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Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
Digital Library Collections
This is a PDF of a folder from our textual
collections.
Collection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers,
1966-74: Press Unit
Folder Title: Press Releases -January 1970
Box: P10
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https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library
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https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection
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Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing
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RELEASE: su )AY A.Ms.
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
January 4, 1970
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
PLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE
445-4571
1-2-70
RELEASE.
#1
A nine year old Palo Alto boy who wrote Governor Ronald Reagan that
he "doesn't like what is going on around the state water project," is
going to get a first-hand inspection of the project.
The boy, Kenny Fried of 707 De Soto Drive, Palo Alto, has been
invited by the governor to meet with him on Tuesday, January 27.
State Resources Secretary Norman B. Livermore and State Water Project
Director William P. Gianelli will explain the water project to Kenny.
Kenny, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Fried, and his sister,
Suzanne, 12, will meet briefly with the governor and his cabinet at
10 a.m. and then be taken on a tour of some of the project facilities.
In his letter, dated November 25, Kenny wrote:
"Dear Governor Reagan, im nine years old and i do not like what is
going on around the state water project. Sincerely, Kenny Fried."
Here is the text of the governor's reply to Kenny:
"I have given a great deal of thought to the letter you wrote me,
saying that you did not like what was going on around the State Water
Project. Although you are only nine years old, your thoughts are
important to me because I try very hard to be the Governor of all the
people of California regardless of age.
"The boys and girls of your generation will, one day, be the men
and women entrusted with the care of this state and dedicated, as we ar
to making it a better place to live for all the generations to follow.
"I am very pleased to know that you are already aware of this f'
responsibility and that you are preparing yourself to be ready for :
"To help you in this effort, Kenny, I would like to invite you
your parents to come and see me in my office on Tuesday, January 27
10 a.m. We could talk about your concerns for the state water proje
and I will arrange to take you on a tour of some of the project
facilities. You will better understand the full benefits of our grea
water project if you see it in action."
#######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
MEMO TO THE
ESS
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-2-70
#2
GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE
January 5, 1970
through
January 11, 1970
Monday, January 5
11:45 a.m.
Swearing-in of Verne Orr as Finance Director,
Governor's Council Room
Overnight - Sacramento
Tuesday, January 6
11:00 a.m.
State of the State Message to Joint Session of
Legislature, Assembly Chambers
Overnight - Sacramento
Wednesday, January 7
No public appointments scheduled
Overnight - Sacramento
Thursday, January 8
10:00 a.m.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Overnight - Sacramento
Friday, January 9
9:00 a.m.
Arrive Resources Building for Fish and Game
Commission meeting (Governor to receive
fishing license No. 1)
Overnight - Sacramento
Saturday, January 10 - No public appointments scheduled
Sunday, January 11
Overnight - Sacramento
# # #
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
RELEASE: Im diate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-2-70
#3
Governor Ronald Reagan has announced the appointments of four new
members to four-year terms on the California Council on Criminal Justice.
The new posts, created by the 1969 legislature to provide additional
representation by counties and cities on the council, pay actual and
necessary expenses.
The appointees are Ventura County Supervisor John T. Conlan, Compton
Mayor Douglas F. Dollarhide, Shasta County Supervisor Patrick G. LaPointe
and Modesto City Councilman Raymond C. Simon.
Conlan, 45, a Republican, was appointed to the Ventura County Board
of Supervisors in 1967 and re-elected in 1968. He has served as chairman
of the Sub-Regional Criminal Justice Advisory Board and as a member of the
six county Regional Council on Criminal Justice Advisory Board. He lives
at 1476 Suffolk Avenue, Thousand Oaks. He will represent supervisors on
the council.
Dollarhide, 46, a Democrat, was first elected to the Compton City
Council in 1963. He served the previous administration as a member of
the State Planning Advisory Committee and the Area Coordinating Committee
of Los Angeles Regional Transportation Committee.
Active in numerous civic and service organizations, he is a past
president of the Compton N.A.A.C.P., and served as a member of the Compton
Council on Human Relations and the Welfare Planning Council of the South
Bay Area.
Dollarhide will represent cities on the council. He lives at 201
North Willbrook Avenue, Compton.
