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On this trip Mrs. Betty Ford visited Ohio Village, presented the Harry S. Truman Public Service Award to Stuart Symington.
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46740307
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5/4-8/76 - Ohio, California, Oregon, South Dakota, Missouri (2)
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46740307
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5/4-8/76 - Ohio, California, Oregon, South Dakota, Missouri (2)
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On this trip Mrs. Betty Ford visited Ohio Village, presented the Harry S. Truman Public Service Award to Stuart Symington.
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Sheila R. Weidenfeld Files (Ford Administration)
Sheila Weidenfeld's Trip Files
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California
Missouri
Ohio
Oregon
President (1974-1977 : Ford). Office of the First Lady. 1974-1977
Campaign trips
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46740307
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1976-07-31
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7
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1976
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1976-05-01
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5
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1976
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nara-archive
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The original documents are located in Box 25, folder "5/4-8/76 - Ohio, California, Oregon,
South Dakota, Missouri (2)" of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford
Presidential Library.
Copyright Notice
The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of
photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United
States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.
Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public
domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to
remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid
copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library.
Digitized from Box 25 of the Sheila Weidenfeld Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library
GERALD R. FORD
WASHINGTON
May 1, 1976
COPY
Dear Mrs. Eu:
I am submitting herewith the names of
persons pledged to my candidacy for the
Republican Party nomination for President
of the United States. The persons so
named shall constitute my delegation to
the Republican National Convention.
Sincerely,
Holl R. Ford
Mrs. March Fong Eu
Secretary of State
State of California
111 Capitol Mall
Sacramento, California 95814
Enclosure
DELEGATES
TO THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION
PLEDGED TO THE CANDIDACY OF
PRESIDENT GERALD R. FORD
Cong. Dist. 1
Ms. Margaret Bertagnalli
Hon. Eugene A. Chappie
Mr. William A. Moore
Cong. Dist. 2
Mr. James D. Boitano
Ms. Gladys L. McPhun
-
Mr. Stanley E. Smith
Cong. Dist. 3
Ms. Lola M. Brekke
Mr. John V. Diepenbrock
Msi Rita K. Marra
Cong. Dist. 4
Ms. Loretta C. Ceasar
Ms. Marjorie Lear
Ms. Madelyn Walton
Cong. Dist. 5
Ms. Caroline Dominic
Mr. Randall Garrison
Dr. Al Marquez
Cong. Dist. 6
Ms. Joan L. Irwin
Mr. Vigo G. Nielsen, Jr.
Ms. Juanita Garcia Raven
Cong. Dist. 7
Ms. Mary Ann Gatterdam
Ms. Claudia M. Nemir
Mr. Dan Van Voorhis
Cong: Dist. 8
Mr. Thomas H. Andrews
Mr. Paul R. HaErle
Ms. Connie Hoseman
Cong. Dist. 9
Mr. Raymond Moser
Mr. Frank Ogawa
Ms. Laura A. Wirt
Cong. Dist. 10
Mr. Bob H. Livengood, Jr.
Ms. Pearl Roche
Ms. Cherie Swenson
Cong. Dist. 11
Mr. W. P. Fuller Brawner
Mr. James W. Halley
Ms. Margaret H. Marsh
Cong. Dist. 12
Mr. Michael W. Cobb
Mr. Russell Collier
Ms. Imogene M. Hilbers
Cong. Dist. 13
Mr. Halsey C. Burke
Ms. Marlene Quayle Duffin
Ms. Nancy L. Dusthimer
Cong. Dist. 14
Ms. Janet M. Beckman
Ms. Kay A. Hunt
Mr. Paul F. Mordy
Cong. Dist. 15
Ms. Elsie Buchenau
Ms. Elsie Marie Solberg
Ms. Mary Stanley
Cong. Dist. 16
Ms. June C. Duran
Hon. Burt Talcott
Mr. Jack Westland
Cong. Dist. 17
Mr. Terry Harper
Mr. Austin Ewell
Mr. Michael Cardinas
Cong. Dist. 18
Mr. Sidney P. Chapin
Mr. R. Mack Phillips
Mr. William M. Thomas
Cong. Dist. 19
Ms. Gertrude Calden
Ms. Martha L. Hickey
Ms. Gwen F. Tillemans
Cong. Dist. 20
Ms. Helen Sayles Sisson
Mr. Paul Priolo
Mr. C. Darrell Williams
-3-
Cong. Dist. 21
Ms. Edith Lashley
Mr. Ted A. Pierce
Ms. Phyllis L. Roberts
Cong. Dist. 22
Mr. Robert J. Keyes
Ms. Alice N. Ogle
Dr. E. J. Zapanta
Cong. Dist. 23
Mr. Dixon R. Harwin
Mr. Alvin J. Livingston
Mr. Clair L. Peck, Jr.
Cong. Dist. 24
Ms. Edith Jerge
Ms. Susan Sullivan Kelly
Ms. Beverly A. Ziegler
Cong. Dist. 25
Mr. Patrick J. Hillings
Ms. Catalina Martinez
Ms. Toshiko Yamamoto
Cong. Dist. 26
Mr. John C. Cushman, III
Mr. Ralph Roy Ramirez
Mr. Malcolm George Smith
Cong. Dist. 27
Ms. Julie McIver
GERALD FORD
Mr. Raymond L. Eden
Ms. J. Erlene Mikels
Cong. Dist. 28
Mr. Jack C. Felthouse
Mr. Frank C. Harding, Jr.
Mr. John H. Holoman
Cong. Dist: 29
Mr. Joseph Baker
Ms. Peggy Jane Jordan
Mr. Marvin Thompson, Jr.
Cong. Dist. 30
Ms. Gilda Bojorquez Gjurich
Mr. John J. Perez
Mr. Frank Veiga
1
Cong. Dist. 31
Mr. P. Louis Johnson
Mr. Ted Mosier
Mr. Edward I. Ouchi
Cong. Dist. 32
Mr. Fletcher Brown
Ms. Dorothy A. Sexton
Mr. Clifford O. Young
Cong. Dist. 33
Mr. Robert F. Bauer
Ms. Rosemary Ferraro
Mr. Art Negrete
Cong. Dist. 34
Mr. Kenneth Cleveland
Ms. Carol L. Crawford
Ms. Dixie Lee Iseminger
Cong. Dist. 35
Ms. Mary Louise McDaniel
Mr. Gregory C. O'Brien, Jr.
Ms. Phyllis Zea
Cong. Dist. 36
Mr. Dallas Holmes
Ms. Ethel Marie Silver
Ms. Anita Smith
Cong. Dist. 37
Hon. Jerry Lewis
Mr. Edgar L. McCoubrey
Hon. Shirley Pettis
Cong. Dist. 38
Ms. Sandy Berwick
Ms. Eileen E. Padberg
Ms. Harriett M. Wieder
Cong. Dist. 39
Mr. Robert F. Beaver
Ms. Dorothy Lee Mason
Hon. Charles E. Wiggins
Cong. Dist. 40
Mr. Robert Samuel Barnes
Mr. Donald M. Koll
Ms. Dorothy B. Stillwell
Cong. Dist. 41
Dr. Albert L. Anderson
Ms. Lois Courtney
Mr. Arthur Madrid
Cong. Dist. 42
Ms. Virginia Bridge
Mr. Philip E. Del Campo
Ms. Catherine L. Montgomery
Cong. Dist. 43
Mr. Donald L. Brock
Ms. Margherita Hunt Mazur
Ms. Emma Lee Powell
At Large Delegates
Mr. George J. Adams
Mr. Dixon Arnett
Ms. Nita Ashcraft
Mr. Charles G. Bakaly
Mr. Phillip G. Bardos
Ms. Marcia Mae Bents
Ms. Margaret Martin Brock
Mr. Asa V. Call
Hon. Dennis E. Carpenter
Ms. Athalie Irvine Clarke
Mr. Charles K. Fletcher, Jr.
Mr. Robert E. Gyemant
Mr. David L. James
Mr. Robert C. Kirkwood
Mr. Putnam Livermore
Mr. Robert E. Mayer
Ms. Deborah Mazzanti
Mr. Peter F. McAndrews
Hon. Paul N. McCloskey, Jr.
Mr. Arch Monson, Jr.
Dr. Stanley A. Moore
Mr. Gus A. Owen
Mr. Oscar Padilla
Mr. Leon W. Parma
Mr. J. Clinton Peterson
Mr. Charles C. Reed
Mr. Rodney W. Rood
Ms. Edessa Rose
Mr. Henry Salvatori
Rev. George Walker Smith
Mr. S. Richard Snodey
Hon. Robert Stevens
Mr. Waller Taylor, II
Hon. Howard K. Way
Mr. Fred Wilson
Hon. Pete Wilson
Ms. Ada S. Wing
Hon. Evelle J. Younger
People
TIME & LIFE BUILDING, ROCKEFELLER CENTER, NEW YORK, N.Y. 10020 (212) JU 6-1212
Stan Posthorn
Promotion Director
BEY.HILLS HOTEL AFTER SAT,
OR LAUNA NEWMAN
CBS CA. (213)651-2345
April 27, 1976
The Honorable Sheila Weidenfeld
c/o The White House
Washington, D.C.
Dear Ms. Weidenfeld:
As Clare Crawford suggested, I am sending you an invitation
to our Dinah PEOPLE Party. I hope Clare also passed along
our enthusiasm and eagerness for the First Lady to be
on hand.
By way of explanation, we are celebrating the second
anniversary of our magazine with a combination TV taping
and buffet supper. The Dinah Shore Show is the vehicle
for doing so. The particulars of time and location are
on the invitation.
More important, PEOPLE and Dinah will feel honored to have
the First Lady on hand at any time during the evening.
There are many possibilities and we are prepared to deal
with any and all of them. At the optimum, Mrs. Ford is
most welcome to appear on the show for a chat with Dinah
and/or Clare Crawford. Special arrangements can be set
up for a visit to the taping room anytime from 7 p.m. to
9:30 p.m. The fact is, the producer is willing and
eager to tape later or earlier, morning or afternoon, and
to make any adjustments in accordance with Mrs. Ford's
schedule.
Because of the First Lady's attendance at the Gabor party
(we are assured that the Gabor residence is no more than
a 15-minute drive from the CBS Studio), it might be that
she would have to confine her appearance to our after-
taping party. It takes place at the same location, Studio
41, from approximately 9 p.m. to midnight.
cont'd
FORD of LIBRARY DERALD
-2-
There will be dancing as well as a buffet dinner.
Miss Shore would be most agreeable to having a mini-
camera setup and just address a short welcome to the
First Lady at the party. And there is one more
alternative. It is that Mrs. Ford simply appear
and take a bow without being interviewed at all. Her
charm and grace are wanted in any manner and at any
time she can be available.
For your information, the audience and party attendees
will be comprised of some 100 celebrities who have
appeared in PEOPLE, ranging from authors, teachers, and
doctors to television and film stars. In addition,
there will be some 400 top West Coast businessmen and
advertising agency chief executives and their wives.
The air date in nearly all of California is May 27,
eleven days prior to the primary election in that state.
Obviously, the First Lady would be the star of our
evening in any appearance she chooses to make. If
you have any questions, please get in touch with me.
My direct line here at PEOPLE is 212-556-3364.
I do thank you for your interest. The nation is in
love with its First Lady. Clare described her at a
luncheon yesterday as the "single most popular First
Lady we've ever had". We would be honored and thrilled
to have her attend our PEOPLE party. Miss Shore shares
our hopes.
Finally, I hope you will join us. And please save
room for me on your dance card. We are all hopeful,
and look forward to hearing from you.
Cordially,
Jon Jonth
Stan Posthorn
SP:kfg
P.S. Obviously, we do not need an RSVP from you
other than by phone. We will have special CBS guards
to clear the way, precluding the need for any identification.
FORD of DERALO LIBRARY
People
cordially invites you
to the
Dinah
People
Party.
BERALD a.
A
celebration of, and entertainment
Your Hosts:
by, those who have appeared in
Richard Stolley, Managing Editor
People
Richard Durrell, Publisher
during the past two years.
Date:
Dinah Show
May 6, 1976
at
7:00p.m. sharp
Location:
Seats have been reserved for you
CBS Television City
and an escort or friend
7800 Beverly Boulevard
in Studio 31.
Fairfax Gate
(No-seating after 6:45p.m.)
Beverly Hills, California
Cocktails and Buffet Supper
R.S.V.P.
at a
213-385-8151 (Askfor Ann Bellows)
Backstage Party
Please reply on or before April 28th,
8:30p.m. to Midnight
and your reserved admission ticket
in Studio 41.
will be mailed to you promptly.
Name
(please print or type)
Yes. Do reserve seats for seatsfor me.
No, but thanks.
Please send my tickets to:
Note:
In place of this card, as stated onyour invitation, a call to
Ann Bellows at 213-385-8151 will immediately confirm
your Dinah People Party reservation card.
People is grateful to Dinah Shorefor giving us this opportunity
to thank those who have graced our pages - or are likely to - our
editors and advertisers.
Dress informal, but be prepared to have the Dinah cameras
glimpse your glamour and photographers take a souvenir snap of
you at our Backstage Party.
People Party
Equitable Bldg. -Suite 2000
3435 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles, California 90010
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
Lee
Dennis wareen
UPI
S
Toni Corrette
Newswah Sygma t
Ruth ashton 2aylor
KNXT
Hill hestod-pose-
* FORD
The California PFC is undera the overall direction of
a State-wide steering committee consisting of:
Attorney General Evelle Younger (State PFC co-chairman
State Senator Dennis Dennis Carpenter, State PFC co-chairman
Mrs. Nita Ashcraft, Northern California PFC Chairman
Leon Parma, of San Diego
Charles Bakaly of Los Angeles
The California PFC has approximately 11,000 names of volunteers
and contributors on file. The Calif. PFC has opened or will
be opening appraximately 25 regional and area headquarters.
The major thrust of the California campaign will be the
telephone operation in which we are targeting on reaching
80% of the 2.8 million registered Republicans in California.
California primary is June 8. There are 167 delegates in a
winner-take all
Sacramente -- The Sacramento PFC chairperson is Mrs. Rita Marra.
For the PFC reception, Republican members of the State Legislature
have been invited. Members who have announced their endorsement
of President Ford are: Assembly Minority Leader Paul Priolo
publicly
(take special care to thank Priolo who last week/announced his support
Assemblyman Jerry Lewis (whose has been active in our press visitations
Assembly Dixon Arnett, who'se been active in our press visitation
Assemblyman Frank Murphy
Assemblyman Bill Thomas
State Senator Howard Way, chairman of the California Farmer's For
Ford Committee
State Senator Robert Stevens, who has gone into Texas campaigning
for Ford
Members who are active supporting Reagan are:
Assemblyman Bruce Nestande (Reagan's Southeran Calif. Chairman)
Assembl James Maddy (
San Francisco
The SF PFC Co-Chairman are: Mrs. Joan Irwin, Brent Abel,
Others at the luncheon will be: Bay Area PFC leaders, Mrs. Ashcraft
will introduce and act as Hostess.
San Diego
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Parma have invited San Diego area financial
supporters of the President. Among those attending will be:
Gerry Warren, Editor of the San Diego Union; Mayor Pete Wilson,
the Society Editors of the San Diego Union and Tribune. One pool
press will be allowed, Gilbert Moore, Editor of LaJolla
Light Journal under stipulation that there will be no cameras and
no interviews with Mrs. Ford.
Los Angeles
Reception at the home of Mr. and Mrs. X Lee T. Bevan, $240/person.
Travis Reed, Mrs. Bevan's son-in-law and former under secretary of
Commerce, will introduce Mrs. Ford to guests. The Bistro reception
two pool reporters will be present. They are: Bob Thomas, AP,
and Bernon Scott, UPI, (entertainment reporters). There will be
a private photographer also.
CERALD
California
Credentialling --
California -- all have to be in by Friday 30th.
O
Los Angeles 482-5180 (213)
San Francisco 863-7660
Sacramento 488-4587 (916)
San Diego 714-232-3333
Palomar College
SAN MARCOS, CALIFORNIA 92069 Phone (714) 744-1150 Ext. 425 or 444
FREDERICK R. HUBER, President-Superintendent
March 6, 1975
file
Mrs. Gerald Ford
c/o Press Office
White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington D.C. 20500
Dear Mrs. Ford:
On April 5, at Palomar College we will televise the Special Olympics for
San Diego County. As a student in telecommunications I have chosen this
project to produce and would be honored if, when you are in La Jolla, you
would grant us a short television interview which would be included as
a part of our telecast.
Our show will be aired locally to promote the Special Olympics and as
National Honorary Chairman you know how much your appearance would mean to
our efforts,
We are equipped with mobile, color telecast equipment and could accomodate
ourselves to your schedule.
Thank you for your consideration, I remain
Sincerely,
Marsha Cook
3/17
Marsha Cook
MC/jkc
dana hawks, mansha
regretted to
COOK'S teacher
pm
Joseph Cryden
3268 Butler Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90066
Nov. 28, 1974
Dear Sheila:
We continue to see newspaper stories of your
activities, with great pleasure. Most recent,
new to us, but a little old, was the Christian
Science Monitor story, which David Broder's mother
brought to me.
If this idea has merit, I could try it in
Los Angeles. My thought is a taped interview
with Mrs. Ford to be played at Temple Sistrhood
and other women's organization meetings.
Mrs. Ford would respond to questions by women
in the organization. We would tape the questions
here, send them to you and Mrs. Fords replies
would be dubbed in. We could even include
questions in response to answers.
Best to you both.
/
unde
P.S La Times is
transfersing political write
joe/
Bill Bryanshisto w adving ton. His wife Nancy
Coauthered" Bach Room politics with him and his
own book Bick Roma polition is in Juvinili Justice is
( my)
LIVERSE BERALD
January 28, 1975
Dear Uncle Joe:
Please forgive me for not writing sconer. It's been
quite a period. Not only did I start a new job, but
the day after I came to the White House Ed and I moved
into a new house. Fortunately, my mother came to the
rescue and came to Washington to help us unpack boxes.
I'm not certain I could have handled the housing
situation otherwise.
You inquired about the possibility of Mrs. Ford taping
an interview to be played at the Temple Sisterhood and
other women's organization meetings. I wish I could
say yes but, unfortunately, her schedule is such that
it would be difficult to fit it in now. I'll let you
know, however, if there is any chance in the future
for her to do it.
Thanks again for writing. I loved hearing from you.
Love to you, Joan, David and Peggy.
Mr. Joseph Cryden
3268 Butler Avenue
Los Angeles, California 90066
SRW :nee
LISEARY GERALD FORD
PaKe
Please Susan all not Mr. joing Ford to calef writ there
freedant not at this
#
availablez
Anneers here time while shin
thus the lett
CHALLENGE
7950 DEERING AVENUE
CANOGA PARK. CALIF. 91304
(213) 887-0550
PUBLICATIONS, INC.
February 25, 1975
Mrs. Sheila Weidenfeld
Press Secretary for Mrs. Ford
White House
Dear Mrs. Weidenfeld,
Coronet magazine, here in Los Angeles, is very interested
in doing a personality profile on the Ford women.
We thought, in view of your projected trip to Palm Springs
during Easter, this could be an ideal time for a brief
Q&A, with either Mrs. Ford or Susan, or both, as time
and scheduling permits.
The questions would focus on updating their feelings,
dreams, hopes and plans for the coming year. We are
particularly interested in reaction on the Equal Rights
Amendment, Susan's school and work plans etc. We are
primarily interested in the women behind the man, without
emphasizing political aspects.
Thank you very much for your time, hoping to hear from
you soon.
CERALD
Sincerely,
Megan R. Marshack
Megan R. Marshack
Staff Writer
Coronet
March 17, 1975
Dear No. Marshack:
Thanks for your recent letter and your
interest in interviewing both Mrs. Ford
and Susan.
Susan will not be accompanying the Fords
to California, and it appears that
Mrs. Ford's schedule will not enable
her to accept any new interviews while
she is there.
life greatly appreciate your interest. If
there is any change in her schedule I will
definitely call you.
Sincerely,
Sheila Rabb Weidenfeld
Press Secretary to Item. Ford
Ms. Magan 2. Marshack
Coronet
Challenge Publicamicas, Inc.
7950 Deering Avenue
Canoga Park, California 91304
SEW:pjmmee
Chocolate
Manufactory
History and Lore
From Cacao Bean
to Ghirardelli Chocolate
The history of chocolate is as rich in
Everything about the cacao tree is
When poured into molds and allowed to
ture is then "kneaded" for many hours
lore as the flavor of the cacao bean itself.
colorful. Leaves are large and glossy, red
harden, the resulting cakes become a
in a "conching machine." This kneading
The Spanish conquerors found the
when young and green when mature.
familiar baking ingredient-unsweetened
action aerates the mixture and helps
beans used as money in Mexico; and
Tiny pink or white blossoms cluster
or bitter chocolate.
develop the flavor of the chocolate.
chocolate was the royal drink of the
together on the branches. The fruit, which
Result? That velvety smooth, wonderfully
Aztecs as well as the Incas of Peru. It is
will eventually be converted into choco-
How Cocoa Powder Is Made
rich Ghirardelli chocolate flavor.
said that the legendary Emperor
late and cocoa, appears as green or
Montezuma drank only chocolate in his
maroon pods 8" to 15" long on the trunk
Chocolate liquor is the basic ingredient
golden ceremonial goblets.
of the tree. When the pods ripen, they
of all chocolate and cocoa products.
