 days prior to election\nAB 477 - Chapter 148\nRequires annual audit of veterans' tax\nPowers\nexemptions in counties which elect to utilize\nS: Unanimous\nprovisions of act: provides procedure for\nA: Unanimous\ngranting exemptions when improperly denied\ngranted under false information provides\nprocedure for enforting penalty\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, Califo. ia\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.16.67\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE\nSacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan announced today the names of 19\nprominent transportation officials in California who will serve on\nhis Transportation Task Force.\n\"Transportation is one of the greatest challenges facing the\npeople of California,\" Reagan said. \"I know these outstanding men\nwill be of immeasurable assistance in helping us create a master plan\nencompassing all methods of travel.\"\nThe first meeting of the committee will be held in Sacramento\nin June. Gordon C. Luce, the Governor S Administrator of Transpor-\ntation, will serve as interim chairman.\n\"\nLuce said, \"The tremendous growth anticipated in the next 25\nyears may more than double the demand on existing modes of transpor-\ntation. Both comprehensive and integrated planning are essential.\n\"The Governor's Task Force will bring the best transportation\nbrains in California together to advise us on the role of the State,\"\nsaid Luce. \"The final goal should be a master plan of transportation\nfor California.\nThe committee will evaluate existing reports, utilize the talents\nof leadingconsultants and recommend a course of action.\nLuce said, \"We also willl study airport facilities to meet the\nneeds of the future the integration of rapid transit and highways\nand the development of transportation systems designed to move goods\nto people much faster.\n\"We have invited several outstanding consultants to join with the\nmembers of this vital committee at the first meeting in June, Luce\nsaid.\nSeveral other members will be added to the committee within\nthe next few weeks. Names announced today are:\nFloyd Andrews, President, Pacific Southwest Airlines, representing\nintra-state airlines\nFrancis T. Fox, General Manager of the Los Angeles Department of\nAirports, representing airports\nMORE\nAlbert W. Bay\nPresident, A. W. Bayer\nm.\nAssociates,\nrepresenting aviation (general)\nB.F. Biaggini, President, Southern Pacific, representing railroads\nJohn McDonnell, President, Board O. Directors, Alameda-Contra\nCosta Transit District, representing busses\nHenry Roloff, Executive Vice President, Pacific Coast Assn. of\nPort Authorities, representing water transportation\nWade Sherrard, Managing Director, California Trucking Assn., re-\npresenting trucking.\nAlso, Richard R. Brown, El Cajon mayor, representing other city\ntransportation planning\nEdwin S. Moore, Executive Vice President, California State\nAutomobile Assn., representing Northern California Auto Club\nErnani Bernardi, Councilman, City of Los Angeles, representing\nTransportation Assn. of Southern California\nNils O. Eklund, Jr., Vice President, Kaiser Industries,\nrepresenting Bay Area Transit Study Commission\nWilliam L. Pereira, Wm. L. Pereira & Associates, representing\narchitects\nHarmer E. Davis, Director, Institute of Transportation and\nTraffic Engineering, representing academics.\nAlso, Adrien J. Falk, President, S.F. Bay Area Rapid Transit\nDistrict, representing rapid transit (San Francisco)\nA. J. Eyraud, President, Southern California Rapid Transit\nDistrict, representing rapid transit (Los Angeles)\nAsa V. Call, President, Automobile Club of Southern California,\nrepresenting Southern California Auto Club\nHerbert Hoover, Jr., Board of Directors, Automobile Club of\nSouthern California, representing members at large\nDr. Richard D. DeLeur, Vice President and General Manager,\nSystems Engineer & Integration, TRW Inc., representing members\nat large, and\nDr. Arnold O. Beckman, President, California State Chamber of\nCommerce, (Chairman of the Board & Chief Exec. Officer, Beckman\nInstruments Inc.), representing State Chamber of Commerce.\nThe following were invited to act as an Advisory Committee:\nSen. Randolph Collier (D-Yreka), chairman, Senate Transportation\nCommittee\nAssemblyman John F. Foran (D-San Francisco) Chairman, Assembly\nCommittee on Transportation and Commerce\nRichard Carpenter, Executive Director and General Counsel,\nLeague of California Cities,\nWilliam R. MacDougall, General Counsel and Manager, County\nSupervisors Assn.\nPeter E. Mitchell, President, Public Utilities Commission\nC.G. Beer, Urban Planner, Division of Highways, Department of\nPublic Works, and Luce.\n# # #\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nPRESS\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.16.67\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nIf you are planning to attend the May 20th Inauguration Cere-\nmonies for Dr. Robert E. Hill as President of California State\nCollege at Chico, please contact Judith Kernoff, 54571 the college\npeople need to know how many to expect for the ceremonies and luncheon.\nWe will be unable to supply transportation.\nJAK\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today issued a PRESS directive ordering\n5.17.67\nstate departments to give summer jobs to qualified youth having the\ngreatest economic need.