LaPointe, 48, a Democrat, was elected to the Shasta County Board of
Supervisors in 1969. He has served as chairman of Region 11 of the
California Council on Criminal Justice, is a member of the Redding Police
Auxiliary and the Shasta County Sheriff's Posse and is County Coordinator
of the Governor's Conference on Youth and Children. LaPointe, who will
represent supervisors, lives at 2199 Oxford Road, Redding.
Simon, 38, a Republican, has served on the Modesto City Council since
1967. Active in numerous civic and service organizations, he is vice
chairman of the Regional Advisory Board on Criminal Justice and is a
member of the Professional Criminologists Association.
In 1966, he was named Modesto's "Outstanding Young Man" and the
following year was named to the Outstanding Young Men. of America by the
Advisory Board of Editors.
Simon, who lives at 2816 Hampshire Lane, Modesto, will represent
city councilmen on the council.
#######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOP
RELEASE: Imr diate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-2-70
#4
Governor Ronald Reagan has announced the appointment of Jerome W.
Komes, 58, of San Francisco, to a four-year term on the Commission on
Judicial Qualifications.
Komes, whose appointment requires Senate confirmation, is executive
vice president of the Bechtel Corporation. He will succeed Benjamin
Swig, who has resigned. The post pays necessary expenses.
A Republican, Komes is active in numerous civic, service and
professional groups, including the Middle East Institute, the American
Welding Society, the World Affairs Council of Northern California, the
Society for Asian Art and the Bay Area Regional Council of the Near East
Foundation.
He and his wife Flora live at 2006 Washington Street, San Francisco.
They have two sons and a daughter.
#######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO
RELEASE: It....ediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-2-70
#5
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced a major breakthrough in his
administration's efforts to obtain 1,200 acres of U.S. Forest Service
land at the Squaw Valley ski lift complex near Lake Tahoe.
He said the acquisition will enable the state to move toward
satisfying a legislative mandate which called for divestiture of property
and facilities paid for by the state to stage the 1960 Winter Olympics.
The legislation, authored by Assemblyman Eugene Chappie (R-Cool), was
passed by the 1967 legislature.
In order to obtain the Squaw Valley property, as well as additional
acreage at Plumas-Eureka State Park and at three Upper Feather River
Reservoirs, the state will transfer a portion of its submerged and upland
property at Davis, Antelope and Frenchman lakes to the U.S. Forest Service
The lands being exchanged are of comparable value.
Deeds to the new state property will be presented to Governor Reagan
by Regional Forester Jack Dienema and Deputy Regional Forester Joe Flynn
of the U.S. Forest Service January 7 at 11:30 a.m. in the governor's
office (press coverage is invited).
The governor noted that in order for the administration to be in a
position to comply with the legislative mandate on Squaw Valley, it was
necessary for the state to gain control of Forest Service land on which
most of the state's ski lifts and facilities are located. Heretofore,
the lifts have been operated on lands under a special land use permit
granted by the Forest Service.
The state already owns 15 acres and has a permanent lease on 30
more at Squaw Valley, immediately adjacent to the Forest Service property,
Acquisition of the additional Squaw Valley property will permit the
state to consolidate its holdings, providing a saleable package for
interested investors.
Governor Reagan said the administration will soon send to the
legislature a full report on the status of the state's interests at Squaw
Valley, and details of the U.S. Forest Service-State land transfer.
The property exchange includes:
1) Forest Service land transferred to the state:
--1,204 acres at Squaw Valley
--2,119 acres at Plumas-Eureka State Park
--41 acres underlying dams at Davis, Antelope and Frenchman lakes
for use by the Department of Water Resources in operating these reservoirs.
2) State land transferred to the Forest Service
--7,000 acres of submerged and upland property at Frenchman,
Antelope and Davis reservoirs.
######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-5-70
CORRECTION
Re Press Release #677, dated 12-17-69:
The name of the second appointee listed should be
Dr. Wheeler James North instead of Dr. James N.
Wheeler.
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVER
R
RELEASE: 1 ediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-5-70
#6
Governor Ronald Reagan has announced the reappointments of
Earnest M. Smith of Glen Ellen and Herbert G. Osborne of Fullerton to
four-year-terms on the Water Quality Advisory Committee.