After "conching," the mixture at last goes
are picked and broken open. Inside are
It contains a unique and flavorful food
into molds to be formed into the shape
Columbus first brought cacao beans back
element, cocoa butter. To make cocoa
of the completed product. A variety of
the "seeds" or cacao beans-anywhere
to Spain from the new world. But it was
powder, the chocolate liquor is pumped
size and shape molds are used-from 10¢
from 20 to 50 per pod. These are scooped
a later Spanish explorer, Hernando Cortez,
into hydraulic presses where pressure is
chocolate bar size to large 10 pound
out, dried in the sun and later placed
who introduced chocolate as a hot
in bags and shipped to market.
applied and a portion of the cocoa
block size. As a final step, the chocolate
beverage, sweetening it with cane sugar
butter is pressed out. What is left after
passes through a refrigerator and when
and vanilla. The drink soon became a
the removal of cocoa butter is a hard cake
cold the bar drops out of the mold.
favorite with the Spanish court-and
How Ghirardelli Chocolate Is Made
of pressed cocoa. The hard cake is
The chocolate is then wrapped in waxed
prized so highly that they kept the method
All the skill and finesse of a master chef
placed in a Melanguer. This machine,
paper or foil and packaged for sale.
of preparation a secret from the rest of
goes into making Ghirardelli chocolate.
with its huge granite rollers, pulverizes the
Europe for more than a century.
First step, of course, is to roast the beans.
cocoa until it becomes a powder. Some
High in Nutrition
They are placed in large rotary ovens
cocoa powder is sold to dairies, bakeries
Ghirardelli Chocolate and Cocoa
However, the popularity of chocolate did
where the beans turn over and over
and food manufacturers to use as a
spread from Spain to France, eventually
possess food value of a very high order.
until they get that famous Ghirardelli
flavor; some is mixed with sugar and
to England and through the rest of Europe
A Milk Chocolate bar, for example,
complexion- rich, even brown. During
processed into instant drink mixes; some
and then back again to the new world.
contains significant amounts of vitamin A,
the 1 1/2 to 2 hours roasting time, a
is made into chocolate flavored syrup.
protein and minerals. Important amounts
Cacao is the Spanish word (derived from
wonderful chocolate aroma fills the room.
of riboflavin (vitamin B₂) and vitamin D
How Ghirardelli Makes Delicious
the Aztec "cacaucatl") usually accepted
are also present. And, of course, choco-
as the name for the chocolate tree and
After cooling, the beans pass to a
"Eating Chocolate"
late is an excellent source of fuel-energy.
its beans-though we more regularly use
machine called a "Cracker and Fanner."
While cocoa is made by removing some of
Soldiers carry chocolate with them in
the English The trees
It cracks the beans and removes the
the cocoa butter, eating chocolate is
their survival kits and athletes take
grow best in hot, rainy climates near the
thin shells. Fans blow away the husk from
made by adding it. Cocoa butter, sugar
nourishment from chocolate during
Equator, and although they may reach
the meat or "nibs."
and a little vanilla are combined with the
periods of long exertion.
heights of 40 feet or more, the trees are
chocolate liquor and ground together,
usually cut back to 16 to 25 feet to
The cocoa nibs are fed into a mill where
making a heavy paste. Adding the cocoa
Best of all, Ghirardelli Chocolate is
produce better beans. Today, the cacao
they are crushed between flat stones
butter enhances the flavor and improves
wonderfully delicious. It adds variety to
tree is cultivated principally in the West
encased in steam-heated iron shells. The
the texture and smoothness of the
your meals. It contributes to the pleasure
Indies, South and Central America and in
heat melts the crushed nibs and a rich,
chocolate. In making milk chocolate, whole
of living. Mostly though, it's just plain
the tropical forests of West Africa.
dark "chocolate liquor" flows from the mill.
condensed milk is also added. The mix-
good to eat.
Domingo and Domenico
THE
The Tale of Two Families
1849. San Francisco. An explosive century
In the mid-80's another son of Italy found
tube candy called Flicks in pantries
Today Golden Grain and Ghirardelli
glittered in a miner's pan at Sutter's
the Golden Gate. Domenico DeDomenico
throughout the western states. In those
products are made in a huge manufactur-
Creek. The first pains of growth were felt
brought the new world a century-old
same cupboards were macaroni,
ing complex on the eastern shores of
in the sinking of a golden spike in Utah
family experience in the art of pasta-
spaghetti, and noodles from the burgeon-
San Francisco Bay. Here, Ghirardelli's
in the whirl and waste of its Barbary
making. He put it to work in a tiny
ing Golden Grain company.
famous quality chocolate and Golden
Coast
a windswept onslaught of
one-press factory just blocks away from
Grain spaghetti, macaroni, noodle,
ten thousand sailing ships.
the massive red brick tower of Ghirardelli.
A few years later, the Rice-a-Roni cable
Rice-a-Roni and Stir-N-Serve one pan
Here, Golden Grain Macaroni products
Out of Italy, into South America, through
car bell rang on the television screens
dinners are packaged and shipped to
were born.
of the nation and Golden Grain pioneered
all corners of the globe.
the Golden Gate, came Domingo
a convenience food trend that included
Ghirardelli. A merchant by trade, he soon
The sons of Domingo and Domenico
set up tent stores to supply the gold-
fulfilled their fathers' wildest dreams.
a wide range of flavorful macaroni dishes.
But, the Ghirardelli Chocolate Manu-
factory, still in its century-old site,
hungry hordes in the Sierras. But he
continues to send its rich aroma through
nurtured a dream. He had found a product
The young twentieth century found
In 1962, the 110 year old Ghirardelli
the old red brick factory buildings of
of the Western World in the lush hills of
Ghirardelli's Stone Ground Chocolate,
Chocolate Co. became a division of the
what is now Ghirardelli Square.
Guatemala. Chocolate!
Eagle Brand Baking Bars and a popular
Golden Grain Macaroni Co.
GHIRARDELLI SODA FOUNTAIN MENU ON THE OTHER SIDE
Chocolate
Manufactory
Soda Fountain & Candy Shop
MENU
Ghirardelli
Nob Hill Sundaes
Ghirardelli
Old Creamery Ice Cream
in the best San Francisco tradition
Hot Chocolate
Two scoops of one flavor in a goblet
TWIN PEAKS
Sip it by the mugful
Vanilla
A famous San Francisco landmark. Twin Peaks of chocolate and
Hot Chocolate
Chocolate
with Marshmallows
Strawberry
vanilla ice cream, topped with marshmallow and chocolate syrup
75c
Hot Chocolate
Turkish Coffee
and hidden under a blanket of whipped cream fog. Dig in and
Toasted Almond
take a peek.
$1.55
with Whipped Cream
$1.00
Chocolate Chip
STRIKE IT RICH
Rocky Road
Bittersweet Chocolate
85¢
The famous gold country of California inspired this goodie. Three
Bonanza Sundaes
marshmallow-covered chocolate ice cream mountains with a rich
Ghirardelli chocolate syrup river running 'round them. Loaded with
nuts and Ghirardelli chocolate nuggets. Dig for 'em.
$1.55
High Sierra Sodas
Choice of Ice Cream and Topping
THE ROCK
Whipped Cream and Nuts
Famous Alcatraz emerges from San Francisco Bay. Ours is a va-
nilla ice cream island in a whipped cream bay. It's armored with a
Hot Fudge Sundae
$1.55
Made the old fashioned way
shell of Ghirardelli chocolate. Break in!
$1.55
Chocolate
Chocolate (vanilla ice cream)
Strawberry
Chocolate (chocolate ice cream)
GOLDEN GATE BANANA SPLIT
Marshmallow
Strawberry (vanilla ice cream)
The longest span of goodness in town. Chocolate, strawberry and
Butterscotch
Strawberry (strawberry ice cream)
vanilla ice cream topped with chocolate, strawberry and pineapple
Pineapple
$1.45
Vanilla Soda
Pineapple Soda
$1.10
syrup. A banana bridge rises above the whipped cream fog. Open
up that Golden Gate!
$1.85
EMPEROR NORTON
Goodness Milk Shakes
Old Favorite Beverages
Goblet ringed with bananas and cherries. Two big scoops of va-
nilla ice cream, hot chocolate fudge and whipped cream. Topped
with nuts.
$1.85
Made with pure ice cream
Chocolate
Root Beer
50c
NO SUBSTITUTIONS ON NOB HILL SUNDAES.
Strawberry
Root Beer Float
75c
Vanilla
Coca Cola
50c
Pineapple
$1.20
7-UP
50c
MALTS (same flavors)
10c extra
GHIRARDELLI HISTORY AND LORE ON BACK OF MENU
Requist Mrs. F.
July 22, 1975
Dear Mr. Ham:
you
Thank you so much for your very thoughtful
letter and kind words about Mrs. Ford. They are
much appreciated.
I love your idea for an interview on dance,
and know Mrs. Ford would enjoy it as well. Unfor-
tunately, her very heavy schedule would make it
impossible at this time.
Again, I thank you for your interest. If
we find that there is any possibility during the
coming months, I'll certainly be in touch.
Sincerely,
Sheila Rabb Weidenfeld
Press Secretary to Mrs. Ford
Mr. Joey Ham
Editor
Star-News Publishing Company
1003 Plaza Boulevard
National City, California 92050
GENALD FORD CIBRARY
HEAD KEY LINE
TYPE FACE
COL. WIDTH
SIZE
LEAD
PG. 1
EDIT
FEATURE
CHURCH
SPORTS
SOC
BIZ
GENERAL
ALL ZONES
C.V.
1.8.
N.C.
PRE-PRINT
SHOPPER
TAB
11 EMS
14.9 EMS
VIRSOLVITVO 'ALIO TVNOIEVN
THURSDAY, APRIL, 14, 1975
START HERE
Palti
ITS BITTY FORD
note HOUSE
WASHINGTON , D.C.
Dear Mrs. Ford;
As a news reporter grown rather blase and cynical in the business
I do not often observe a public figure who arouses my admiration.
and interest. You are a notable exception
I am impressed at your ability to maintainyour balance in
the glare and pressure of your position. I don't know how you
do it but you seem to be able toretain your own personal identity
and hang loose, as the kids say, rare acomplishment for a president's
wife
Your personal support of women's right before the Law and in
the job market is having a culminative impact on the casue
I
think your influence will be flet for years in that movement.
However what I am really writing you about, Mrs. Ford has
absolutely nothing to do with women's rights, nor with politics,
nor any other matters of national interest.
wouldlike to talk with are rather Listen to you talk,
about dance. As a hard news reporter all these years Ihave never
been able to indulg natural interest in music and the stage,
Nov as 2 columnist I an making up for lost time taking in opera,
citage in grest Typorant about the nits I
never even thought of Come as art I stumbled on
the fact recently.
T am amazo? at the human body in its ability to express and
communicate thoughtland feeling.I I vent to Learn more about this
Since whon you start Late you had better start at the top
I would be forever grateful If Thight ask you something about
dance I on coming to Washington to visit V nephow a Licutenant
FORMSE-13
(Navy) who lives in a restored torm house on your Hill.
Could your possibly spare me a for mintues anytime of the day or
(MORE)
2-2-2-2-2012-2 Request for interview (continued)
14.9 EMS
TART HERE
hightjany by of the week:
T would publish your remarks 02 not as you wish.
Sincerely,
JOEY HADI
Jay COLUMNIST Ham
9
STAR-NEMS PUBLISHING COMPANY
CHULA VISTA, CALIFORNIA
POST OFFICE BOX 1207
CTP 92012
TELEPHONE (714) 427-3000
TOEY HAN HOME ADDRESS
1621 E. 16th St
National City , California
zip 92050
telephone (714) 262-5370
P.S. To Mrs. Ford's staff;
Please check my credentials with nyboss the co-publishers
of the three newspapers work for; Lowell Blankfort, Chula
Vista Star-News, telephone (714) 427-3000
Also I interviewed Mrs. Nixon a number of years ago (four)
and I would be glad to send story of that interview
J.Ham Ham
SERAID FORD LIBRARY
FORM SE-12
GERRY ROBINSON
THE HOLLYWOOD TROUBADOUR
Everybody likes to hear a song about himself.
THEY'VE ALL BEEN
ENTERTAINED BY
GERRY ROBINSON
THE
HOLLYWOOD
TROUBADOUR.
GERRY ROBINSON has spark-
ed the festivities at parties for
these celebrities, as well as for
countless others He's made
festive occasions of conven-
tions and trade shows, wowed
the crowds at store openings,
published hit songs and
appeared on many top radio
and T.V. programs.
WHY IS GERRY ROBINSON IN
SUCH DEMAND?
GERRY'S PERSONALIZED
SONGS ABOUT THE GUESTS,
spontaneously composed and
delivered with his own special
knack for imaginative lyrics
and bouncy original tunes, are
guaranteed to enliven any
gathering. Give him a second
and he'll give you a song.
GERRY AND HIS SPIRITED
GUITAR ACCOMPANIMENT
lead the group in rousing ren-
ditions of old standards and
current hits.
GERRY "ROASTS" GUESTS
SELECTED BY HIS HOST
to
the delight of the roastee and
the entire gathering.
GERRY ROBINSON'S LIVELY
PRESENCE assures the success
of any party, wedding, trade
show, store opening, conven-
tion or meeting.
HERE'S WHAT DELIGHTED
CLIENTS SAY ABOUT GERRY
ROBINSON
"Your performances drew the
largest crowd we ever had."
-E.T. Stevenson, Jr., Regional
Sales Manager, Datsun Motor
Corporation in U.S.A.
"You really got a hold of a cold
crowd and turned them to
putty
-W. Guy Fox, Chairman,
Evening Program, Annual
Regional Meeting, Delta Nu
Alpha, Marina West.
"Hit of the Suite at the
Convention
-T.B. Slattery, Senior Direc-
tor, Agency & Interline Sales,
Pan American Airlines.
"Attracted many people
made them laugh helped
sell shirts and ties with his 'fun'
GERRY ROBINSON
singing approach."
-Robbi Kraft, Director of
733 West Knoll Drive
Publicity, Bullock's
Apartment 148
"No end of fun "
-Dal Eisenbraun, State Farm
Los Angeles, Ca. 90069
Insurance Companies.
(213) 980-4818
Robinson Roasts Rickles
GERRY ROBINSON
733 West Knoll Drive
Apartment 148
LIBRARY
Los Angeles, Ca. 90069
FORD
GREATO
WHAT DO TAYLOR
THE
The the
All
NORTH
VERMONT
AVENUE,
CALIFORNIA
90029
SUPPORTED SOLELY #CONTRIBUTIONS, GIFTS AND BEQUESTS
PUTTI + PETER
BRAILLE
and
Background on Mon. 6/7 /76 Photo
BIA
DIRECTORS
Edwin H. end Corbin
at Hollywood Burbank Airport
BOARD OF
February 10, 1976
PRESIDENT
Robert E. Christensen, M.D.
1976
W. W. Eaton
Miles Flint
The President of the United States of America
Victor R. Hansen
The White House
Ben Hoberman
Leslie N. Shaw
Washington, D.C. 20500
Frank C. Sullivan
George W. Weedon
Howard O. Wilson
Mr. President:
VICE PRESIDENTS
Anita Weil
Braille Institute of America, the nation's leading educational
SECRETARY
and service organization for the blind, is preparing to dedicate
Raymond W. Barton
TREASURER
the central structure of its new Los Angeles campus. This $5 million
Harry M. Bardt
complex already is attracting international attention, because it
Mrs. Samuel F. Bowlby
will set a world standard in functional and beautiful facilities
James B. Boyle
Albert L. Burford, Jr.
for rehabilitation of those with severe sight loss.
Edmond R. Davis
John A. Despol
Henry B. Jordan, C.P.A.
It would be an unforgettable occasion for Southern California
Mrs. Valley M. Knudsen
S. Charles Lee
and for the nation if you and Mrs. Ford would honor us with your
Jackson F. Long
participation in this historic event. We would like to schedule
Mrs. A. Morgan Maree, Jr.
Homer I. Mitchell
the dedication for May or June, but have delayed in specifying a
Howard E. Ritt
date in the hope that you might include it on your schedule,
Francis M. Smith
Richard W. Sprague
perhaps in conjunction with other California appearances.
Mrs. Norman A. Stahl
Barbara Stanwyck
Ron Stever
Since Braille Institute, a 56-year-old community service organization,
Russell L. Stimson
so well expresses your own self-help philosophy, it would seem
Norman Taurog
C.C. Trillingham
particularly appropriate for you and Mrs. Ford to participate in
John R. Van der Zee
the formal dedication of this very special and purposeful structure.
Fred Isamu Wada
Robert E. Williams
Braille Institute derives its entire support from gifts and bequests
from private citizens, and thousands of community volunteers
Russell W. Kirbey
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
participate in an outstanding program which supplements the work
of its professional staff.
J. Robert Atkinson
FOUNDER
Founded in 1919, Braille Institute has grown from a single braille
1887-1954
press in a blind man's garage to a nationally-known organization
which now offers a comprehensive program of counseling, rehabilitation,
training, education and special services. Braille Institute is
nonprofit and nonsectarian, and all of its services are offered
without charge to any legally blind man, woman or child. In addition,
the Braille Institute Library, a branch of the Library of Congress
under its Division for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, provides
services to the disabled of the Southwestern United States. The
Braille Institute Press produces braille reading material and cassettes
for the blind all across the nation.
FORD
BERALD
At the time of our dedication, Betty Clark, an outstanding
and charming young woman, an award-winning artist and a winner
of Braille Institute's coveted Light Award for service to the
blind, would like to present you with a handwoven American flag
which has taken her two years to complete. Ms. Clark also happens
to be blind. The flag is of museum quality, and she would like
to make this appropriate gift to you in this Bicentennial year
We await your reply with the hope that we will be welcoming you
and Mrs. Ford as our special honor guests upon this significant
date in Braille Institute's history.
Los Feliz
Very respectfully,
Edwin H.Varbin
Edwin H. Corbin
President
EHC/d
Enclosure (LIGHT)
Mr. R.W.Kirdey
:
CC: William W. Nicholson
Efec Sir
Director, Scheduling Office
FORD as CERALO LIBRARY
TELEPHONE MESSAGE
TIME
MAY 6 1238 PM'76
19
M is
Weedwfeld
ROOM
667
The following message was received during your absence from
M
Larry Peck
TEL. NO.