\nHowever, he tempered this by ordering also that college\nstudents needing summer work to finance their educations are \"to\nreceive every consideration.\"\nThe governor named Employment Director Peter Weinberger to\nhead the program.\nIn a statement the governor said: \"Employment among youth\nseeking and needing summer work is of direct concern to this\nadministration. A job with pay is the best way to help any youth\nbecome a productive member of society. While provision of summer\njobs by private industry and business is vital, state agencies can\nand should participate in providing these jobs.\nThe program is aimed primarily at providing summer jobs for\nyouth between the ages of 16 and 21.\n# # #\nLN/266\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today ordered the PRESS\n5.17.67\nin a state effort to coordinate and maximize the use of automatic\ndata processing equipment used by state, county and local governments.\nInitial step will be the naming of a Governor's Intergovern-\nmental Board on Automatic Data Processing. The 11-man board will\ndraw four members from the state, three from the counties, three from\nthe cities and one from the school districts.\nLong-range aim is the eventual achievement of a statewide\nfederated information system. The committee is expected to propose\nany legislation that may be needed to coordinate the data processing\nsystems.\nRonald Frankum, the governor's Special Assistant for Local\nGovernment, said it is hoped that \"eventually all levels of government\nwill be in a position to pool their resources and to control the\ngrowth of their data processing staffs and reduce their investments\nin equipment.\"\nFrankum said the governor's office is aware of work being\ndone in the same area by the County Supervisors Assn., the League of\nCalifornia Cities and under a study authorized by the Legislature\nlast year. He said the governor's office intends to work with these\ngroups \"on a partnership basis.\"\n# # #\nLN/267\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\nFOR IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE\n445-4571\n5.18.67\nSacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today announced that he has pro-\nclaimed Friday, May 19, 1967 as NATIONAL DEFENSE TRANSPORTATION\nDAY and the week beginning May 14, 1967, as NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION\nWEEK. The proclamation follows:\nWHEREAS\nOur national and state transportation systems\nare modern day networks of railroads, highways\nand airlines which are essential to commerce\nand industry- and\nWHEREAS\nThe several modes of passenger transportation\nwhich are fully developed in this country make\nus the most mobile society in history; and\nWHEREAS\nOur way of life and our national defense depend\nupon our efficient and modern transportation\ncomplex; and\nWHEREAS\nThe Congress of the United States has requested\nthe President to proclaim annually the third\nFriday of each month of May as National Defense\nTransportation Day, and also requested the\nPresident to proclaim annually the week of May\nin which the third Friday falls as National\nTransportation Week, as a tribute to the men\nand women who move the goods and the people\nthroughout our land; and\nWHEREAS\nThe President has designated Friday, May 19, 1967\nas National Defense Transportation Day, and the\nweek beginning May 14, 1967, as National\nTransportation Week; and\nWHEREAS\nThe California Legislature has requested the\nGovernor to proclaim Friday, May 19, 1967, as\nNational Defense Transportation Day and the week\nbeginning May 14, 1967, as National Transportation\nWeek in California\nNOW THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA,\ndo hereby proclaim Friday, May 19, 1967, as NATIONAL DEFENSE\nTRANSPORTATION DAY and the week beginning May 14, 1967, as\nNATIONAL TRANSPORTATION WEEK in Cali ornia, and I urge all\nCalifornians to observe these occasions through appropriate\nceremonies.\n# # #\nJAK/268\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nPRESS\nContact: Lyn Nofziger\n445-4571\n5.18.67\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE\nSacramento--Gov. Ronald Reagan today announced that he has\nproclaimed the month of May, 1967, as ANTI-LITTER MONTH. The\nproclamation follows:\nWHEREAS\nThe natural beauty of California is\nmarred when litter is strewn along our\nhighways, parks and other public places;\nand\nWHEREAS\nCalifornians have every right to be\nproud of our state's scenic beauty,\nand we should make an extra effort to\navoid littering it with carelessly\ntossed away trash and debris; and\nWHEREAS\nComplacency toward this defacement of\nCalifornia's beauty must not be tolerated;\nand\nWHEREAS\nThe California Anti-Litter League is\nconducting a campaign to heighten the\nappreciation of the need to deposit trash\nin waste containers instead of on streets,\nsidewalks, highways, parks and other pub-\nlic places; and\nWHEREAS\nThe California Legislature has requested\nthe Governor to proclaim the month of\nMay as \"Anti-Litter Month\";\nNOW THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA,\ndo hereby proclaim the month of May, 1967, as ANTI-LITTER\nMONTH, and I urge all citizens to support this effort to\nkeep California beautiful.\n# # #\nJAK/269"
}