482 -5180
H: 874-4998
behind Nus, Fords
Campayn poster -
Pathi
head Carry -
Lamy
OPERATOR of
Beviu's
Armands Courtrights
URD
party Beverly BEVERLY Wilshire HILLS, CALIFORNIA Hotd
GERALD
LIBRARY
CRESTVIEW 5-4282
- TELEPHONE MESSAGE
TIME
MAY 6 12 12 45 PH '76 19
M
AR
Weidenfild
ROOM
667
The following message was received during your absence from
M tom Dowling
TEL. NO. 202-966-3473
Washing tor star
Twe Mes
thine. Editor of
FORDS STATES CIBNARY
bucciane PS,
"Bravo"- :- Oui & Rolling
Q A A - Slone - Rolling stone
OPERATOR &
Armands Courtrights
Beverly Wilshire Hotd
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA
CRESTVIEW 5-4282
4 Kinder independence endence
[Stene #
$ Tom Druling
(212)966 - 3473 (q16)946 - - 3473
Cleve Crawford
202-291-
8520 BERNICO FORD E
Armands Courtright's
Beverly Wilshire Hotel
CRestview 5-4282
Re-assessing
Stoa
assond 634
TO
Shiela
DATE 5/4 TIME 634
AM
PM
WHILE YOU WERE OUT
M Rort Swain
of (916)
tubid
Phone 484- 2694
TELEPHONED
PLEASE RETURN CALL
CALLED IN PERSON
URGENT
WANTS TO SEE YOU
WILL CALL AGAIN
Message™ call 961-3790 to
arrange fora usu to the
school where Rus. Ford
presented Ryan of Fitness
MESSAGE TAKEN BY: award Im sure
Mrs Ford would like to follow
KAYCO FORM 1130
9:20P 10:30P up
To Pope Avenue 5chool
Pone then ve
Rex Simpson
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sacre mento, ce Celifrinia
We were here sut
conldn't whe-
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0811 MAOR OOYAX
PROMO NAME
ACCOMODATION
REMARKS
775 FORD, MRS GERALD
P & 2 DLX
COMPL IMENTARY
Wife of President
#775 UP
(Share W/Chirdon)
835 BAGGAGE HANDLERS
Twin/Wil Wing
$45SP
775 CHIRDON, MS NANCY
INFO
Share W/Ford
#775 DOWN
663 HARRELL, MS JEAN
SINGLE/BW
$40SP
Nurse
#663
676
MATTSON, MS PATTY
SINGLE/BW
$40SP
Asst Press Secretary
#676
521
NAVY FILM CREW
Twin/WW
$45SP
670
SCHUMACHER, MR CARL
SINGLE/BW
$40SP
Photographer
#660
774
SORUM, MR PETE
P & 1/BW
$45SP
#774
667
WEIDENFELD, MS SHEILA
SNGL/BW
#40SP
Press Secretary
#667
/ss
5/4/76
CC Mr Portenstein
Mr Pavone
Mr Taub
Mr Ashton
Ms Tabino
Mr McKinney
Ms Kostoff
Ms Shand
Mr McDonagh
Mrs Chaplin
Mr Korzillius
Mr White, Mr Courtright, Mr Boldt - for your info
GERALD
NAME
ACCOMODATION
REMARKS
772 BALL, MR JERRY
Single
Upgrade to #772
461 BOSCO, MR A
Twin
W/Corcoran
425 CLINE, MR J
Info
W/Provasi
727 COLLEY, MR D
Twin
W/Gajowki
768 COMMAND POST
P&1
Arrived 5/04
#768
461 CORCORAN, MR M
Info
W/BOSCO
727 GAJKOWSKI, MR R
Info
W/Colley
706 ELSTON, MR J
Twin
W/lson
706 ISON, MR W
Info
W/Elston
471 KINELY, MR
Single/Bev Wing
Arrived 5/02
822 PACKAGE ROOM
Twin
#822
425 PROVASI, MR K
Twin
W/Cline
607 SCHMELTZER, MRS J
Single
573
HOOPER HENRY
280
DOMENICO, Frank
/ss D'ALTON, orthur
5/4/76
cc Mr Portenstein
Mr Pavone
Mr T ub
Mr Ashton
Ms Tabino
Mr ME Kinney
Ms Kostoff
Ms Shand
Mrs Chaplin
Mr McDonagh
Mr Korzillius
Mr Courtirght, Mr White, Mr Boldt - for your info
FORD
SEARTS
MRS. FORD'S VISIT TO LOS ANGELES
5/4/76
3:30 P.M.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1976
9:10 P.M. DC-9 Arrives Los Angeles International Airport, B-4 Hangar
(closed arrival)
9:15 P.M. Motorcade Departs Los Angeles International Airport enroute
Beverly Wilshire Hotel
9:35 P.M. Motorcade Arrives Beverly Wilshire Hotel
Mrs. Ford will be met by Mr. George White, President
and General Manager, Beverly Wilshire Hotel and Hotel Staff
Mrs. Ford proceeds to suite
9:40 P.M. Mrs. Ford Arrives suite
remain overnight
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1976
4:15 P.M. Alfred Ruess Arrives Beverly Wilshire Hotel for 30-minute
appointment with Mrs. Ford
5:45 P.M. Cary Grant Arrives Beverly Wilshire Hotel
5:55 P.M. Mrs. Ford, escorted by Cary Grant, departs suite enroute
motorcade for boarding
6:00 P.M. Motorcade Departs Beverly Wilshire Hotel enroute Lee T. Bevan
residence (919 N. Roxbury Beverly Hills - 274-6581)
6:07 P.M. Motorcade Arrives Bevan Residence
Mrs. Ford will be met by Mr. & Mrs. Lee T. Bevan,
Mr. & Mrs. Travis Reed (Ellie),
Mr. David James, California Co-Chairman,
P.F.C. Finance Committee
Mrs. Ford will make brief remarks and be introduced by Travis Reed
7:20 P.M. Mrs. Ford, escorted by Cary Grant, departs Bevan residence
enroute motorcade for boarding
7:22 P.M. Motorcade departs Bevan residence enroute Bistro
(246 N. Canon Dr., Beverly Hills - 273-5633, 272-0740)
FORD
GERALD
7:28 P.M. Motorcade arrives Bistro
Mrs. Ford will be met by Ray Caldiero, Dolores Hope,
Ava Gabor, Glenn Ford, Helen Reddy
8:30 (-8:45) P.M.
Mrs. Ford departs Bistro, boards motorcade
Motorcade depårts Bistro enroute Beverly Wilshire Hotel
Mrs. Ford - L.A. Visit
page two
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1976 (cont'd.)
8:35 (-8:50) P.M. Motorcade arrives Beverly Wilshire Hotel. Mrs.
Ford proceeds to suite.
Remain overnight
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1976
7:00 A.M.
Luggage Call
8:55 A.M.
Mrs. Ford departs suite enroute motorcade for
boarding
9:00 A.M.
Motorcade departs Beverly Wilshire Hotel enroute
Los Angeles International Airport - - B-4 Hangar
9:25 A.M.
Motorcade arrives Los Angeles International Airport
9:35 A.M.
Wheels up
SEAL FORD LIBRARY
News
President Ford Committee
Southern California
Northern California
1116 Wilshire Boulevard
2619 Fox Plaza
Los Angeles, California 90017
San Francisco, California 94102
F-222
For release:
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5 AFTER 11:15 A.M.
Contact: Larry Peck (213) 482-5180
SACRAMENTO--Mrs. Betty Ford today filed with the California
Secretary of State a 167-member delegation pledged to President
Ford in the June 8th primary election.
In handing the list of names to the Secretary of State
Mrs. March Fong Eu, Mrs. Ford said she had come to California to
personally file the delegate slate "for good luck".
The nation's First Lady was accompanied to the State Capitol
by Attorney General Evelle J. Younger and State Senator Dennis
Carpenter, California co-chairmer of the President Ford Committee.
The 167-member delegation is composed of three persons from
each of the state's 43 Congressional districts, plus an additional
38 at-large delegates.
The California Republican primary, the nation's largest, is
winner-take-all. On June 8th voters will elect a delegation pledged
to the candidate receiving the most popular votes. The GOP National
Convention will be held August 16th through 19th in Kansas City.
Nearly 41 percent of the Ford delegates are women. There are
14 Spanish surname delegates, 12 blacks and four of oriental ancestry.
Ninety-six of the delegates are over 45 years old, 71 are
between 18 and 45 years old.
The Ford delegation represents a broad spectrum of the California
Republican Party and includes Younger, Carpenter, four California
Republican Congressmen, Mayor Pete Wilson of San Diego, four
State Assemblymen including the Assembly Minority Leader Paul Priolo
and two additional State Senators.
Also included on the delegation are the current state Republican
Party Chairmen Paul Haerle of San Francisco and two former state
party chairmen: James Halley and Putnam Livermore.
Charles C. Reed of Los Angeles, the National Republican Committeeman
from California, is also a Ford delegate.
-More-
SERVICE FORD LIBRARY
The President Ford Committee, Howard H. Callaway, Chairman, Robert C. Moot, Treasurer. A copy of our Report is filed with
the Federal Election Commission and is available for purchase from the Federal Election Commission, Washington D.C. 20463.
News
President Ford Committee
Southern California
Northern California
1116 Wilshire Boulevard
2619 Fox Plaza
Los Angeles, California 90017
San Francisco, California 94102
For release:
Contact: Larry Peck (213) 482-5180
California delegates
Page 2
The delegate slate represents a backbone of Republican party
leaders in California. Ford delegates include Mrs. Marie Solberg
of Madera, past president of the California Federated Republican
Women; Thomas Andrews of Los Angeles, President of the California
Republican League and Peter McAndrews of Los Angeles, past president
of the California Young Republicans.
The Ford delegate slate also includes numerous former Reagan
supporters. These include Mrs. Nita Ashcraft, Northern California PFC
chairman and former assistant appointments secretary to Reagan;
Henry Salvatori of Los Angeles, long-time Reagan financial supporter;
Mrs. Margaret Brock of Los Angeles, a key member of Reagan's
campaign committees and John Diepenbrock of Sacramento, another
key Reagan leader.
Also, David James of Pasadena and Arch Monson, Jr. of
San Francisco, both top members of Reagan's campaign efforts.
The slate includes long-time Ford supporter and campaign workers
such as Leon Parma of San Diego and Fred C. Wilson of Los Angeles.
Congressmen named to the slate are: Burt Talcott (Salinas)
Pete McCloskey (Menlo Park) Charles Wiggins (Fullerton) and
Mrs. Shirley Pettis (Loma Linda).
In addition to Priolo, State Assemblymen are: Dixon Arnett
(Redwood City) Bill Thomas (Bakersfield) and Jerry Lewis (Highland).
State Senators are Howard Way (Exeter) and Robert Stevens
(Los Angeles).
####
00
The President Ford Committee, Howard H. Callaway, Chairman, Robert C. Moot, Treasurer. A copy of our Report is filed with
the Federal Election Commission and is available for purchase from the Federal Election Commission, Washington D.C. 20463.
Weiden feel
Celebrities for President Ford
8730 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE 416, BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA 90211 (213) 659-7733
May 5, 1976
Raymond P. Caldiero
Director
MEMORANDUM FOR: MRS. BETTY FORD
FROM:
Raymond Caldiero
SUBJECT:
Celebrity Party
The following represents a list of celebrities who
have responded positively to the Celebrity Party, being
held at The Bistro
as of 7:00 PM, Wednesday, May 5th.
Mr. Marty Allen
Mr. & Mrs. Steve Allen
Wife, Jayne
Mr. & Mrs. Jim Bacon
Syndicated columnist, Herald Examin
Mr. & Mrs. Sid Balkin
V.P. Brut Productions
Mr. & Mrs. Edgar Bergen
Wife, Frances
Mr. Ray Bolger
Mr. Sonny Bono & Guest
Mr. & Mrs. Pat Boone
Mr. & Mrs. Ernis Borgnine
Wife, Tove
Mrs. Mary Benny
Mr. Jim Brown & Escort
Mr. David Brown
Wife, Helen Gurley Brown
Partner, Zanuck/Brown
"Jaws"
Mr. Milton Berle
Mr. & Mrs. Red Buttons
FORD di GERVED LIBRARY
The President Ford Committee, Howard H. Callaway. Chairman, Robert Mosbacher. National Finance Chairman, Robert C. Moot. Treasurer. A copy of
our Report is filed with the Federal Election Commission and is available for purchase from the Federal Election Commission. Washington, D.C. 20463
28
Celebrities for President Ford
du
8730 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE 416, BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA 90211 (213) 659-7733
Raymond P. Caldiero
Director
Mr. & Mrs. Sammy Cahn
Ms. Marge Champion & Escort
Mr. Dick Clark (Tent.)
Mr. & Mrs. Gary Collins
Wife, Mary Ann Mobley
Mr. & Mrs. George Coelo
Parents of Sonny Bono's gal
Mr. Mike Connors
Mr. Robert Conrad
New Series "BaBa Blacksheep (Fall)
Mr. & Mrs. Bert Convy
Host of "Tattletales"
Mr. Xavier Cugat
Wife, "Charro"
Painted caricature of The President
Mr. & Mrs. Tony Curtis
Mr. Cesare Danova & Guest
Character actor
Mr. & Mrs. Fred DeCordova
Producer, "Tonight Show"
Mr. & Mrs. Don De Fore
Mr. Luis Estevez
Mr. Glenn Ford & Guest
Fiance, Cynthia Heyward
Mr. & Mrs. Wes Farrell
Wife, Tina Sinatra
Mrs: Lee Majors & Escort
New fall series, "Charlies Angels"
Farrah Fawcett
Ms. Nanette Fabray
REPARTMENT FORD FIBRARY
Mr. & Mrs. Mike Frankovich
Former head of Columbia Studios,
now an independent producer,
produced, Fortune Cookie, Forty
Carets, Love Machine
The President Ford Committee. Howard H. Callaway. Chairman, Robert Mosbacher. National Finance Chairman, Robert C. Moot, Treasurer A copy of
our Report is filed with the Federal Election Commission and is available for purchase from the Federal Election Commission, Washington, D.C. 20463
28
fu
Celebrities for President Ford
8730 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE 416, BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA 90211 (213) 659-7733
Raymond P. Caldiero
Director
Ms. Kay Gable
Ms. Eva Gabor
Mrs. Frank. Jameson
Ms. Zsa Zsa Gabor & Escort
Mr. Johnny Grant
KTLA TV & great supporter
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Guber
Former head of Columbia, now
an independent producer
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Hutner
Friends of the Jamesons'
Wife, a TV actress of sorts
Mr. Ross Hunter
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Hyams
Wife, Elke Sommers
Ms. Marilyn Horn
Guest of Jim Nabors and an
Opera Singer
Mr. Harvey\ Korman & Guest
Carol Burnett show
Mr. & Mrs. Steve Lawrence
Wife, Edie Gorme
Nominated for an EMMY for TV
show on Gershwin
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Landon
"Bonanza" & now new series
"Little House on the Praire"
Mr. & Mrs. Art Linkletter
Great supporters
Mr. & Mrs. Allen Ludden
Wife, Betty White
Mr. & Mrs, Gordon Mac Rae
Mr. & Mrs. Peter Marshall
Host, "Hollywood Squares"
Ms. Tichi Wilkinson Miles
Owner, Hollywood Reporter
FORD
Ms. Lee Ann Meriweather
& Escort
CERALD
LIBRARY
Former Miss America, TV Actress
The President Ford Committee. Howard H. Callaway, Chairman. Robert Mosbacher. National Finance Chairman. Robert C. Moot. Treasurer. A copy of
our Report is filed with the Federal Election Commission and is available for purchase from the Federal Election Commission, Washington, D.C. 20463
Celebrities for President Ford
fu
8730 WILSHIRE BLVD., SUITE 416, BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA 90211 (213) 659-7733
Raymond P. Caldiero
Director
Mr. Jacques Mapes
Guest of Ross Hunter, think
what you want and you're right!
Mr. Roger Miller
Country & Western singer
Mr. & Mrs. Ricardo Montalban
Mr. & Mrs. Ed Nelson
Former, "Peyton Place"
Great supporter
Mr. Jim Nabors & Guest
Mr. Hugh O'Brien & Guest
Mr. & Mrs. Donald O'Connor
Mr. Freddie Prinze
Star of "Chico & the Man"
Wife just had a new baby
Ms. Joan Rivers
Mr. CeasarwRomero & Guest
Mr. Buddy Rogers
Husband of Mary Pickford
Mr. Taft Schreiber
Former Executive VP Universal
Extremely active in Fund Raising
Mrs. Nancy Sinatra
Mr. & Mrs. William Shatner
Ms. Connie Stevens
Ms. Keeley Smith
Singer, former wife of Louis Prima
Mr. & Mrs. Roy Thinnes
Wife, Gloria Lorring-singer
Mr. & Mrs. Michael Wayne
FORD
John Wayne's son
LIBRARY
President of Batjac Productions
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Wayne
John Waynes's son & actor
The President Ford Committee. Howard H. Callaway. Chairman. Robert Mosbacher, National Finance Chairman, Robert C. Moot, Treasurer. A copy of
our Report is filed with the Federal Election Commission and is available for purchase from the Federal Election Commission. Washington. D.C. 20463
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NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION
NA FORM 1429 (1-98)
MAY 5
MAY 6
the horses to be entered the day before the running. In 1787, two years
tribute to the general who defended it from the French. The body of
earlier, the practice of racing horses through the streets of Lexington
the general lies in the Panteon de San Fernando in the Mexican capital.
became so common that the trustees of the town ordered it to be stopped.
Thereupon the lovers of horses built the first race track in the state. The
Louisville Jockey Club advertised in a newspaper of the city on Oc-
MAY SIXTH
tober 3, 1823, that beginning on Monday, October 15, it would hold a
race meet for three days, with three-mile heats the first day, two-mile
BIRTHDAY OF ROBERT E. PEARY
heats the second day and one-mile heats the last day, with weights run-
ning from seventy-five to one hundred and twenty pounds, according to
Robert E. Peary, the discoverer of the North Pole, was born at
the age of the horse. This is the Jockey Club which in 1875 held the
Cresson, Pa., on May 6, 1856, was graduated from Bowdoin College in
first Kentucky Derby.
1877 and became an engineer in the United States Navy in 1881. He
was engaged in surveys of a route for the Nicaragua canal for three or
CINCO DE MAYO
four years. His first expedition into the Arctic was in 1886 for an in-
One of the great days in Mexican history, celebrated by Mexicans
spection of the Greenland icecap. He found that Greenland was an
at home and in foreign countries is known as the Cinco de Mayo, or the
island. Thereafter he devoted himself almost exclusively to Arctic study
Fifth of May. In Mexico City one of the streets is named for the day.
and exploration. From one trip to the North he brought back a meteorite
In that city it is customary for the President of the Republic to review
weighing ninety tons. After more than twenty years' experience in the
the troops which march through the streets between buildings gayly deco-
Arctic he started on his final expedition on July 6, 1908, on the ship
rated with flags and banners, while the regimental bands play the national
Roosevelt. He established winter quarters and when the Arctic dawn
anthem. The day is observed by Mexicans living in the United States,
began he started on a dash for the pole. He made the last one hundred
particularly those in the Southwest. They have a great festal dinner in
and twenty-five miles over the ice in five days, arriving within a short
the afternoon, and in the evening there is a ball at which the dancing
distance of his goal so exhausted that he had to rest. On the next day,
usually lasts until morning.
April 7, 1909, he reached what he regarded as the pole itself, took
astronomical observations to verify his position, remained there thirty
The day is the anniversary of the battle of Guadaloupe near Puebla,
hours, and returned to his base. In the meantime Dr. Frederick A.
which was fought in 1862 by a Mexican force of about two thousand
Cook, who had been in the North, had returned with the announcement
against a French force of six thousand which was repulsed. The battle
that he had discovered the pole. Philip Gibbs, as the correspondent for
was one of those fought in the campaign of the French to place Maxi-
a London paper, who had gone to Denmark to interview Dr. Cook,
millian on a Mexican throne. Mexico had defaulted payments on her
concluded that the man was an imposter and so wrote for his paper.
bonds. An arrangement was made by France, Spain and England at a
When Peary's announcement was made there was much popular sym-
conference in London in October 1861, to make a joint naval demon-
pathy with him because of Dr. Cook's supposed prior discovery, a dis-
stration against Mexico in order to compel payment to the bondholders.
covery which in spite of the scepticism of Philip Gibbs was generally
Fleets of the three powers sailed for Vera Cruz and arrived there near
credited. Considerable controversy arose and Peary made some bitter
the end of the year. It was announced that there was no intention of
remarks which led a wit to say that Dr. Cook was a liar and a gentleman
conquering Mexico and that nothing was desired but a settlement of just
while Peary was neither. When it was proposed that Congress honor
claims. A conference was arranged with Mexican representatives and a
Peary for his discovery his claims were carefully examined and majority
preliminary agreement was made. Thereupon the British and Spanish
and minority reports were made by members of the committee, but each
fleets sailed for home. The French remained, repudiated the agreement
report held that the evidence indicated that he had reached the pole. He
and started a war of conquest. The French army met the Mexicans
was then promoted to the rank of rear admiral and received the thanks
under the command of Ignacio Zaragoza on May 5 and was driven back
of Congress. Many geographical societies awarded gold medals to him
with serious losses. The battle itself was not of great importance, but
and he was made a Grand Officer of the Legion of Honor of France.
the victory appealed to the imagination of the Mexicans as they had
He died on February 20, 1920, and is buried in Washington.
succeeded, even though temporarily, in resisting foreign invasion. The
French ultimately conquered the country and put Maximillian on the
FEAST OF ST. JOHN BEFORE THE LATIN GATE
throne only to have him deposed and shot by the Mexicans after a short
and troubled reign. The city of Puebla, which had been known as
The special feast day of St. John the Evangelist is December 27, but
Puebla de los Angeles, changed its name to Puebla de Zaragoza as a
a feast is celebrated on May 6 because of the legend concerning his
266
267
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
THE PRESIDENT'S BRIEFING BOOK
QUESTIONS & ANSWERS
FOR: CALIFORNIA
MARCH 26-27, 1976
SEAL R. FORD LIBRARK
CALIFORNIA PROFILE
FORDS
CALIFORNIA
California was admitted to the Union in 1850, as the
31st state. In size it ranks third in the Union, Alaska
and Texas being larger.
California was nicknamed the "Golden State" because of
its early and sustained gold production. It offically
adopted the golden poppy, the California valley quail, and
the California redwood as its state flower, bird, and tree
respectively. The grizzly bear is the official state
animal, and the state fish is the South Fork golden trout.
The state capital is Sacramento.
Physical Features. California's physiography is simple;
its main features are few and bold; a mountain fringe
along the ocean, another mountain system along the east
border, between them-closed in at both ends by their
junction--a splendid valley, and outside all this is a
great area of barren, arid lands, belonging partly to the
Great Basin and partly to the open basin region.
History. "Gold made California!" The most important
feature of modern Californian history is the way in which
the territory came to be a part of the United States, with
gold as the underlying dramatic element. In the 18th
century fear lest England or Russia might obtain California,
and thus threaten Mexico, caused Spain at Length to occupy
it. The Spanish occupation merely kept others out, to the
ultimate advantage of the American Union, which would not
have been strong enough to take over California much prior
to the time when it actually did so. If the Spanish
settlers had discovered California's gold, the destiny
of the province would have been different from what it
proved to be; in the event California might have become a
Spanish-American republic, or England might have acquired
it. Gold was not discovered there, however, until the
Americans were already pouring into the province. Thereafter
the rush of American settlers put the stamp of certainty on
the connection with the United States.
Exploration and Early Settlement. The name California
was taken from Garci Ordonex de Montalvo's story,
Las Sergas de Esplandian (1510), of black Amazons ruling
an island of this name "at the right hand of the Indies
very close to that part of the Terrestrial Paradise."
-2-
Jesuit missionaries entered Lower California as early
as 1697, and maintained themselves there until expelled
in 1767 by order of Charles III of Spain; not until
Russian explorations in Alaska from 1745 to 1765 did
the Spanish government take definite action to occupy
Upper California.
The Mission Period. Twenty-one missions were established in
California between 1769 and 1823, extending from San Diego
in the south to Sonoma in the north. Economically the
missions were the blood and life of the province. The
missions, however, were only one phase of Spanish institutions
in California. The government of the province was in the
hands of a military officer stationed at Monterey. There
were also several other military establishments and civilian
towns in the province, as well as a few private ranches.
The political upheavals in Spain and Mexico following 1808
made little stir in this far-off province, but in 1822
allegiance was given to newly independent Mexico. From
this colorful feudalistic era derive place names, land
titles, trails which became highways, and the traditions
of Mexican law which became the heritage of the later
state.
Foreign Influence. Foreign commerce, which was contrary to
all Spanish laws, was active by the beginning of the 19th
century. Trade with the United States was by far the most
important. It supplied almost all the clothing, merchandise,
and manufactures used in the province; hides and furs were
given in exchange. Americans were hospitably received and
very well treated by the government and the people. Many of
the later comers wanted to make California an independent
republic. An offer made by President Andrew Jackson in
1835 to buy the northern part of California, including
San Francisco Bay, was refused. By the treaty of Guadalupe
Hidalgo, in 1848, however, Mexico ceded California to the
United States. Gold was discovered at Sutter's Mill on the
American River in 1848 and the new territory took on great
national importance.
-3-
The gold rush changed California as much culturally
as it had economically and politically. Rapid influx of
a cosmopolitan population, combined with sudden increases
in wealth, provided consumers and purchasing power for
the amenities of civilized life. Virtually overnight
new towns and cities were founded and old ones expanded.
San Francisco, the new western metropolis, boasted
magazines, newspapers, theatres, libraries, and even able
historians. Artists, such as C.C. Nahl, depicted the
dramma of the scene, while Bret Harte, Mark Twain, and
others created a gold rush literature.
The economic depression of the 1930's although generally
less pronounced than in most otherestates, created great
social unrest, accentuated by the influx of migrant
laborers, chiefly from the dust bowl area of the Great
Plains, and helped form modern California political
character. For one result of the depression was the
rise of various radical socioeconomic nostrums (such
as the "end poverty in California" (EPIC) plan, a
comprehensive social welfare scheme presented by Upton
Sinclair, and various old-age pension plans) and the
rapid growth of the Democratic Party, long of minor
importance in the state.
The state's large population growth after World War II
gave it an increasingly influential position in national
politics. Congressional reappointment after the 1950 census
raised the number of California's representatives from 23
to 30 and after the 1960 census the number rose to 38,
second only to New York (41) and, for the first time,
exceeding Pennsylvania (27)
CALIFORNIA
Demographics
1970 California Population At A Glance
Total
19,953,134
Males
9,816,685
Urban
18,136,045
Females
10,136,449
Urban fringe
8,880,631
Whites
17,761,032
(Suburban)
Blacks
1,400,143
Rural
1,817,089
Spanish
Farm
184,875
Language
3,101,589
How Many? California's population in the 1970 census
totaled 19,953,134, ranking it first among the States.
Its population density was 128 persons per square mile.
The 1970 population was 91 percent urban and 9 percent
rural.
The 1970 total was 27 percent greater than the 1960
population. The increase of 4,236,000 in the 1960-70
decade was divided almost equally between a natural
increase (births minus deaths) of 2,123,000 and a net
immigration of 2,113,000.
Los Angeles, the State's largest city, had a 1970
population of 2,816,061, an increase of 14 percent over
1960. The Los Angeles-Long Beach Standard Metropolitan
Statistical Area, the State's largest, and a 1970
population of 7,032,075, an increase of 16 percent over
1960.
Other major cities and their 1960-70 percentage changes
were:
San Francisco
715,674 -
3%
San Diego
696,769 + 22%
San Jose
445,779 + 118%
Oakland
361,561 -
2%
-2-
Long Beach
358,633 + 4%
Sacramento
254,413 + 33%
Anaheim
166,701 + 60%
Fresno
165,972 + 24%
Ethnic Groups. Major nationalities in California's first
and second generations from other countries included
1,112,008 from Mexico (411,008 born there) ; 439,862 from
Canada (153,725 born there) i 373,495 from the United Kingdom
(129,957 born there) ; 360,656 from Germany (105,675 born
there) ; 340,675 from Italy (80,495 born there) There were
3,101,589 persons of Spanish language or surname.
Racial Makeup. The white population totaled 17,761,032.
Other racial groups included 1,400,143 blacks (58 percent
more than in 1960) ; 91,018 American Indians; 213,280
Japanese: 170,131 Chinese; and 138,859 Filipinos.
Age of the Population. The Median age of the California
population was 28.1 years, the same as the nationsl median.
Of California's 1970 population, 1,800,977 were 65 years or
older and 1,642,683 were under 5 years. The total of
school age, 5 to 17, was 4,993,289 and the college age group,
I8 to 21, numbered 1,415,288. The remainder, 22 to 64,
totaled 10,100,897.
Income. The median family income in 1969 (the last reported
year) was $10,729, ranking the State ninth in the nation.
The U.S. median was $9,586. The California median for white
families was $10,966; for black families it was $7,482.
About 8 percent of the State's families (421,968 families)
were below the low-income or poverty line in 1969. The
1969 poverty level was $3,743 for a nonfarm family of four.
Schooling. There were 5,970,204 Californians 3 to 34 years
old enrolled in school or college at the time of the census:
151,910 were in nursery school; 3,489,122 in kindergarten or
elementary school; 1,436,1436,197 in high school; and
892,994 in college.
FALD
FORD
Of the 10,875,983 persons 25 or older in California, 63
LIBRARY
percent had completed at least four years of high school
and 13 percent at least four years of high school and
13 percent at least four years of college. The median
number of school years finished by this age group was
12.4 compared with the national median of 12.1 years.
-3-
Among Californians in their working years (16 to 64),
35 percent of the men and 27 percent of the women with less
than 15 years of schooling had had vocational training of
some type.
Workers and Jobs. There were 5,285,220 men workers age 16
or older in 1970; 4,650,034 had civilian jobs and 340,025
were in the Armed Forces. Women workers totaled 3,053,273
of whom 2,834,656 had civilian jobs and 6,300 were in the
Armed Forces.
There were 922,274 men working as craftsmen, foremen, and
kindred workers (in skilled blue collar jobs) ; 825,543 in
professional, technical, and kindred jobs; 564,718 were
nonfarm managers and administrators; and 499,158 were
nontransport operatives (chiefly operators of equipment
in manufacturing industries).
A total of 1,104,640 women were employed in clerical and
kindred jobs; 477,023 in professional, technical or kindred
jobs; 434,402 in nonhousehold service work; and 274,943 were
nontransport operatives.
There were 355,274 Federal employees, 269,537 State employees,
and 709,494 local government employees.
California's Housing. Housing units for year-round use
numbered 6,976,744 in 1970, a 30 percent increase over
1960. They had a median of 4.7 rooms per unit and 67 percent
were single family homes. Thirty-one percent were built
between 1960 and 1970.
A total of 6,572,861 units were occupied with an average of 2.9
persons per unit. Fifty-five percent were occupied by the
owners. Median value of owner-occupied homes was $23,100 and
renters paid a median of $126 per month.
The presence of piped water, toilet, and bath for exclusive
use of the household is an indication of housing quality.
In 1970, only 2 percent of all year-round housing in
California lacked complete plumbing facilities, compared
with 7 percent for the U.S.
STRAD
-4-
Ninety-five percent of the households had television;
65 percent clothes washing machines; 42 percent clothes
dryers; 27 percent dishwashers; 21 percent home food
freezers; 42 percent two or more cars; and 4 percent
owned a second home.
Economic Base. Finance, insurance and realestate; agriculture,
notably cattle, dairy products, grapes and hay; transportation
equipment, especially aircraft and parts; electrical equip-
ment and supplies, especially radio and television equipment;
food and kindred products; machinery, especially office and
computing machines; tourism; ordnance and accessories.
Farming in California. California's farms, like those of
the country as a whole, are becoming fewer and larger.
The 1969 Census of Agriculture counted 77,875 farms and
ranches in the State, 4 percent fewer than in 1964. The
average sixe of farms and ranches rose slightly from 458
acres to 459 acres during the five years. The 1969
average value per farm was $217,730; average value per acre,
$475.
The 1970 farm and ranch population totaled 184,875, a 45
percent decrease from 1960.
The market value of all agricultural products sold by
California farms and ranches was $3.9 billion in 1969.
Crops accounted for $2.1 billion; livestock, poultry, and
their products for $1.8 billion; and forest products
for $5.9 million.
SEALD
the
3/15/76
CALIFORNIA FARM FACTS
BACKGROUND: California, the Nation's top farm state with $8.7 billion
in cash receipts during 1974 (latest official figures) earns roughly
two-thirds of its farm income from crops and one-third from livestock.
California grows 200 different crops.
Of the Nation's 25 leading agricultural cash crops, California
leads in five (eggs, greenhouse and nursery, hay, tomatoes and grapes)
and is second in four others (dairy products, cotton, barley and oranges).
In recent years, out of every $1 in cash farm income in California,
the following earned:
cattle & calves
$ .14
rice
$ .04
wholesale milk
.10
sugar beets
.04
grapes
.06
lettuce
.03
tomatoes
.06
almonds
.02
greenhouse & nursery
.05
oranges
.02
cotton
.04
peaches
.02
eggs
.04
In Fiscal 1975, California farm products accounted for 5 percent of
U.S. farm exports.
Approximately 13c out of each dollar of California farm income
comes from exports.
of
SERALD
FORD
LIBRARY
CALIFORNIA
The Federal Presence
1974 Share of Federal Tax Burden $28,924,051,000,
10.80% of U.S. total, 1st largest.
1974 Share of Federal Outlays $31,378,867,000; 11.62%
of U.S. total, 2d largest. Per capita federal spending
$1573.
DOD
$11,940,242,000 1st (17.48%)
AEC
$333,655,000 3rd (10.94%)
NASA
$$1,125,857,000 1st (37.91%)
HEW
$9,582,066,000 1st (7.55%)
VA
$1,498,604,000 1st (10.95%)
DOT
$730,579,000 1st (8.63%)
DOC
$203,915,000 3rd (12,64%)
DOI
$256,201,000 1st (10.41%)
USDA
$840,592,000 3rd (6.75%)
HEW
$9,582,066,000 2nd (10.33%)
HUD
$73,585,000 Ist (7.55%)
VA
$1,498,604,000 1st (10,95%)
EPA
$244,610,000 2nd (7.78%)
RevS
$657,110,000 2nd (10.81%)
Int.
$684,293,000 3rd (3.33%)
Other
$3,208,558,000
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POLITICAL PROFILE
SEALO
CALIFORNIA
Political Profile
Source: Almanac of American Politics 1976
California, just a few years ago the most noticably
right wing major state, has now become a leftish state
politically. The change was symbolized neatly bytthe
change in the Governor's chair in early 1975: 63-year-old
conservative Republican Ronald Reagan was out, 36-year-old
liberal Democrat Jerry Brown was in. This shifting signalled
the culmination of a major change in the most Californians'
political attitudes; their feelings about what government
candand should do. Ronald Reagan was the personification
of a conservatism that believed in less government activity --
but also implicity promised that political leaders could
accomplish things, like changing basic life styles, which
were inherently beyond the competence of government.
Jerry Brown, in contrast, seems to believe in a liberalism
which means more government activity in some areas, but
overall has a much more modest view of what government and
politics can achieve.
The standard picture of California politics for some Eastern
observers is one of zaniness: as if, someone said, the country
was tilted westward and all the loose nuts slid to the coast.
California, to be sure, is a state of contradictions: one
of the nation's most urbanized states, yet the home of vast
agribusiness conglomerates; perhaps the most awe-inspiring
scenic state, yet the most smoggy and pollution-ridden; the
place where the peace movement first made an impact, yet a
state still heavily dependent on money from giant defense firms
and military bases.
Yet out of these contradictions, California has emerged
as a national trend-setter--in suburbanization, in what
a few years ago were considered bizarre life styles, and
in politics. And perhaps the most noticeable trend in recent
years has been this state's preference for candidates of the
political "extremes", both the conservative right and the
-2-
antiwar liberal left. Why? First of all, there are no
political machines here to modulate such trends; the old
bosses were wiped out by a series of reforms enacted by
progressives in 1911. As a result, California is a state
where the individual candidatess ideology--and personality--
is of paramount importance.
Before one can understand the recent ascendancy of the
left-leaning politics in California, one must understand the
earlier rise of the right. For this, it is necessary to go
back to the early 1960's. Democrats were in control of things.
Across the land, conventional wisdom had it that for
Republicans to win elections they had to support many Democrati
programs, to be seen as a moderate or even liberal. A sizable
number of California Republicans did not agree. These people
believed very deeply that the nation was moving in the wrong
direction under the Democrats. They were determined to do
something about it, and they did--by electing Ronald Reagan
Governor in 1966.
Reagan's victory, coming just two years after the smashing
defeat of another right-winger, Barry Goldwater, shocked and
surprised Eastern pundits. They would have been less
surprised if they had been following California elections
more closely over the preceding few years. In that time,
the Republican right had scored a series of unexpected
victories.
Behind all these victories was the new California
homeowner's resentment of rapid and sometimes violent change.
The Berkeley student uprising in 1964 and the Watts riot
in 1965 evoked a hatred of those who were different, and
Reagan, promising crackdowns on rioters and stern budget cuts,
played on these hatreds skillfully. Reagan was able to re-
volutionize California politics successfully putting to the
fore those issues where his positions commanded majority
support. It was a masterful political achievement, and one FORD
which would be echoed nationally in the Nixon campaigns of
1968 and 1972.
But whatever the successes of the Reagan-Nixon politics
nationally in the latter year, it reached its high point in
California back in 1968. That year, the Republicans finally
took control of the California legislature, after painstakingly
picking off Democratic seats in each of the preceding
-3-
three elections. The legislative victory was particularly
dear to Reagan, for it promised that Republicans would
redraw the state's congressional and legislative district
lines and thus sew up political control of California for
another then years.
It was not tobbe. The Regan Republicans were on the down-
slide of their success curve. George Murphy, the old song-
and-dance man, for example, turned out to be getting
$20,000 a year and a Washington apartment from Technicolor,
Inc., while serving in the Senate. Today he can sometimes
be seen in Washington, a forlorn figure eking out a living
as a lobbyist.
But such gaffes do not totally explain the right's problems.
Reagan could point to some solid achievements in his years in
office: he had pushed through an oft-copied welfare reform
(with help from Democratic Speaker Bob Moretti) in 1971, and
he had stabilised, if not the state budget, then at least the
number of state employees. But Reagan's campaign style
promised more than these governmental accomplishments, and his
waning popularity was almost the inevitable price of his
early success. If he had professed concern for ordinary
middle class voters, it also became clear one of his major
goals was reducing taxes on the rich. And if he had
convinced Californians in 1966 that he would reassert and
reestablish the values of the middle class against those who
disdained them--hippies, blacks, and university professors--
it became painfully apparent by the early seventies that he
just couldn't do it. For every long-haired freak thumbing
a ride on the Big Sur highway in 1966 there were a dozen by
1972. Reagan could win at the polls, but California was
changing anyway.
It would have been unthinkable back in 1966, for example,
that a referendum to legalize marijuana would outpoll a
referendum to clamp limits on obscene movies. Yet exactly
that happened in California on 1972. Some 33% of the
California voters favored legalized pot; the proposition
carried six of the state's 80 Assembly districts, and even
got 187,000 votes in supposedly ultraconservative Orange County.
Demographic shifts--not SO much in the population as a whole,
but in the electorate--are responsible for many of these
-4-
changes. Much of the support for Reagan and Reaganites
came from Midwestern and Southern migrants to California,
people of the World War II generation (or earlier) whose
kids were passing through the rebellious adolescent years
just as Berkely and Watts ignited. The older people wanted
a. return to the serenity and order they remembered, perhaps
inaccurately, from their own younger days; they wanted their
kids to honor them by trying to grow up to be like them.
As time went on, the kids grew up and fashioned their own
life-styles, which in turn seemed less threatening to their
parents. But one thing these new voters did remember was
that politicians like Ronald Reagan and Richard Nixon had
been winning votes by campaigning against them. Some 18%
of California's potential voters in 1970 were under 25--a
significantly larger percentage than in the nation as a
whole--and nearly 10% of the potential electorate can be
found in college or graduate school. The dormitories and
communities around California's vast system of higher
education produced huge majorities against candidates like
Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan following passage of the
I8-year-old vote. And in the post-Vietnam years when the
differences between the attitudes college and non-college
youth have almost vanished station attendants are as
likely as Berkeley students to smoke pot these days, and
Berkeley sutdents as Likely to drink beer--the huge
California youth vote is overwhelming anti-Republican.
The final humiliation for the Reagan people was that they
didn't even have a candidate in the general election for
Governor. Lieutenant Governor Ed Reinecke, hand-picked
by Reagan for the job when Robert Finch became Nixon's
HEW Secretary in 1969, turned out to be another bad choice;
the obvious heir apparent was indicted for lying before
the Watergate grand jury about the ITT affair, and was on
trial as the primary was held in June. Despite all that,
he received 30% of the vote--testimony of the continuing
presence of undeterrable conservative voters in the
Republican primary.
STATE
-5-
There are still those who believe that the successful
candidate in the general election, Edmund G. (Jerry) Brown
Jr. 's, sole political asset is his father's name and doubtless
some people did vote for him thinking he is the Pat Brown
who beat Bill Knowland and Richard Nixon, and was Governor
from 1959 to 1967. But Jerry Brown is quite a different sort
of character. His father is (or was) gregarious; Jerry is
quiet, almost sullen. His father was a "centrist"
Democrat, ready to get along with anyone in the party;
Jerry is a purist, a stickler for campaign finance reform,
who pays little attention to the big contributors. As befits
a former seminarian, Brown is a devout believer in morality
in politics. He built his career as Secretary of State
around enforcing hitherto ignored campaign financing laws,
and pushing for new ones.
California, the largest state in population, also has the
largest congressional delegation: 43 members, tipped heavily
(28-15) in favor of the Democrats. Its Democratic members
tend to be ideological liberals, its Republicans fierce
conservatives, although there are a few exceptions in each
case.
A word should be said about the California presidential
primary. In the Republican contest, conservatives have an
overwhelming advantage, even more than in most states.
The body of registered Republicans is a constricted
constituency, far smaller than the number of people who
regularly vote Republican for state and congressional office,
and it has a heavy majority which prefers ideological
conservative candidates. California represents as good a
chance as conservative Republicans have of upsetting
Gerald Ford in the 1976 primaries.
DEPART
PFC CAMPAIGN OVERVIEW
There are 2,858,000 registered Republicans in California,
comprising 37% of the total electorate. Registration will
close May 9 on only registered Republicans eligible to vote
in the June 8 primary.
Principal emphasis in PFC California strategy is on voter
identification and selective voter turnout. Phone banks
will again be the key tool in identifying the President's
support, and the operational date for opening of all phone
centers is April 19. Other key elements of the campaign
include the following:
1. An estimated 80% of the registered Republicans
will be covered in the priority counties. Pre-
cincts in each of the phone locations are now
being prioritized and phone numbers of registered
Republicans are currently obtained.
2. County and community organizations are also being
formed with 51 out of the 58 counties, (and vir-
tually all main vote areas) currently being
organized.
3. Volunteer mailings numbering 52,000 pieces have
been sent out by PFC county organizations as part
of a recruitment drive.
4. County organizations are also being encouraged
to utilize "in home" exemptions to hold receptions
for recruitment and training purposes. Instruc-
tion kits have been mailed to key PFC personnel,
and 20 receptions are tentatively set.
5. A California brochure is being developed for
printing and distribution in April. Radio spots
presently being developed are scheduled to run in
the first part of April with emphasis on the
President's record in office.
6. Press tours using Advocates and key President Ford
volunteers in the state have been scheduled, and
emphasis at this time is on meeting with the
editorial boards of major papers to encourage
primary endorsement of the President.
GEBATE
DELEGATE SELECTION
The California primary on June 8 is a "winner take all" race
by which delegates to the Republican National Convention are
bound through the second ballot, unless released or unless
the candidate to whom they are bound receives fewer than IO
percent of the votes needed for the nomination on the first
ballot.
There will be a total of 167 delegates in the California
delegation. Three delegates are apportioned to each of the
forty-three Congressional Districts for a total of 129 persons
with the remaining 38 delegates to be selected at-large. The
candidate's name will appear on the ballot and ballot position
will be rotated.
Write-in votes are permitted under California law, but are
counted only if the write-in candidate has filed an endorse-
ment of his candidacy with the Secretary of State by May 18th.
As was the case in Florida, only registered Republicans may
vote in the June 8 California GOP primary. A potential voter
must register, change party affiliation or designate party
affiliation by May 9 in order to qualify to vote.
CALIFORNIA PFC OFFICIALS AND PERSONNEL
Evelle Younger
Co-Chairman
Honorable Dennis Carpenter
Co-Chairman
Mrs. Nita Ashcraft
Northern California Chairman
Mayor Peter Wilson
Southern California Chairman
Leon Parma
Steering Committee
Charles Bakaly
Steering Committee
David Liggett
Campaign Manager
Doug Lynn
Administrative Director
Jim Medas
Field Director
Larry Peck
Press Director
Priscilla Hobson
Scheduling Coordinator
Bill Bailey
Youth Director
Margo Terkuile
Speakers Bureau
Mrs. Lawrence Solberg
California Women's Chairman
Vicky Perry
Assistant Field Director
Ken McMullen
Fieldman
Frank Rich
Fieldman
Mike Livingston
Fieldman
C. H. Rehn
Fieldman
Tim Grush
Fieldman
Cherrie Swenson
Fieldman
Erik Lund
Fieldman
John Kroger
Fieldman
Officials in Areas to be Visited
Honorable Milton Marks
State Senator, San Francisco
Honorable Dixon Arnett
Assemblyman, Redwood City
Honorable Peter McCloskey
Congressman, San Mateo
Honorable Howard Way
State Senator, Fresno
GERALD
REAGAN CAMPAIGN OVERVIEW
As of the end of last week, the only campaign activity visible
in the state was with a number of Republican Women's Federation
clubs. It is clear that Reagan is attempting to run his grass-
roots activities through the CFRW -- an organization which was
solidly supportive of him during his tenure as Governor. It
should not be inferred, however, that Reagan has a monopoly on
Women's Federation backing. Immediate past president of the
CFRW, Marie Solberg, is working actively in behalf of the
President and has reported good success in lining up CFRW leader-
ship and rank-and-file support.
Former Nixon youth director Ken Reitz, who was initially res-
ponsible for organizing California for Reagan, has apparently
left the campaign to work for U.S. Senate candidate John Harmer.
There is no phone campaign yet evident, and direct mailings have
been solely of a fund raising nature. There is no evidence of
any media activity at this time.
Although there have been press reports of sizable numbers of
volunteers, the Reagan campaign does not appear to have an
organizational mechanism to put them to work. The only activity
in the last two to three weeks has been the appointment of
leadership in several counties (i.e., Orange, San Diego, Kern,
Marin, San Mateo and a portion of Los Angeles).
In short, the Reagan campaign has been extremely low profile.
REAGAN CAMPAIGN OFFICIALS
As was true with the organizational structure, the leadership
structure of the Reagan campaign in California is virtually non-
existent. The two principal officials are:
Mike Curb
Chairman
Elsa Sandstrom
Co-Chairman
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1
ISSUES IN BRIEF
2.
GERALD
FORD LIBRARY
CALIFORNIA ISSUES
AGRICULTURE
Last week, the California Assembly passed a bill to reduce to $2.55 million
the amount of funding for the controversial Agriculture Labor Relations Board,
Democratic and Republican farm-area legislators had earlier united to block
the appropriation, but the Democrats, bowing to party pressure, changed their
position.
The Senate is not expected to pass the bill unless there is a change in the access
rule, which has generated the most controversy, for it allows union organizers
to go onto private property to organize workers to vote in union elections.
An estimated 90 percent of the state's farm owners believe the bill is slanted
toward farm employees. They are solidly united in their efforts to make changes
in the Act.
-0-
The Caesar Chavez United Farm Workers controversy is still alive, but it is
presently overshadowed by the Agricultural Labor Relations Board issue.
-0-
In the California "farm belt" a lack of rainfall has brought on a mini-drought.
Governor Brown has asked that emergency status be given this affected area so that
it would be eligible for relief funding.
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
Public reaction against a Democrat-sponsored bill, which was introduced in the
state legislature last year and which provided for collective bargaining rights
for all governmental employees, resulted in an amendment that limits the bill's
coverage to teachers. The bill serves to raise in the public mind last year's
controversial police and firemen's strike in San Francisco.
CRIME
Questions should be anticipated on the gun control issue. Approximately 95% of the
California GOP audience is believed to be opposed to gun control. State sources,
however, advise not to address this issue in remarks because of its affect on the
general electorate.
-0-
DEPARTO FORD LIBRARY
-2-
There has been a highly positive reaction to Patty Hearst's conviction, but
answers to anticipated questions should reflect only your disinterest in order
to avoid a repeat of the off-the-cuff Nixon comment on the Manson trial. F. Lee
Bailey plans to appeal the conviction.
DEFENSE
Reagan has scored points with his attacks on detente and national defense.
A confident, reassuring statement from you on the strength of our defense posture
would be helpful.
Of the state's major defense contractors, McDonald/Douglas has had to cut back
on some 4500 jobs due to a lack of business, but General Dynamics in San
Diego just won a major contract for cruise missiles.
ECONOMY
As elsewhere in the nation, inflation and unemployment rank as the most
important concerns, with cost-of-living the greater of the two. The standard
array of questions pertaining to the economy can be anticipated.
The national economic climate, however, is producing a facorable increase in
California housing starts. A comparison of the number of building permits
issued in California from January, 1975 to January of 1976 shows an increase of
over 200%.
Jan. - 1975
Jan. - 1976
Single dwellings
4806
8501
Multiple dwellings
1790
6085
TOTAL
6596
14,586
SEPTIO
-3-
EDUCATION
School financing is an issue stemming from the Serrano vs. Priest court
decision, by which equal quality education is to be achieved by equalizing
spending in accordance to average daily attendance within school districts.
The court deicsion is the basis for several state bills (i. e. Senate Bill 383
and Assembly Bill 721) which call for the collection of a state-wide property
tax to be apportioned back to school districts according to their average daily
attendance. Local school districts would have the option to levy local property
taxes to augment state funds.
Most state observers feel that no equalization scheme will be forth coming within
the next few months--certainly not one to equalize spending by a state-wide property
tax.
-0-
Busing has become an issue in Los Angeles as a result of a proposition which
will appear on the June 8 ballot. The proposed measure would enlarge the L.A.
Board of Education to a total nine members, each of whom would be elcted from
Specific geographical districts. The current Board's anti-busing pledge has
caused concern from Black, Hispanic and Civil rights groups who are now
moving to support the proposition with the hope of improving their representation
on the Board.
ENERGY
Offshore oil drilling continues to be an area of concern. While some groups are
becoming more vocal in their opposition to offshore drilling, general sentiment
reflects an attitude of cautious approval of seeking new oil reserves.
Questions pertaining to the Exxon Corporation's plan to open another off-shore
drilling platform can be anticipated. The Los Angeles Times ran a lengthy
article on this issue on March 22.
Nuclear energy considerations are being raised by Proposition 15 (a proposal
on the June 8 ballot calling for a ban on development of future nuclear sites
until a safe method of disposing of nuclear wastes is agreed upon). The more
conservative forces are opposing Proposition 15, maintaining that the proposal
will eliminate nuclear energy as a power source and that the reliance on alternate
energy sources would cost the state $40 billion in taxes over the next 20 years.
Proponents of the Proposition cite the danger hazard as overshadowing the
energy need, and want the utilities to provide full compensation for possible plant
accidents to the public.
FORD
BERALD
-4-
ENVIRONMENT
The California Coastal Commission has been developing, since 1972, guidelines
for coastal planning, and these regulations have been incorporated into a
Democrat-sponsored bill now before the California legislature. A companion
measure requesting authority to sell up to $250 million in bonds for acquisition
of coastal properties is also under consideration by the legislature.
The opponents of the legislation, including many local communities, find the
regulations too stringent. They contend that the bills preempt local options
as well as creating horrendous administrative costs. Proponents include
environmentalist groups.
FOREIGN POLICY
The attitude of Republican voters as well as that of the general electorate toward
the Panama Canal is strong for keeping the Canal a. U.S. possession. Reagan has
received substantial play in the state of his criticism of the current negotiations.
HEALTH
Public concern over rising medical costs is pressuring legislators to resolve
the continuing crisis of increases in medical malpractice insurance. Massive
increases from 200% to 500% in malpractice premiums for physicians forced a
statewide strike by California doctors last year.
An Assembly bill passed last year, the Medical Insurance Compensation Reform
Act, is basically perceived by doctors as a stop-gap measure which will achieve
little to roll back their insurance premiums. Many legislators feel the bill is
only a step in the right direction; their primary concern is to act on better
health care delivery systems in California and then turn to problems of special
interest groups (i.e. doctors).
An additional factor in the medical malpractice premiums/doctor's strike issue is
the doctors' growing reluctance to treat Medical (California Medicaid) patients
because of the increasing malpractice insurance costs.
Your catastrophic health insurance proposal was favorably received, but public
interest in the issue is not significant at this time.
LIBRATY
-5-
ILLEGAL ALIENS
Some questions may be anticipated, but public feeling in general supports the
view that more stringent enforcement of immigration lawslis necessary.
NIXON TRIP TO CHINA
There has been no extensive news play on Nixon's China trip, but some
reverberations have been received in California, and you should anticipate
questions as to the purpose of Nixon's trip and the former President's well
publicized post-trip assessment.
PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATES
Governor Jerry Brown's recently declared candidacy for the Democratic
Presidential nomination is a subject of considerable state interest. The
Governor's philosophy with regard to limited government and his austere personal
style have evoked extremely favorable approval ratings among California voters.
Brown has yet to formulate any national campaign platform, and has stated
he will not be a candidate in any primary outside of California.
SOCIAL SECURITY
Public reaction to your Social Security program is extremely positive. Your
soft insistence on your own plan is being received far better than Reagan's harsh
criticism of Social Security.
VETOES
Your vetoes have been well-received by California voters who view your actions
as attempting to save tax dollars and thereby relieve the burden on taxpayers.
Your fiscal responsibility position is closely parallel to that of Governor Brown.
JS/FS/3-24-76
CALIFORNIA FARMER ATTITUDES
Drought. Farmers are still wary of possible drought in certain areas.
The Northern portion of the State is still low in moisture, although it
is not yet to a crisis stage. Recent rains have greatly improved the
short-range picture for moisture although much additional rainfall
is needed. California depends heavily on irrigation and, as a result,
is also dependent upon adequate winter snowfall to provide a melt-off
during the spring and summer months. As of 3/12/76, snowpack was about
a third below normal.
Unionization. The unionization of farm Labor bothers vegetable farmers.
This is spurring the development of machine harvesting. For example,
there is more use of lettuce planters and harvesters, as well as machines
to harvest tomatoes for canning.
Rice legislation. Rice farmers are concerned about the new rice legislation.
They fear that without government support, State rice acreage may dwindle,
since rice can be grown more cheaply in the Mississippi Delta region.
Background on the rice program. H.R. 8529, signed into law Feb. 16 suspends
marketing quotas for the 1976 and 1977 crops of rice. It provides a target
price program for rice similar to those for wheat, cotton and feed grains.
Under this program, anyone who wants to produce rice can do so, in
any amount.
A preliminary target price has been set at $8.00 per hundredweight,
and a loan rate at $6.00 per hundredweight.
An allotment of 1.8 million acres is apportioned to growers on the
basis of allotments established for the 1975 crop. Farmers are eligible
for a loan and deficiency payments based on production from allotment
acres.
FORD GERALD LIBRARY
The payment limitation is $55,000 per "person."
REAGAN ON THE ISSUES
Ronald Reagan has yet to make any statements specifically
addressed to California voters regarding his bid for the
nomination. He has returned to the state to rest from
campaign activities, but has not used these visits to
make any major statements to California voters.
Reagan has, however, frequently referred to his record
as Governor as evidence of his qualifications to be
President. His proposed $90 billion plan was severely
criticized by the state's major newspapers as an ill-
considered plan and his claims on reducing the welfare roles
while Governor have likewise been the subject of negative
editorial comment.
CERALD
GUIDANCE
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20515
12TH DISTRICT, CALIFORNIA
(202) 225-5411
COMMITTEE ON
DISTRICT OFFICE:
GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS
Congress of the United States
305 GRANT AVENUE
AND
PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA 94306
COMMITTEE ON
house of Representatives
(415) 326-7383
MERCHANT MARINE
AND FISHERIES
Mashington, D.C. 20515
+E
March 17, 1976
Honorable Vernon C. Loen
Deputy Assistant to the President
for Legislative Affairs
The White House
Washington, D.C. 20500
Dear Vern:
I am enclosing some material which I hope will help on
California issues. If you haven't already done so, I'd get
in touch with some Southern California people to fill in the
gaps.
Let me know if you need back-up material on these issues.
Respectfully,
Pete
Paul N. McCloskey, Jr.
PNMcC:BJd
Enclosure
GERALD
THIS STATIONERY PRINTED ON PAPER MADE WITH RECYCLED FIBERS
CALIFORNIA ISSUES FOR THE PRESIDENT FORD CAMPAIGN
Q. What is your position on Proposition 15, the California Nuclear Initiative?
A. I feel very strongly about the need to make nuclear power plants as safe as
possible. I question, however, whether the initiative is the proper approach.
As I understand the measure, because Congress has continued a limitation on
liability, existing nuclear plants would have to be phased out, commencing in
five years, unless the State legislature could certify an almost absolute
safety of nuclear power sites by a 2/3rds vote. I think there is a. serious legal
question over the power of states to restrict development in this way, and I
believe our efforts would be better focused on the strengthening of federal
safety standards on the nuclear industry. It is an issue that affects the entire
nation and should be dealt with as such.
Q. California may have a ballot measure in November to ban private ownership of
handguns.. You have taken a position opposed to this on a national basis, but,
if California voters passed such a gun control proposition, would you reconsider
your position?
A. I don't think the nation is ready for such a strong gun control law, but it is
the right of every state to have its own law, and I can understand California
having a special interest in the problem after the two women who pulled out
handguns during my visits to California last fall. California voters have
traditionally been leaders in shaping public opinion nationwide, and I will
watch the initiative vote with interest.
Q. What help will the Federal government give to BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit System),
and to other public transportation systems proposed by local government?
A. To the extent possible in a budget-cutting Administration, I very much want to
see Urban Mass Transit Administration funds used to help local government
LIBRARY
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construct and operate mass transit systems. But we can't do it alone. Cities and
counties should follow the example set in March (1976) by Santa Clara County and
impose 1/2-cent sales tax increases to provide funds for transit systems. BART has
received substantial sums from the federal government and certainly will continue to,
but the emphasis must be on local initiative.
To what extent should the Federal government be responsible for water quality in the
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta when effected by Federal water projects which divert
water (e.g. San Felipe) from the Delta?
This is a difficult issue because it involves competing interests in different parts
of the State. The Environmental Protection Agency and the Bureau of Reclamation are
trying to reach agreement on who should bear the ultimate responsibility for ensuring
high water quality. Obviously, the State of California and the Department of Water
Resources feel strongly that the Federal government should assume the responsibility.
I think we will reach an agreement whereby both State and Federal officials can
cooperatively protect the delta water. I think we should Iet EPA and the Bureau of
Reclamation try to reach agreement before I comment any further.
Which of the Republican Senate Candidates do you feel has the best chance of
defeating Senator John Tunney?
I don't think it would be appropriate to endorse anyone in the Republican primary. Bob
Finch, AL Bell, Dr. Hayakawa, and John Schmitz all have unique qualities, and which
would make the best Senator is really a question for California Republican voters to
decide.
Governor Brown has decided to enter the California Democratic Presidential primary.
What effect will this have on your campaign here, and what are your impressions of
him?
GREAT
A. From what I have seen and heard of Governor Brown I am impressed by his approach
to State government. I don't think his entry will affect my campaign, but I do
think that his popularity should indicate to the national Democratic party that
the voters don't think the answer to every problem lies in more government and
more spending.
Q. Should Yosemite National Park and other national parks undertake to limit
construction and concessionaires?
A. I'm aware of the concern which has developed over the Yosemite situation and agree
with the joint report recently issued by the House Government Operations Committee
and Small Business Committee which urges the Interior Department to halt further
development of Yosemite. The Interior Department will be working towards the
goals expressed in the House report.
Q. Environmentalists are concerned about the development of off-shore oil drilling
sites, especially as other sources of oil decrease. What steps will your
Administration take to ensure environmental safeguards are met and oil drilling
problems minimized?
A. I too am concerned about the ecological implications of increased off-shore oil
development. This Administration has proposed that an Energy Development Impact
Assistance Fund be created to make loans and planning grants to areas in some way
impacted by Federal energy resource development. Both the House and Senate have
passed different bills to amend the Coastal Zone Management Act, amd we are
studying now what position we should take on the different versions of the
legislation.
On the related subject of commercial development of the coastal shelf, I have
noted the fact that California has led the nation on coastal protection by its
pioneer creation of the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission
BERALD
and by your State Coastal Zone Commission. The Coastal Commission's proposed plan
for controlling development seems like a fair and well-balanced way to address
the problem, and I am hopeful that the California legislature will enact the
plan before the Commission expires at the end of the year. California's action
in this area is indicative of the type of action best implemented at the state and
local levels:
Q. Do you have a position on mining in Death Valley?
A. The Death Valley situation, like the proposed Mineral King Resort area, is a
conflict between environmental and business interests. An order has been handed
down to halt the mining activities in Death Valley, but it is clear that local,
state and federal agencies involved need to develop a more far-reaching and
permanent decision to the question. I can assure you that Secretary Kleppe is
sympathetic to the problems on both sides of the issue and will shortly make
recommendations which will give full protection to environmental concerns.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION FROM CONGRESSMAN ROBERT
LAGOMARSINO FOR THE PRESIDENT'S VISIT
TO CALIFORNIA
The Coastal Commission in California has determined that
Exxon cannot build refinery facilities ashore from their
offshore proposed platform above Santa Barbara. Interior
has taken the Exxon side. Exxon states it will be too expensive
to pipe the oil onshore to Los Angeles from their facility.
Therefore, Exxon is planning to ship their oil down to their
refineries near Los Angeles. This is an environmental issue.
Elk Hills producing. Be aware of the Elk Hills Naval
Petroleum reserve and that Congress has passed legislation
allowing it to be pumped to ease our oil shortage problem.
If you go to Santa Barbara, there are several other issues.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION FROM CONGRESSWOMAN
SHIRLEY PETTIS FOR THE PRESIDENT's
TRIP TO CALIFORNIA
Recently Congresswoman Pettis conducted a constituent
survey. The majority of the people indicated the following
issues in order of importance.
L. Inflation, government spending and high taxes.
2. Immorality, lack of trust in public officials, bad government,
bad public officials, and national apathy. They thought there
was a general dishonesty in this country.
3. Unemployment
4. Crime and disregard for law and order.
5. Too much government regulation, too much bureaucracy
6. Foreign Affairs, Henry Kissinger, detente, and Russia
7. Unemployment is 25% worse than any other place in the
United States in Mrs. Pettis' district.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION FROM CONGRESSMAN CLAIR
BURGENER FOR THE PRESIDENT'S TRIP
TO CALIFORNIA
Illegal Aliens - This is especially important in Southern
California. Naturally one of the things that is being considered
and pushed is the Rodino Bill and that there is some resistance
by farmers in California to that approach for fear that as
employers they will get caught under the law rather than the
illegal alien.
The malpractise situation is very big in California. There have
been several doctor strikes.
Food Stamp Reform is very popular in Southern California.
The President's position is very well accepted on that issue.
Continuation of the President's economic policies. Naturally
the President has a very good stand on fiscal restraint.
Push those programs that curb inflation, because of the large
number who live on a fixed income in California.
Import policy on citrus and farm products. To be honest,
there is some unhappiness that the decision the President
made on aspargus was not right.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION FROM CONGRESSMAN BOB
WILSON FOR THE PRESIDENT'S TRIP TO
CALIFORNIA
There are a couple of issues that Congressman Wilson feels
are of importance.
Number one is the unemployment situation. It is higher than
average, 10-1/2 to 11%. It is not as bad as it sounds, because
there are some people that feel that they would rather be
unemployed in California than in Minnesota. Also, there are
people who retire and go out to California.
The second problem is dealing with the Defense Department
budget. Industrial economy is dependent on government
contracts.
MAR 17 1973
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
WASHINGTON. D. C. 20515
ALPHONZO BELL
Los ANGELES
March 16, 1976
CALIFORNIA
Dear Vern:
In response to your call to my Washington office earlier this
morning, following are several questions the President may get in
California:
I) Is President Ford going to sign the Elk Hills
bill?
2) What is President Ford's reaction to Governor
Brown's decision to get into the Presidential
race?
3) What does President Ford intend to do about the
200 mile coastline extension?
4) Why does California still have an unemployment
rate well above the national average?
5) What are President Ford's views on the need for
more public service jobs in light of California's
high unemployment rate?
6) What is President Ford's reaction to the fact
that Reagan is well ahead of him in California
surveys?
7) What is President Ford's position on the California
Nuclear Energy Initiative?
LIBRARY
Page 2
8) Is President Ford aware that federal policies
have made natural gas for power generation al-
most unavailable and, as a result, Los Angeles
faces a serious new air pollution problem?
9) What does President Ford believe should be done
about the problem of illegal aliens?
10} Does President Ford share the view expréssed by
a number of his local campaign supporters that
Ronald Reagan was a poor governor of California?
II) Does President Ford plan to see or telephone
former President Nixon while in California?
If I may be of any additional assistance in connection with
the President's trip to my State, please let me know.
With warmest regards,
Sincerely,
ae
ALPHONZO BELL
United States Congressman
Mr. Vernon C. Loen
Special Assistant to the President
The White House
Washington, D.C. 20500
FROM
DEL CLAWSON
MAR 18 1970
MEMBER OF CONGRESS
OFFICE ADDRESS:
CALIFORNIA
2349 RAYBURN House OFFICE BUILDING
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20515
TELEPHONE No.: 202-225-3576
COMMITTEES:
RULES
Congress of the United States
BUDGET
FIELD OFFICES:
11600 S. PARAMOUNT BLVO.. SUITE D
house of Representatives
DOWNEY, CALIFORNIA 90241
TELEPHONE No.: 213-923-9206
Clashington, D.C. 20515
13601 E. WHITTER BLVD.. SUITE 401
WHITTIER. CALIFORNIA 90605
TELEPHONE No.: 213-945-1404
March 17, 1976
Mr. Vernon C. Loen
Deputy Assistant for Legislative Affairs
The White House
Washington, D.C.
Dear Vern:
In response to your request for information regarding
issues of current interest in California, I believe
the following should be mentioned:
The economy
"big government" - Federal regulation
Federal spending
nuclear energy development
gun control
Thanks for your interest in my assessment.
Sincerely,
Ad.
Del Clawson
Member of Congress
DC:ac
WISCONSINQ& A's
LIBRARY
FORD
OREGO
NUCLEAR MORATORIUM*
Q. The people of this State will soon be voting on the question
of whether or not to slow down or stop the development of nuclear
powerplants. What is your position on this question?
A. I don't believe it would be proper for me to attempt to tell
the people of this State how to vote on a specific issue that
will be before you in a State election.
I will share with you my thoughts on the general subject of
nuclear power.
First, we are now in the 18th year of commercial nuclear power
production in the United States. In total the Nation's
commercial nuclear plants represent several hundred plant years
of operating experience -- without a single death from a nuclear
accident. That's a good record.
Second, even though we have an excellent safety record, I
believe we must continue our efforts to assure it remains so
in the years ahead. As one step, I have asked for more funds
in 1977 for both the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and
ERDA for reactor safety R&D. I have also requested funds for a
major expansion of programs to provide safe, secure, and
environmentally acceptable transportation and storage for nuclea
wastes.
Third, in January I975, I activated NRC as an independent
regulatory agency for commercial nuclear power. Ensuring the
safety of nuclear powerplants is the primary responsibility
of that agency. I have increased both the funding and manpower
for the NRC so that it has the resources it needs.
Fourth, the question of safety has been looked at in detail by
a number of competent, objective, and expert people who have
expressed confidence in the safety of nuclear plants. Also,
my environmental advisers have also told me that nuclear
energy is preferable from an environmental point of view.
Fifth, the 57 plants now operating are supplying about 9
percent of our nation's electrical power. Generating this
amount of power with oil-fired plants would mean increasing
our oil imports by about 1 million barrels per day. Thus
nuclear power is already making a substantial contribution
to our energy needs. Also, the cost of electricity from
nuclear plants is much less than from oil-fired plants.
*Proposition 15 on the California June 8th ballot
-2-
NUCLEAR MORATORIUM (CONTINUED)
Finally, I recognize that there are still a number of
responsible people in the country that have legitimate
concerns and questions about nuclear power. This is quite
understandable. We should expect questions about technologies
that are just achieving wide-scale application. It's important
that we respond to these questions. I can assure you that
the energy and environmental agencies reporting to me will
do everything they can to answer questions that come to them.
I have every confidence that the independent NRC will also
address fully any questions that come to its attention.
GRS 3/25/76
of
SEALD
FORMS
EARTHQUAKE RESEARCH AND PREDICTION
Q. Scientists are telling us that there is a bulge in the
earth along the San Andreas fault north of Los Angeles
and this may be a sign that we'll be hit by a major
earthquake soon. At the same time, we hear that you've
cut the budget for the Federal agency (Geological Survey
of the Interior Department) which is trying to watch this
problem. What is going on?
A. In Mid February, I approved a proposal to reprogram more
than $2 million to buy instruments and to monitor the
uplift situation near Los Angeles.
Our scientists tell me that the uplift could be a warning
sign of a potential earthquake. They also say that
similar uplift occurred in Southern California in the past
and was not followed by an earthquake.
The possibility for earthquake prediction is a significant
development here and in several other countries (Russia,
Japan, China). In addition to the reprogramming to
support the additional work in California, I have directed
my Science Advisor (Guy Stever, Director of the National
Science Foundation) to work with the Interior Department
and develop a proposal for an overall earthquake prediction
program for my consideration.
GRS/3/25/76
RATES CHARGED MUNICIPAL UTILITIES BY PG&E
Q. Some cities in California maintain their own
municipal power facilities and purchase power
wholesale from Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E)
for actual distribution. Do you think its fair
for PG&E to charge these municipalities a higher
rate than it charges its retail customers?
A. Rates charged by PG&E and other electrical utilities are
subject to controls maintained by independent regulatory
agencies, so it would not be appropriate for me to
comment on matters they may be considering.
I understand, however, that the rate differential you
are referring to is due to the involvement of two
different regulatory agencies (the Federal Power
Commission and the California Public Utilities Com-
mission) and their different policies with respect to
automatic pass-through of higher fuel costs.
Background
The question refers to a problem caused by the involvement
of two different regulatory agencies:
The Federal Power Commission (FPC) regulates rates for
wholesale sales of electrical power to municipal utili-
ties. FPC permits automatic pass through of higher fuel
costs and thus the wholesale rates increased some time
ago when oil prices increased.
The California State PUC controls other rates. The State
higher fuel cost agency has now decided to permit the
pass through of costs, beginning in about 2 weeks.
There has been a period of time during which wholesale
rates to municipalities have actually exceeded retail rates.
GRS/3/25/76
DEVELOPMENT OF CALIFORNIA OCS
Q. The Governor and Attorney General of California oppose
your policy of allowing private corporations to drill
for oil on the Outer Continental Shelf. They believe
this will have a serious, harmful impact on California
in that the coastal waters will certainly be polluted
by oil spills and the economies of coastal communities
will be disrupted by an influx of oil company personnel.
A. I believe that we must take actions to increase domestic
energy production so that we can regain our ability to
avoid the economic and socila disruption from another
oil embargo. This includes development of oil and gas
on the outer Continental shelf where this can be done
safely and in a way that protects environmental values.
As we move ahead, we must also work closely with States
and also with areas that might be affected by onshore
development.
In October 31, 1975, Secretary Kleepe decided to proceed
with the sale of leases off Southern California.
Secretary Kleppe eliminated some proposed areas from the
sale and took other precautions to assume proper protec-
tion of the wildlife, and natural values of the Southern
California region. For example,
Tracts in the Santa Monica Bay area and tracts south
of San Miguel Island were deleted in order to protect
areas of special biological significance.
A three-quarter mile buffer was established around
the Channel Islands in order to protect State oil
sanctuaries.
.
Special environmental stipulations were imposed in
order to protect the important estuaries along the
coastline and any unique biological areas offshore.
Interior Department will work closely with the people
of California and provide an opportunity to review plans
before oil and gas development proceeds.
SEALE
GRS/3/25/76
(California)
ADMINISTRATION SUPPORT FOR GEOTHERMAL ENERGY
Q.
Does the Administration support geothermal power?
A.
Yes, certainly. The Administration recognizes the contribution
that geothermal power can make, particularly in the Western
states.
A limited amount of geothermal energy already is being produced
today in Northern California using dry steam. However, the
dry steam form of geothermal energy apparently is a rather
limited resource.
On the other hand, this country has abundant geothermal resources
of other forms (specifically, hydrothermal and hot dry rock)
but these are more difficult to tap. My budget provides
funds to assess these geothermal resources and to develop
the technology needed to use these geothermal resources.
Federal geothermal R&D will increase 44% in my 1977 Budget,
from $32 to $46 million in outlays. We are also planning to
implement a geothermal energy loan guarantee program which
will help promote the use of geothermal energy during the
period when economic viability is uncertain.
Detail
I. The Federal government is supporting experiments in
Southern California and Idaho that may lead to new means
of producing power from hydrothermal resources and more
advanced experiments are being conducted in New Mexico and
along the Gulf Coast states on hot-dry rock. There are a
number of important uncertainties that must be resolved,
including environmental problems (e.g., release of hydrogen
sulfide gas, earthquakes, sunsidence of land), and these are
also being addressed through research.
2. The loan guarantee program is designed to assist industry
in developing the near-term application of geothermal power,
during the period when economic viability of geothermal power
production is uncertain, specifically to reduce the financial
risk to the private sector in producing power from geothermal
resources. The total dollar amount for the loan program might
reach $2 billion.
GRS
3/25/76
(California)
SHORTAGE OF NATURAL GAS IN CALIFORNIA
LEADING TO INCREASED AIR POLLUTION
Q. Are you aware that Federal policies have made natural gas for
power generation almost unavailable and, as a result, Los Angeles
faces a serious new air pollution problem?
A. I understand that the shortage of natural gas in California
may force some major users to switch to other fuels --
principally oil -- and this will increase air pollution.
This is unfortunate but there is no real choice when you must
have energy and there isn't enough natural gas to go around.
The best way to deal with this problem is to increase natural
gas production -- reversing the decline in natural gas production
that began two years ago.
The Administration is trying to get the Congress to remove
Federal price regulation from new natural gas supplies, Federal
regulation has been a prime cause of declining production. We
must remove these unnecessary controls so that there is an
incentive for increased natural gas production.
BACKGROUND
Priorities for natural gas use within the State of California
are determined by the California Public Utilities Commission
(PUC) The California PUC generally follows the FPC's priorities
with large users curtailed first -- before homes and small
business.
Natural gas for boiler fuel is given low priority and that is
where users in California are being forced to switch to other
fuel, principally oil.
GRS
3/25/76
(California)
GUARANTEEING NATURAL GAS TO CALIFORNIA IF
THE SOHIO PIPELINE APPLICATION IS APPROVED
Q.
Can the Federal Government give California assurance that
the present gas delivery will be maintained (or increased)
in the L.A. basin (in exchange for SOHIO pipeline approval) ?
A.
The Federal Government has no authority to allocate natural
gas from one pipeline to another. If the pipelines delivering
gas to California are curtailed, then the California Public
Utilities Commission (PUC) must determine priorities for
remaining gas.
BACKGROUND
"The SOHIO pipeline approval" refers to an application from SOHIO
now pending before the Federal Power Commission (FPC) to
switch the use of a natural gas pipeline to oil -- to
bring expected Alaskan oil eastward. FEA has publicly urged
the FPC to approve the application.
GRS
3/25/76
SEALD R. FORD
LIBRARY
ELK HILLS BILL
Q.
Are you going to sign the Elk Hills bill?
A.
I haven't seen the final bill agreed upon by House-Senate
Conferees. But, my people tell me that the Conferees have
come up with a good compromise.
I understand that the Conferees will file their report next
week (Wednesday, March 31), and both the House and the Senate
will take it up soon thereafter.
I hope to have a bill that I can sign soon so that we can
begin producing oil at Elk Hills without further delay.
GRS
3/25/76
BEBALD
n.
FORD
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA RAPID TRANSIT DISTRICT
Question:
Mr. President, the Southern Califronia Rapid Transit District
has been forced by the Department of Labor to enter into a
labor agreement it does not like because Department of
Transportation funds could not be made available to it
without Department of Labor certification. Do you think
this is right?
Answer
I am aware of this situation. It relates to the implementation
of a provision of the Urban Mass Transportation Act (UMTA-
SS13 (c) which says basically that recipients of Federal
funds must certify that employees will not be adversely
affected by the use of those funds.
Recently, concerns have been expressed about the implementation
of this requirement. I do not think it would be appropriate
for me to comment on the specifics of any local labor-
management agreement which stems from the 13 (c) requirement.
However, at the national level, I have asked Secretary
Coleman and Secretary Usery to examine the way 13 (c) is
being implemented, to see if they feel there should be any
changes in the procedures.
BACKGROUND
Los Angeles County Supervisor Pete Schabarum serves on the
Board of the Southern California Rapid Transit District. He
has been the leading figure in challenging DOL handling of
Section 13 (c) cases. Schabarum has met with a number of
people at the White House to argue his case.
The majority of the Board of the Transit District, while
approving an agreement with the unions which DOL will find
acceptable, indicated their approval was granted "under
economic duress:" if they failed to grant approval, the
transit district would have run out of operating funds.
The broader 13 (c) problem has been discussed with both Bill
Coleman and Bill Usery. They will be examining the matter
carefully. Given the state of the law and other developments,
however, it is not clear that they will agree to recommend
any significant changes at this time.
DEBALD
STATE
DHL/JRH
3/15/76
LOS ANGELES CETA
Q.
Los Angeles is about to run out of CETA funds and
will have to fire several thousand people. Why
won't you do something about this problem?
A.
I am aware of the problem you mention and have
discussed it with Mayor Bradley.
We have tried to do something. I have proposed
to the Congress a $1.7 billion appropriation to
provide funding for CETA at present levels through
the end of 1976 and then reduced funding until
October 1977 consistent with our expectations of
gradually improving economic conditions through
the country. The Congress and I may have a
difference of opinion over some proposed programs
substantially in excess of my request but the
Congress should certainly be able to act on the
continuation of a jobs program which is working.
Background
Los Angeles authorities feel they were misled by the
Department of Labor into spending their CETA funds at
too fast a pace. There is some merit to the claim that
DOL is partially at fault.
CETA prime sponsors were advised several months ago of
the need to curb expenditures so funds would last through
the end of the Fiscal Year. A number of prime sponsors
froze new hires and gradually laid off workers so the
programs could be maintained. Los Angeles froze new hires
but refused to lay off any workers. Los Angeles now seeks
special assistance. To give Los Angeles special assistance,
however, would be unfair to those prime sponsors which took
steps to live within the fiscal constraints.
The enactment of the $1.7 billion supplemental would solve
Los Angeles' , immediate problem though it would still have to
phase its program down if it wanted its funds to last well
into 1977.
R. R. FORD FORD
COMPLYING WITH THE CLEAN AIR ACT IN CALIFORNIA
a
How will California communities possibly meet the
Standards of the Clean Air Act by 1977?
A:
We share local concern about the 1977 date for
achievement of the standards in Los Angeles, San
Francisco and other areas of California. We have
proposed amendments to the Clean Air Act that would
provide greater flexibility in accepting reasonable
control measures. The Senate Committee has reported
and the House Committee is presently considering
amendments to the Act. We hope to get a workable
bill out of the Congress during this session.
Background:
Clean Air Act requires all health standards for
air pollution be met by July 1977.
Several areas, including San Diego, Los Angeles,
and San Francisco, cannot meet standards by 1977
without severe, social and economic impact in
those areas.
The National Academy of Sciences' report indicates
all air quality standards are supported by evidence
on health effects, and that benefits related to
their achievement outweigh costs.
EPA has recommended amendments to the Clean Air
Act which would provide the time and local flexi-
bility needed to achieve the goals of the Clean
Air Act.
The Senate has passed legislation amending the Act,
and the House Public Works Committee is presently
considering amendments. There are numerous differences
between the Senate and House versions which will have
to be resolved in conference. Both versions, however,
provide a degree of flexibility in dealing with the
concerns of local government.
GWH/3-15-76
WASTEWATER AND DRINKING WATER
REQUIREMENTS IN CALIFORNIA
Q:
Why is EPA requiring installation of expensive
water and wastewater treatment measures?
A:
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act and the
Safe Drinking Water Act each set forth treatment
requirements that must be met by municipal depart-
ments providing water and wastewater disposal requirements
into regulations, and the State of California has assumed
responsibility for implementing the regulations. While
we are always willing to review the regulations to see
that they do not impose excessive requirements, we
cannot provide relief from statutory mandates. I
should add, at this point, that State and local re-
quirements are frequently more stringent than those
mandated by the Congress.
Background:
The Federal Water Pollution Control Act requires
that municipal wastewater discharges meet secondary
treatment requirements by 1977.
There are major sewer systems in both the Los
Angeles and San Francisco regions which do not
presently meet these requirements. State and
Federal grant funds are available to meet 87-1/2 per-
cent of the capital cost of improving these plants.
However, besides the 12-1/2 percent local share of
construction costs, local communities would face
increased costs for operation and maintenance of
the facilities. Federal law requires that the
operation and maintenance costs be met through a
system of user charges. EPA has requested an
amendment to the law to permit use of other than
user charge funding methods.
- 2 -
The Safe Drinking Water Act requires that drinking
water meet Federal drinking water standards
established to protect public health.
The State of California has assumed responsi-
bility for insuring that standards are met.
The State is requiring Los Angeles to treat the
Owens Valley water supply in order to meet
Federal standards for turbidity (which interferes
with disinfection).
There are no provisions for providing Federal
financial assistance for either construction or
operation of the water treatment. facilities.
SERALD
R.
GROA
LISA
GWH/3-15-76
OFF-SHORE OIL DRILLING SAFEGUARDS
a
Environmentalists are concerned about the develop-
ment of off-shore oil drilling sites, especially
as other sources of oil decrease. What steps will
your Administration take to ensure that environmental
safeguards are met and oil drilling problems
minimized?
A.
Environmental protection is a developing technology
and as better methods are developed, they will be
considered carefully. Many safety measures have been
implemented in recent years. The Department of the
Interior routinely eliminates from its OCS sales the
high risk tracts. From 1968 to present, the inspection
force has been increased from only seven to more than
200. Regulations on all phases of drilling and
production have been updated and revised, and a typical
20-well platform now has about 300 safety devices.
Operators are required to submit contingency plans
for oil spill containment and cleanup prior to lease
operations. There have been results. Since 1968,
more than 5,000 wells have been drilled on the OCS
and only four resulted in accidents that caused oil
spill of more than 250 barrels.
GWH
3/22/76
STRIP MINING IN DEATH VALLEY
Q.
Do you favor proposals to allow mining in
Death Valley?
A.
Present law does not permit withdrawal from
mining of certain areas of Death Valley National
Monument. The Administration has endorsed legis-
lation to forbid new mining claims in National Park
System units where they are still permitted, and
to give the Secretary of the Interior regulatory
authority to protect environmental values involved
in mining which would continue on existing claims.
Background:
This volatile issue surfaced last summer, when
National Park Service asked for authority to withdraw
certain areas of Death Valley National Monument from
mining, and the Interior Solicitor issued an opinion
that the law did not permit such withdrawal. The
flak, mostly directed against Interior, kept flying
in the press until early October, when the Depart-
ment endorsed legislation to forbid new mining claims
in National Park System units where they are still
permitted, and to give the Secretary regulatory
authority to protect environmental values involved
in mining which would continue on existing claims.
Areas still open to mining claims under law are:
Death Valley; Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument
and Coronado National Memorial, both in Arizona;
Mt. McKinley National Park, Alaska and Glacier Bay
National Monument, Alaska (which Interior proposes
not be closed to mining yet while surveys by Bureau
of Mines and Geological Survey continues; nickel and
other valuable minerals exist at Glacier Bay but
there is a question whether they can be mined profitably).
GWH
3-22-76
WARM SPRINGS DAM NEAR
SAN ANDREAS FAULT
Q. Why does the Federal Government keep supporting
public works projects such as the Warm Springs Dam
in Sonoma County that is close to the San Andreas
Fault and subject to earthquakes?
A. The Warm Springs Dam is located in the Russian River
Basin north of San Francisco. The project was started
by the Congress in 1967 and about $40.5 million has been
spent through fiscal year I975, mainly for lands and
road relocations. The total cost of the project is
estimated at $180 million. The major benefits are
flood control and water supply.
The project is currently halted under a court injunction
pending additional studies by the Corps of Engineers,
including studies of any modifications that may be
needed because the dam is near a fault zone. If these
studies indicate that there is any serious reason for
questioning the dam's safety, the dam will not be
started.
DEPARTMENT
FORD
GWH
3-22-76
EROSION IN THE REDWOOD NATIONAL PARK
Q.
The large number of virgin stands of giant redwoods
are now being threatened because of the harvesting
of timber in close proximity. Are you in favor of
the enlargement of the Redwood National Park (Burton
bill) as a means to protect these trees?
A.
There are very serious problems of erosion in some
of the parks finest areas. This Administration is
considering legislation to be submitted to Congress
that would address this problem. The bill would
direct the Department of the Interior to protect
affected areas within the Park by regulating some
harvesting of timber, and through land rehabilitation
outside the Park boundaries on watersheds which feed
the streams within the Park.
Background
Created by Congress in 1968, this Park has been in
trouble ever since. Cost of land acquisition
(authorized at $92 million plus exchange of some
Federal lands) has run far above ceilings; and the
State of California has refused to turn over its
adjacent State Redwood Parks as originally expected,
making management difficult. Immediate and pressing
problem is erosion undermining some of the Park's
finest areas, felling prime trees, some of them many
centuries old. Loggers working slopes above and outside
the Park have denuded land; when heavy rains fall,
excessive runoff swells streams and undermines their
banks, where biggest and best trees grow. The Act
creating the Park had directed National Park Service
to look into possible need for a buffer zone and report
back to Congress; because of extremely high costs of
standing redwood timber on private lands, NPS wanted
strong factual justification, which was slow in coming.
in 1975, a Sierra Club lawsuit against Interior forced
the issue. In November, Interior released a two-year
study report by Geological Survey hydrologists, docu-
menting heavy damage within the Park and blaming
accelerated erosion on logging practices outside the
Park.
GWH
3/22/76
CONCESSIONERS IN NATIONAL PARKS
a
Should Yosemite National Park and other national
parks undertake to limit construction and concessioners?
A.
The National Park Service currently is hiring con-
cessions management specialists for several large
parks, in accordance with the Service Director's
plan to upgrade control over concessions. The Park
Service has a mammoth effort underway to poll the
public as to whether more or less human comforts are
desirable for Yosemite. There have been hearings
nationwide, and more than 30 in California. A
determination of what the public wants would come
before a course of action. At present, 347 con-
cessioners operate in 87 units of the National Park
System.
Background
Environmentalists would prefer a minimum of concessioners
within the parks, with necessary services, particularly
overnight accommodations, provided from outside the
park where possible. Tourist-oriented business firms
would like to expand services for a comfort-loving
population, contending the parks are big enough to
accommodate all kinds of tastes. The Park Service
leans toward the environmentalist view; where the
public stands is unclear.
Concessions have grown like Topsy, some from an era
when a grand old resort hotel would accommodate
visitors arriving by train and provide them with
everything from food and lodging to golf and tennis,
all within the park. That type of concession still
survives in some of the big parks, but environmentalists
and Park Service managers are pressing for closer
control and phase out where possible. They feel the
presence of these super-facilities violates the
national park concept. of preserving unspoiled nature
as much as possible. Some concessions have become
big business, operated by firms taken over by con-
glomerates, with a built-in pressure to maximize profits
at the expense of park values by expanding facilities
Concessioners in National Parks (cont'd)
-2-
and services. Concessioners are not all hotels and
restaurants; they include gift shops, ski tows and many
sport facilities, shuttle bus and sightseeing firms and
a wide variety of other services. They pay a fee to NPS
based on their gross receipts; in return they provide
service that meets NPS standards. There is little uni-
formity in contract administration and considerable
criticism of sub-par service, possibly exorbitant profits,
plus occasional allegations of favoritism. Part of the
problem is that concessions management is not a parti-
cularly desirable "major" for National Park Service
employees career ladder. It is not a high-status field,
but rather is one where the potential career risks are
greater than anticipated rewards.
GWH
3-22-76
Parsons
BAN ON HANDGUNS
Q. California may have a ballot measure in November to
ban private ownership of handguns. You have taken
a position opposed to this on a national basis, but,
if California voters passed such a gun control
proposition, would you reconsider your position?
A. As you know, I have stated on a number of occasions
that I am unalterably opposed to Federal registration
of handguns or licensing of handgun owners. I am
also opposed to a Federal ban on private ownership
of handguns. I believe these questions should be
addressed by State and local governments and not by
the Federal government. This will be my position
regardless of the outcome on the California proposition.
MALPRACTICE
Do you believe the Federal Government should provide
malpractice insurance for doctors to prevent strikes,
such as the one that tied up California medicine
earlier this year?
It is our feeling that the solution to the malpractice
insurance problem for doctors and hospitals should
come from the industry and the States. So far, over
30 States have passed legislation to help deal with
the problem. It is our hope and belief that such
steps will alleviate the crisis and make direct
Federal involvement unnecessary.
The Administration's policy has been to encourage
such activity. Many conferences and meetings with
physicians, hospital administrators, insurance company
executives and State insurance commissioners have been
held in an effort to resolve this issue. The Department
of Health, Education and Welfare is also conducting
research to seek better understanding of the problem.
Currently, no State is threatened with the immediate
loss of malpractice insurance coverage, although in
many areas the premium rates are quite high. There
are several States that we are watching closely, in-
cluding California.
:KGROUND
:wo-track effort is underway:
We have encouraged States to pass legislation providing
for the immediate availability of medical malpractice
insurance; and
We are looking at long term solutions to the problem
such as possible changes in legal practices involving
medical malpractice, necessary medical practice reforms,
better insurance data, etc.
SCM
BEALD
3/19/76
ILLEGAL ALIENS
What should be done about illegal aliens? Do you
support the Rodino bill?
We have anywhere from 6,000,000 to 8,000,000 illegal
aliens in this country, which is, roughly, the total
number of unemployed in this country. This is a very
serious matter, but let me tell you what we are trying
to do about it.
Number one, we are working very closely in a new
program with the Mexican Government. There has been
a 'tremendous increase in the flow of illegal aliens
from Mexico. The cooperation that we are developing
with the Mexican Government will, I think, produce
some results in stopping that flow.
When I was in Mexico about nineteen months ago, I
personally talked to President Echeverria about this.
Number two, in my budget I have recommended additional
employees for the Immigration and Naturalization Service
SQ it can doing a better job of finding illegal aliens
and seeking to deport them.
There is one other thing we are trying to do. I have
favored legislation that passed the House, last year
as I recall, that makes it mandatory for an employer
to ask whether a prospective employee is an illegal
alien. That would be helpful.
BERALD
SEAL
LIBRARY
GOV. BROWN'S PRIMARY CANDIDACY
Q. Governor Brown has decided to enter the California
Democratic Presidential primary. What effect will
this have on your campaign here, and what are your
impressions of him?
A. Governor Brown's entering the Democratic primary should
sustantially affect the Democratic outcome because of
his widespread popularity in the state. I do not
believe it will have any effect on the Republican
primary.
(Note: You have met with Governor Brown twice.
Once was at the Governor's Conference in San Francisco.
The second was in Sacramento in September of last year.
At that time you discussed general issues as well as
the crime message you were about to give to the
California Assembly.)
Recent ratings of Gov. Brown's job performance showed
that a great majority of Californians believe he 'is
doing an excellent job.
3/24/76
SEN. TUNNEY
Q.
Which of the Republican Candidates do you feel has
the best chance of defeating Senator John Tunney?
A.
I have made it a practice never to become involved in
conjecture regarding Republican candidates involved
in primary campaigns. I think that we are very
fortunate to have four candidates for the Republican Senatorial
nomination. I have worked personally with both Al Bell
and Bob Finch and have the highest respect and admiration
for them both. I think that the Republican voters will decide
with their ballots who they believe is best equipped to
oppose Senator Tunney in November.
NOTE: The other Republican candidates are
S. I. Hayakawa, former President of San Francisco
State and syndicated columnist; and John Harmer, former
Lt. Governor of California.
STATE
DEPART
REVENUE SHARING
ORANDUM
THE WHITE HOUSE
WASHINGTON
March 23, 1976
MEMORANDUM FOR
FROM
JIM PAUL SHUMAN MYER Paulton
Per your request, attached is the supplemental
material for the President's trip to California.
Attachment
Tab A - GRS Payment Data
Tab B -- Actual Uses
Tab C -- GRS Payment Data
for State of California
and all local jurisdic-
tions
SEPARAL
R.FORD
LIBRARY
TAB A
FORD of GERALO
LIBRARY
THE
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING PAYMENTS - CALIFORNIA
(in millions)
Total State
& All Local
State
Indian
Governments
Gov't.
Counties
Municipalities
Tribes
Actual Payments to
Date as of 1/5/76
$ 2,504.1
$ 834.7
$ 999.8
$ 669.0
$ .5
Estimated Payments
Under Existing Pro-
gram--thru 12/31/76
$ 3,178.7
$1,059.5
$1,257.2
$ 861.2
$ .7
Projected Payments
Under President's
Proposal (1/77-9/82)
$ 4,125.8
$1,375.3
$1,575.4
$1,174.0
$1.1
GENERAL REVENUE SHARING PAYMENTS
CALIFORNIA
Total
Projected
(Existing Program Under President's
Jurisdiction
Payment to Date
thru 12/31/76)
Legislation
Fresno County
$ 31,181,521
$ 39,095,853
$ 48,216,992
Fresno City
$ 12,984,376
$ 16,519,139
$ 21,555,480
--
San Francisco
$ 74,986,878
$ 93,948,787
$ 115,524,126
--
Los Angeles County $ 364,261,987
$ 453,355,450
$ 542,080,020
Los Angeles City $ 143,180,896
$ 185,875,910
$ 260,122,070
TAB B
LIBRARY
Actual Uses of General Revenue Sharing Payments
(July 1974-June 1975)
Jurisdiction
Actual Uses
Fresno County
$ 8,227,000 for health
2,476,000 for public safety
767,000 for public transportation
Fresno City
$ 1,236,000 for environmental protection
658,000 for recreation
442,000 for general government
San Francisco
$ 9,054,000 for public transportation
6,251,000 for social services to the poor
and aged
2,686,000 for public safety
Los Angeles County
$31,143,000 for public safety
25,214,000 for public transportation
25,397,000 for recreation
Los Angeles City
$19,547,000 for environmental protection
6,000,000 for recreation
3,097,000 for public transportation
TAB C
CALIFORNIA
REVENUE SHARING DISBURSEMENTS
COUNTY
QUARTERLY
ALL PAYMENTS
COUNTY
QUARTERLY
ALL PAYMENTS
CODE
NAME
PAYMENT
TO DATE
CODE
NAME
PAYMENT
TO DATE
MONROVIA CITY
70,594
1,108.585
MONTEBELLO CITY
99,983
1,376,887
026 MONO COUNTY
46,905
516,484
MONTEREY PARK CITY
68,102
1,090,581
. COUNTY TOTAL
46,905
516,424
PALOS VERDES ESTATES CTY
14,260
226.401
PASAOENA CITY
296.191
4,129.205
027 MONTEREY COUNTY
741,697
12,451,457
POMONA CITY
391,058
5,799,936
CARMEL BY THE SEA CITY
11,854
190,835
REDON00 BEACH CITY
163.436
2,473,386
DEL REY OAKS CITY
4.090
65,431
SAN FERNANDO CITY
99,527
975,069
GONZALES CITY
6.937
129.135
SAN GABRIEL CITY
46.931
719.691
GREENFIELD CITY
7,623
105.91*
SAN MARINO CITY
14,940
235,686
KING CITY CITY
25,789
340,625
SANTA MONICA CITY
164,631
2,552,597
MONTEREY CITY
114,417
1,735,899
SIERRA MADRE CITY
12.616
201,468
PACIFIC GROVE CITY
34,734
434.794
SIGNAL MILL CITY
32,850
427,232
SALINAS CITY
228.018
3,255.734
SOUTH GATE CITY
112,095
1,480,177
SEASIDE CITY
77.976
1.126.153
SOUTH PASADENA CITY
24,048
381.680
SOLEDAO CITY
18.040
254,554
TORRANCE CITY
280,294
4,211,239
SAND CITY
1.766
25,244
VERNON CITY
1,936
31,340
. COUNTY TOTAL
1,272,945
20,140,579
WEST COVINA CITY
113,518
1,582,498
WHITTIER CITY
103.813
1,470,530
029 NAPA COUNTY
288.833
4,213.383
DOWNEY CITY
110,260
1,706,060
CALISTOGA CITY
8,460
122,257
BELLFLOWER CITY
53,286
866,304
NAPA CITY
98,656
I,258,095
BRADRURY CITY
870
13,905
ST HELENA CITY
11,081
139.200
QUARTE CITY
10,970
359,488
YOUNTVILLE CITY
13.167
159,077
INDUSTRY CITY
5,408
85,752
. COUNTY TOTAL
420,197
5,892.022
IRWINDALE CITY
5,785
94,084
NORWALK CITY
131.245
1,571,396
029 NEVADA COUNTY
157,913
2,054,495
PARAMOUNT CITY
96,634
887,144
GRASS VALLEY CITY
24,203
318.680
PICO RIVERA CITY
117.222
1,136,847
NEVADA CITY CITY
6.413
105.428
ROLLING HILLS EST CTY
8,340
114,452
. COUNTY TOTAL
188.529
2,478.594
SANTA FE SPRINGS CITY
116.754
1,785.915
SOUTH EL MONTE CITY
76,938
869,768
030 ORANGE COUNTY
2,795,723
42,415.363
WALNUT CITY
10,587
108.160
ANAMEIM CITY
403,971
5,434,701
ARTESIA CITY
30,638
314,812
BREA CITY
51,758
517,597
COMMERCE CITY
79,337
1,277,987
BUENA PARK CITY
136.581
2,111,738
LAWNDALE CITY
41,199
442,782
COSTA MESA CITY
222.040
2,937.374
ROLLING HILLS CITY
2,061
33,883
LA PALMA CITY
14,486
191,87*
BELL GARDENS CITY
71,755
699,980
FULLERTON CITY
146.553
1,973.745
CUDAHY CITY
26,024
298,808
GARDEN GROVE CITY
197.353
2,647,941
LA MIRAOA CITY
45,104
517,446
MUNTINGTON BEACH CITY
281.083
3,806.392
SAN DIMAS CITY
34,946
350.413
LAGUNA BEACH CITY
28.612
425.742
TEMPLE CITY
32.124
514.768
LA HABRA CITY
162.090
1,087,219
ROSEMEAD CITY
88,627
774,390
NEWPORT BEACH CITY
70,859
913.872
HAWAIIAN GARDENS
39,088
375,224
ORANGE
195,460
2,531.684
MIODEN HILLS CITY
1,597
25,391
PLACENTIA CITY
55.454
633.648
LOMITA CITY
20,158
327,521
SAN CLEMENTE CITY
43,295
546.644
PALMOALE CITY
29,123
234.527
SANTA ANA CITY
483.773
6,804,202
CARSON CITY
223,018
1,685.750
SEAL BEACH CITY
30,596
446.705
RANCHO PALOS VERDES CITY
37,436
218,786
STANTON CITY
28,166
*58.506
- COUNTY TOTAL
39,412,029
607,959,508
TUSTIN CITY
42.040
418,220
FOUNTAIN VALLEY. CITY
59.145
904,091
020 MADERA COUNTY
267+764
4,176,942
CYPRESS CITY
41,521
589,653
CHONCHILLA CITY
14.030
153,039
LOS ALAMITOS CITY
25.604
355,866
MADERA CITY
54,056
711,507
WESTMINSTER CITY
121,954
1,535,279
. COUNTY TOTAL
335,850
5,041,488
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO CITY
25,472
211.991
VILLA PARK CITY
4.830
49,190
021 MARIN COUNTY
347,062
5,308.788
YORBA LINOA CITY
20.634
213.383
BELVEDERE CITY
2,757
43v24m
IRVINE CITY
49,407
339.715
CORTE MADERA TOWN
15,800
208,552
. COUNTY TOTAL
5,748,469
80.504,336
FAIRFAX TOWN
11,731
158,951
LARKSPUR CITY
12,952
178.144
031 PLACER COUNTY
352,013
5,232.057
MILL VALLEY CITY
20,427
321.236
AUBURN CITY
21.010
294.354
ROSS TOWN
2,996
45.797
COLFAX CITY
5.490
68.343
SAN ANSELHO TOWN
23,284
330.111
LINCOLN CITY
9.543
154,645
SAN RAFAEL CITY
67,433
927.025
ROCKLIN CITY
7.932
80.560
SAUSALITO CITY
7,338
104,071
ROSEVILLE CITY
61.429
793,977
NOVATO CITY
44.346
655,009
. COUNTY TOTAL
457,417
6,623,973
TIBURON CITY
7.164
104,464
. COUNTY TOTAL
563,290
8,385,392
032 PLUMAS COUNTY
76,884
1,230.072
PORTOLA CITY
3.613
45.759
022 MARIPOSA COUNTY
53.094
733,549
. COUNTY TOTAL
.
80,497
1,275,841
. COUNTY TOTAL .
53,094
733.549
033 RIVERSIDE COUNTY
1,873,985
30.173.313
023 MENDOCINO COUNTY
337,781
4,760.161
BANNING CITY
36,683
530.307
FORT BRAGG CITY
20,930
305,741
BEAUMONT CITY
22.785
336.647
POINT ARENA CITY
1.262
16,402
BLYTHE CITY
40,202
528.817
UKIAH CITY
34,923
466.737
COACHELLA CITY
61.150
825.033
WILLITS CITY
17,783
218,805
CORONA CITY
107,871
1,643,665
COVELO INDIAN COMMUNITY COU
2,467
35,570
ELSINORE CITY
21.268
339.789
MANCHESTER COMMUNITY COUNCI
1,248
7.589
HEMET CITY
55,363
890.750
LAYTONVILLE EXECUTIVE COMMI
786
7,913
INDIO CITY
105,779
1,455,442
. COUNTY TOTAL
417,180
5,818,918
PALM SPRINGS CITY
102.889
1,431.552
PERRIS CITY
19,981
293.182
024 MERCED COUNTY
637,760
9.663,763
RIVERSIDE CITY
409,544
5,543,502
ATWATER CITY
29,645
421,345
SAN JACINTO CITY
10.594
174.57*
005 PALOS CITY
9,874
102,445
DESERT HOT SPRINGS CITY
10,521
130.900
GUSTINE CITY
6,272
103,058
NORCO CITY
42,462
511,9*!
LIVINGSTON CITY
12.226
192,997
INDIAN WELLS CITY
1.256
10,410
LOS RANOS CITY
35,266
472,494
RANCHO MIRAGE CITY
6.492
24,948
MERCED CITY
128,862
1,775,690
PALM DESEPT CITY
10.003
52,911
. COUNTY TOTAL
859,905
12.731.792
COLORADO PIVER TRIBAL COUNC
15+
2.35*
AGUA CALIENTE TRIBAL COUNCI
REPORT
,
025 MODOC COUNTY
50,770
782,834
MORONGO GENERAL COUNCIL
REPORT
22.125
ALTURAS CITY
7,61R
113.419
PECHANGA GENERAL COUNCIL
392
2.579
FORT BIOWELL GENERAL
REPORT
2,513
SANTA ROSA AUSINESS COMMITT
REPORT
414
ALTURAS RANCHERIA GEN COUNC
123
1.298
SORORA GENERAL COUNCIL
1.536
12,277
X-L RANCH ROARD OF DIRECTOR
223
3,498
CAHUILLA GENERAL COUNCIL
REPORT
A
+ COUNTY TOTAL
58,734
903.562
TOPRES-MARTINEZ BUSINESS CO
REPORT
c
REVENUE SHARING DISBURSEMENTS
COUNTY
QUARTERLY
ALL PAYMENTS
COUNTY
QUARTERLY
ALL PAYMENTS
CODE
NAME
PAYMENT
TO DATE
CODE
NAME
PAYMENT
TO DATE
. COUNTY TOTAL
2,940,912
45,105,651
SAN MATEO CITY
135,055
2,172,890
so SAY FRANCISCO CITY
132.901
1,859,341
034 SACRAMENTO COUNTY
2,562,184
37,932,760
PACIFICA CITY
55.959
881,646
FOLSOM CITY
20.613
315,147
WOODSIDE TOWN
5,089
78,901
GALT CITY
7,739
118,860
HALF MOON BAY CITY
8,207
137,914
ISLETON CITY
4,255
60.403
BRISBANE CITY
11.924
180.108
SACRAMENTO CITY
933,623
14,342.600
PORTOLA VALLEY TOWN
5.346
A3,25ª
. COUNTY TOTAL
3,528,414
52,769,770
FOSTER CITY CITY
70,093
1,084,25*
. COUNTY TOTAL .
1,735.520
26,670,759
035 SAN RENITO COUNTY
74,626
1,085,552
HOLLISTER CITY
27,796
368.234
042 SANTA BARRARA COUNTY
873.466
14,951,955
SAN JUAN BAUTISTA CITY
2,462
44,411
GUADALUPE CITY
7,493
110.744
. COUNTY TOTAL
104,884
1,498,197
LOMPOC CITY
53,601
794,454
SANTA BAHBARA CITY
206.724
2,962.343
036 SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY
2,944,844
44,748,042
SANTA MARIA CITY
102,781
I.429.524
BARSTOW CITY
45,635
714.092
CARPINTERIA CITY
28.908
311.249
CHINO CITY
72.943
904.431
SANTA YNE7 BUSINESS COUNCIL
308
5.184
COLTON CITY
76,762
1,169,883
. COUNTY TOTAL
1,273,281
20,574,455
FONTANA CITY
49,246
674,955
NEEDLES CITY
11.210
175.021
043 SANTA CLARA COUNTY
2,516,033
36.583,870
ONTARIO CITY
167,245
2,452,465
CAMPBELL CITY
72,930
957,287
REDLANOS CITY
78,081
1.193.323
CUPERTINO CITY
25.040
316.902
RIALTO CITY
55,960
820.017
GILROY CITY
52,039
642.015
SAN BERNARDINO CITY
464,410
7,275,442
LOS ALTOS CITY
27,218
418.251
UPLAND CITY
50,421
776.199
LOS ALTOS HILLS TOWN
7,395
114.532
MONTCLAIR CITY
91.206
1,200.551
LOS GATOS TOWN
27.379
394.712
VICTORVILLE CITY
30,854
420,749
MILPITAS CITY
77.120
1,093,982
ADELANTO CITY
8,497
79,713
MORGAN HILL CITY
21.899
287,313
LOMA LINOA CITY
10,158
117.322
MOUNTAIN VIEW CITY
110.898
1,432,878
FORT MOJAVE TRIBAL COUNCIL
1,197
16.350
PALO ALTO CITY
74,063
1,001,436
SAN MANUEL GENERAL COUNCIL
REPORT
1,516
SAN JOSE CITY
1,388,650
19,210,717
CHEMEMUEVI INDIAN TRIAE
NO PAY DUE
360
SANTA CLARA CITY
210.261
2,931,903
COUNTY TOTAL
.
4,158,669
62,744.431
SUNNYVALE CITY
172.944
2,394.151
SARATOGA CITY
32.182
453,565
037 SAN DIEGO COUNTY
3,540,774
52,445,546
MONTE SERENO CITY
3.538
48,405
CARLSBAD CITY
86,695
911+204
+ COUNTY TOTAL .
4,819,593
68,281,933
CHULA VISTA CITY
188,826
2,803,613
CORONADO CITY
40,574
574.302
044 SANTA CRUZ COUNTY
561,094
8,145.794
EL CAJON CITY
160,424
2,191,566
CAPITOLA CITY
13.296
207,915
ESCONDIDO CITY
152,745
2,160,969
SANTA CRUZ CITY
134,202
2,057,520
IMPERIAL BEACH CITY
55,885
791,159
WATSONVILLE CITY
65.186
904.694
L& MESA CITY
67,614
1,101,085
SCOTTS VALLEY CITY
5,211
81.027
NATIONAL CITY CITY
175,750
2,373,792
. COUNTY TOTAL
779,591
11.396.951
OCEANSIDE CITY
163.757
2,335,732
SAN DIEGO CITY
1,908,666
27.701.270
045 SHASTA COUNTY
306,786
5.218.720
DEL MAR CITY
5,863
95.078
REDDING CITY
115.275
1,616.801
SAN MARCOS CITY
33,163
280,321
ANDERSON CITY
17,474
250.268
VISTA CITY
43,871
670,684
BIG BENO GENERAL COUNCIL
REPORT
$29
SAN PASQUAL GENERAL COUNCIL
212
1,588
MONTGOMERY CREEK RANCHERIA
REPORT
398
LAJOLLA TRIBAL COUNCIL
REPORT
2,452
ROARING CREEK RANCHERIA
REPORT
sea
MES4 GRANDE BAND OF MISSION
REPORT
604
. COUNTY TOTAL
439.535
7,086,844
PALA BANO MISSION INDIANS
1.331
12,346
PAUMA GENERAL COUNCIL
REPORT
1,784
046 SIERRA COUNTY
17,535
237.447
RINCON INDIAN RES SAN DIEGO
415
4.408
LOYALTON CITY
1.115
15,949
BARONA GENERAL COUNCIL
862
8,098
. COUNTY TOTAL
18.450
253,396
INAJA-COSMIT GENERAL COUNCI
REPORT
149
LOS COYOTES RANO OF MISSION
270
3,966
047 SISKIYOU COUNTY
175.307
2,478,487
MANZANITA INDIAN RESERVATIO
99
1,056
DORRIS TOWN
1.335
21.30
CAMPO BAND OF MISSION INDIA
383
3,014
DUNSMUIR CITY
5,424
94,559
SANTA YSABEL GENERAL COUNCI
1,346
6,949
ETNA TOWN
1.758
34,527
SYCUAN BAND OF MISSION INOI
388
1.123
FORT JONES TOWN
1.454
20.637
VIEJAS TRIBAL COUNCIL
595
7.195
MONTAGUE TOWN
1,699
23.753
. COUNTY TOTAL .
6,630,508
96,483.053
MOUNT SHASTA TOWN
5.977
94,347
TULELAXE CITY
4,676
67.972
038 SAN FRANCISCO CITY
4,631.680
74,986,878
YREKA CITY TOWN
22.610
294.382
. COUNTY TOTAL .
4,631,680
74,986,878
WEFO CITY
8,410
122,08*
. COUNTY TOTAL
228.650
3.252.056
039 SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY
1.321,925
20,462,757
LOOI CITY
77.180
1,072.162
048 SOLANO COUNTY
499,569
7,641,371
MANTECA CITY
44,647
646,857
RENICIA CITY
49,227
861,543
RIPON CITY
10.156
169,778
OIXON CITY
13,445
204.203
STOCKTON CITY
527,090
7,795,015
FAIRFIELD CITY
121.260
1.752,640
TRACY CITY
44,581
665.525
810 VISTA CITY
6.470
91.63*
ESCALON CITY
7,980
116.630
SUISUN CITY CITY
14.022
260,408
. COUNTY TOTAL .
2,033.559
31,128,724
VACAVILLE CITY
62,791
900.037
VALLEJO CITY
172,676
2,435,795
040 SAN LUIS OBISPO COUNTY
594,549
9,099,624
. COUNTY TOTAL
+
939.459
14,147,635
ARROYO GRANDE CITY
20.252
337,213
EL PASO DE ROBLES CITY
42,957
552,599
049 SONOMA COUNTY
992.860
14,933.518
PISMO REACH CITY
REPORT
189,479
CLOVERDALE CITY
13.632
170.009
SAN LUIS 081520 CITY
121.893
1,536,409
HEALDSRURG CITY
30.922
390.785
GROVER CITY
21,994
305,216
PETALUMA CITY
83.387
1.225.178
MORRO PAY CITY
27,666
456.777
SANTA ROSA CITY
205.242
2,830,710
. COUNTY TOTAL
829,311
12,477,317
SEBASTOPOL CITY
21.675
298.302
SONOMA CITY
17.239
258.824
041 SAN MATEO COUNTY
843,876
13.21A,856
COTATI CITY
10.002
131.339
ATHERTON TOWN
8,674
134,718
ROWNERT PARK CITY
46,291
343.484
BELMONT CITY
25,884
393.467
STEWARTS POINT RANCHERIA CO
REPORT
3.034
BURLINGAME CITY
49.939
699,836
DRY CREEK RANCHERIA
REPORT
"30
COLMA TOWN
4,034
61,422
. COUNTY TOTAL .
1.421.250
20,606.013
DALY CITY
106,711
1,627,496
WILLSBOROUGH TOWN
9,476
146,019
050 STANISLAUS COUNTY
726.233
13.371.083
MENLO PARK CITY
29,235
447,901
CERES CITY
29,253
366.013
MILLBRAE CITY
22,150
347,994
MODESTO CITY
238,255
3,245,202
REDW000 CITY
126.110
1,925,952
NEWMAN CITY
9,876
159.234
SAN BRUNO CITY
55,496
749,692
OAKDALE CITY
26.317
357.712
SAM CARLOS CITY
29,441
437,092
PATTERSON CITY
16,625
225,163
OFFICE OF REVENUE SHARING
PAGE
15
05 CALIFORNIA
REVENUE SHARING DISBURSEMENTS
COUNTY
QUARTERLY
ALL PAYMENTS
COUNTY
CODE
NAME
QUARTERLY
PAYMENT
ALL PAYMENTS
TO DATE
CODE
NAME
PAYMENT
TO DATE
RIVERBANK CITY
23,451
381,389
TURLOCK CITY
44,365
687,123
WATERFORD CITY
6,487
75,938
HUGHSON CITY
6,919
73.533
. COUNTY TOTAL .
1,127,789
18,944,396
051 SUTTER COUNTY
199.006
2,722,265
LIVE OAK CITY
8,819
109,437
YUSA CITY
49,147
760,402
. COUNTY TOTAL
256,972
3,592,104
052 TEHAMA COUNTY
167,990
2,544,607
CORNING CITY
12,851
168.999
RED BLUFF CITY
36,237
505,717
TEHAMA CITY
350
5.303
. COUNTY TOTAL
217,428
3,224,626
053 TRINITY COUNTY
67,925
896,570
+ COUNTY TOTAL +
67,925
896,570
054 TULARE COUNTY
1,128,468
17,463.791
DINUBA CITY
28,707
397,552
EXETER CITY
10,382
160.946
LINOSAY CITY
25,264
331.333
PORTERVILLE CITY
97,054
1,292,563
TULARE CITY
108,652
1,315.701
VISALIA CITY
118,944
1,655,809
WOOOLAKE CITY
8,347
113,688
FARMERSVILLE CITY
8,606
127.868
TULE RIVER TRIBAL COUNCIL
REPORT
30.100
. COUNTY TOTAL
1,534,424
22,889,351
055 TUOLUMNE COUNTY
141,778
1,890,480
SONORA CITY
17,676
221,872
TUOLUMNE INDIAN RANCHERIA
745
9,208
. COUNTY TOTAL
160,199
2,121,560
056 VENTURA COUNTY
1.462,487
22,771,887
FILLHORE CITY
16,547
199,813
OJAI CITY
15,252
231,858
OXMARO CITY
312,797
4,214,135
PORT HUENEME CITY
19,841
338.166
SAM BUENAVENTURA CITY
155,201
2,178,192
SANTA PAULA CITY
44,737
675,288
CAMARILLO CITY
24,624
338.221
THOUSAND OAKS CITY
67,721
840,906
SIMI VALLEY CITY
92,317
1,169,194
. COUNTY TOTAL
2,211,524
32,957,660
057 YOLO COUNTY
409,428
6,140,362
DAVIS CITY
92,788
1,257,250
WINTERS CITY
6,115
113,407
WOODLAND CITY
100,010
1,228,403
RUMSEY RANCHERIA
112
1,109
. COUNTY TOTAL .
608,453
8,740,531
058 YUBA COUNTY
229,420
4,09n,843
MARYSVILLE CITY
70,822
1,083,654
WHEATLAND CITY
4,326
60,648
. COUNTY TOTAL .
304,568
5,235,145
** STATE TOTAL ..
164,941,915
2,504,104,509
NUMBER PAID
500
GOVERNMENTS NOT PAID
REASON
NUMBER
AMOUNT
REPORT
25
50.727
DUE TRUST FUND
o
ORS HOLD
0
WAIVED
0
NO PAY DUE
I
STOTAL*
26
50,727
PAGE
12
OFFICE OF REVENUE SHARING
05 CALIFORNIA
REVENUE SHARING DISBURSEMENTS
COUNTY
QUARTERLY
ALL PAYMENTS
COUNTY
QUARTERLY
ALL PAYMENTS
CODE
NAME
PAYMENT
TO DATE
CODE
NAME
PAYMENT
TO DATE
05 STATE OF CALIFORNIA
54,934,544
834,690,872
GRINOSTONE INDIAN RANCHERIA
REPORT
960
. COUNTY TOTAL
136.110
2.055.419
001 ALAMEDA COUNTY
2,704,179
43,016,351
ALAMFDA CITY
114.309
1,700,440
012 HUMBOLDT COUNTY
386.884
6,864,187
ALBANY CITY
43,396
496.837
ARCATA CITY
36.195
431,220
BERKELEY CITY
307,695
4,864,227
BLUE LAKE CITY
1,287
22,527
EMERYVILLE TOWN,
26,555
335,280
EUREKA CITY
94,206
1,479,874
FREMONT CITY
213,264
3,090.157
FERNDALE CITY
3.394
51.003
HAYWARD CITY
296,647
4,254,719
FORTUNA CITY
11.128
169,196
LIVERMORE CITY
68,250
979,386
TRINIDAD CITY
846
11.181
NEWARK CITY
70,478
1,095,037
RIO DELL CITY
5,749
73,A56
OAKLAND CITY
1,365,397
20.127.453
HOOPA VALLEY BUSINESS COUNC
5.938
100,680
PIEDMONT CITY
11,320
181,123
CHER-AE HEIGHTS COMMUNITY
286
2.402
PLEASANTON CITY
44,882
614.566
. COUNTY TOTAL
545,914
9,206,126
SAN LEANORO CITY
165,297
2,514,583
UNION CITY
64,526
961,089
013 IMPERIAL COUNTY
379.227
5,907,388
. COUNTY TOTAL
5,496.195
84,272,243
BRAWLEY CITY
41,094
612.569
CALEXICO CITY
78,932
1.104.071
002 ALPINE COUNTY
4,488
51,284
CALIPATRIA CITY
8,605
135.449
WASHOE TRIBAL COUNCIL
REPORT
9,630
EL CENTRO CITY
61,892
861.544
e COUNTY TOTAL .
4,488
59.914
HOLTVILLE CITY
8.937
146.338
IMPERIAL CITY
9,468
126,877
003 AMACOR COUNTY
60,146
947,326
WESTMORLAND CITY
3.138
46,384
AMADOR CITY
188
2,640
QUECHAN TRIBAL COUNCIL
6.056
94,204
IONE CITY
6,546
96,224
. COUNTY TOTAL
597,349
9,034,828
JACKSON CITY
6,149
78,800
PLYMOUTH CITY
1.200
17,641
014 INYO COUNTY
65,277
1.018.454
SUTTER CREEK CITY
4,001
52,910
BISHOP CITY
13,998
203.054
. COUNTY TOTAL
78,230
1.190,541
FORT INDEPENDENCE GENERAL C
231
3.597
BIG PINE TRIBAL COUNCIL
892
4,529
004 BUTTE COUNTY
459,785
7,399,682
BISHOP TRIBAL COUNCIL
4,089
62.743
BIGGS CITY
1.569
22,278
LONE PINE RESERVATION
805
9,978
CHICO CITY
104,385
1,509,857
. COUNTY TOTAL
85,292
1,302,549
GRIOLEY CITY
17,288
203,844
OROVILLE CITY
45,876
658.114
015 KERN COUNTY
1,986,638
31,361,361
. COUNTY TOTAL
628,903
9,793,775
BAKERSFIELD CITY
409,759
6,022,267
DELANO CITY
66.969
914,637
005 CALAVERAS COUNTY
96,003
1,522,048
MARICOPA CITY
1.365
22,737
ANGELS CITY
5,689
58,376
SHAFTER CITY
10.432
211,226
w COUNTY TOTAL
101,692
1,580,424
TAFT CITY
10,148
158.271
TEMACHAPI CITY
12,577
133.744
006 COLUSA COUNTY
77,609
1,211,539
WASCO CITY
22.657
289.290
COLUSA CITY
12.197
171,926
MCFARLAND CITY
8.497
133.91*
WILLIAMS CITY
3,626
53.768
ARVIN CITY
14,635
172,329
COLUSA INDIAN COMMUNITY COU
REPORT
755
RIDGECREST CITY
23.008
239,094
CORTINA RANCHERIA
REPORT
72
CALIFORNIA CITY
16.757
171.283
+ COUNTY TOTAL
93,432
1,438,060
. COUNTY TOTAL
2,581,482
39.830.147
007 CONTRA COSTA COUNTY
1,489,896
24,023,034
016 KINGS COUNTY
407,887
6,359,304
ANTIOCH CITY
59,178
854.709
CORCORAN CITY
31,057
361.537
BRENTWOOD CITY
7.523
81,128
MANFORD CITY
75,783
1.157,087
CONCORD CITY
141,648
2,022,218
LEMOORE CITY
15.273
197.000
EL CERRITO CITY
26.020
417,724
SANTA ROSA GENERAL COUNCIL
REPORT
5.993
HERCULES TOWN
975
14.203
+ COUNTY TOTAL
530,000
8,081,001
MARTINEZ CITY
28,890
436.875
PINOLE CITY
15.649
231,394
017 LAKE COUNTY
157.754
2,173,498
PITTSBURG CITY
66,825
932.677
LAKEPORT CITY
18,422
224,987
RICHMOND CITY
329.044
5,149,205
EL-EM INDIAN COLONY
794
7,862
SAN PARLO CITY
32.228
487,685
MIDOLETOWN GENERAL COUNCIL
REPORT
1,626
WALNUT CREEK CITY
48,697
683.843
. COUNTY TOTAL
176.974
2,407,979
CLAYTON CITY
1,969
26.025
PLEASANT HILL CITY
29,720
416.703
018 LASSEN COUNTY
73.755
1.022,554
LAFAYETTE CITY
22,341
342,047
SUSANVILLE CITY
19,661
303.644
. COUNTY TOTAL +
2,300.603
36,121,470
SUSANVILLE INDIAN RANCHERIA
351
5.129
. COUNTY TOTAL
93,767
1,331.327
008 DEL NORTE COUNTY
80,406
1,269,022
CRESCENT CITY CITY
20,161
303,097
019 LOS ANGELES COUNTY
21,787.493
364,251.987
RESIGHINI BUSINESS COUNCIL
134
850
ALHAMARA CITY
104,456
1,545,792
. COUNTY TOTAL .
100.701
1,572,969
ARCADIA CITY
48,154
751.573
AVALON CITY
7,753
127.127
009 EL DORADO COUNTY
271,566
3,640,375
AZUSA CITY
74.182
1,172,853
PLACERVILLE CITY
23,964
340.709
BALOWIN PARK CITY
121.824
1,341,531
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE CITY
105.054
1,353,338
BELL CITY
27,697
520,513
. COUNTY TOTAL .
400,584
5,334,422
BEVERLY HILLS CITY
35.835
556.768
BURBANK CITY
216.322
3,182,419
010 FRESNO COUNTY
1,933,196
31,181,521
CLAREMONT CITY
32,818
465,761
CLOVIS CITY
46.317
665,127
COMPTON CITY
357.554
5,178,406
COALINGA CITY
10,493
161,229
COVINA CITY
87,643
1,316,985
FIRERAUGH CITY
22,947
255.182
CULVER CITY CITY
111.785
1,590.436
FOWLER TOWN
7,892
125,385
CERRITOS CITY
85,784
706.268
FRESNO CITY
862,561
12,984,376
EL MONTE CITY
211.913
2,847,043
HURON CITY
22.194
134,021
EL SEGUNON CITY
111.660
1,232,554
KERMAN CITY
10,997
169,185
GARDENA CITY
106,441
1,459,234
KINGSBURG CITY
7,404
128.343
GLENDALE CITY
191,395
2,975,922
MENDOTA CITY
15,629
197,905
GLENDORA CITY
54,203
794,484
ORANGE COVE CITY
18,082
234,412
MAWTHORNE CITY
@1.877
1,202,032
PARLIER CITY
11,828
130,997
HERMOSA BEACH CITY
23.302
349,827
REEDLEY CITY
21,807
297,462
MUNTINGTON PARK CITY
88,773
1,177,886
SANGER CITY
81,986
559.311
INGLEWOOD CITY
267,177
3,227,776
SAN JOAQUIN CITY
10,175
101,174
LAXEWOOD CITY
95,578
1,396,427
SELMA CITY
54,358
398,249
LA PUENTE CITY
63.943
650,990
SYCAMORE VALLEY ASSOCIATION
REPORT
4.120
LA VERNE CITY
25.013
384,647
. COUNTY TOTAL .
3,137,866
47,727,999
LONG BEACH CITY
816,753
14,311,318
LOS ANGELES CITY
10,415,561
143,180,894
011 GLENN COUNTY
102.044
1,597.114
LYNW000 CITY
74,441
947.758
ORLAND CITY
13,286
195.829
MANHATTAN REACH CITY
36.609
586.427
willows CITY
20,780
281,916
MAYW000 CITY
20,733
330,745