Smith, a Democrat, is county government representative on the
committee and Osborne, a Republican, is public sewage disposal
representative. The posts pay actual and necessary expenses.
Smith, a retired businessman and rancher, lives in Glen Ellen.
His address is P. O. Box 418.
Osborne, Orange County Water Pollution Engineer, lives
at 1225 Crestview Drive, Fullerton.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
RELEASE: I ediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-5-70
#7
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
two new members to the non-statutory Educational Radio and Television
Advisory Committee for California.
Under a reorganization plan, proposed by the Reagan administrat
and approved by the 1969 legislature, the new committee replaces the
statutory Television Advisory Committee.
Under the plan, the office of Television Coordinator was
eliminated at a saving to taxpayers of $50,322 on the recommendation
of Raymond Reid, the committee's former executive secretary.
The new committee will continue to serve the educational
needs of the state under the Department of General Services and will
make recommendations to the federal government on allocations of federal
funds to the educational television and radio stations in Califomia.
The new members are Dr. James Loper, General Manager of
Community Television of Southern California, KCET-TV, Los Angeles,
and Dr. Warren Wade, manager of the Santa Clara County Educational
Station, KTEH-TV.
Other committee members are:
Dr. Gary N. Hess, coordinator of educational TV at the
University of California at Santa Barbara;
Dr. Herman J. Sheffield, superintendent of the Ventura City
Junior College District;
Dr. Robert A. Thornton, dean of natural sciences of San
Francisco State College;
Harry Diner of Corte Madera, account executive with KPIX,
San Francisco;
Percy Holliday, Napa County Superintendent of Schools; and
Norman C. Cissna. Eureka attorney.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE:
TUESDAY, P.Ms.
Sacramento, California
January 6, 1970
Contact:
Paul Beck
PLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE
445-4571
1-5-70
RELEASE.
#8
Governor Ronald Reagan today called on the people of California to
help him "make the decade of the seventies a benchmark in man's search
for a better world- a return to the original purpose and spirit of
America.'
In his annual "State-of-the-State Message" to a joint session of
the legislature, the governor said "The 'Spirit of the 70s' must be on
quality rather than quantity.
"Our task for the seventies is not more government, but better
government
more responsive to the citizenry, so that once again the
individual citizen can exercise control over the affairs of state.
"The new decade, he said, "introduces its own imperatives, and
stirs our souls for a new spirit. Dare we imagine what the 1970s could
be if the spirit of those first American seventies
the
1770s
could
be reawakened in our land?"
He challenged the young people of our society
"those who want to
serve and become meaningfully involved, those who are really looking for
action to seek it "by working within the system, reforming it, making
it more responsive to the citizenry, and helping to get it out of our
pockets and off our backs."
The governor cited "the need, indeed the absolute necessity, to hold
down
the
cost
of
government
the need to bring government to heel.'
Recalling the words of a former president at the beginning of the
last decade, the governor said: "Now on the threshold of a new decade
we might well add, 'Ask also what we can do for ourselves. Ask what we
can do to solve the problems of human misery without waiting for another
government program.'
"The imperatives of the seventies, he said, "should bind us
together in a common effort. They demand a common commitment greater
than any personal ambition and stronger than any partisanship."
Governor Reagan emphasized "the absolute necessity of waging an
all-out war against the debauching of our environment," and committed
his administration to a continuing program "to preserve the magic of
California,"
- 1 -
#8
Yet, he said, "We must avoid those extremes on either end which
could destroy our state, Progress and preservation are compatible; it
is the refusal to work together for the proper balance that is
incompatible with the spirit of the seventies.
"We must be concerned about the quality of our environment; we must
also be concerned with the quality of government, and the integrity of
those who serve in it."
He promised that again this year he will propose conflict-of-
interest legislation which will give California "the most comprehensive
laws of any state."
In the consumer protection field, he said his administration will
"accelerate programs to protect the consumer from the possibility of
the unscrupulous entrepreneur," including a reorganization proposal
which would create within state government a Department of Consumer
Affairs, "the first of its kind in the nation."
To fight the growing problems caused by drug abuse and narcotics,
he said he will create a State Office of Narcotics and Drug Abuse
Coordination. He noted that his administration has "already embarked
on a widescale public education campaign to bring the facts of the horrors
of drug abuse to our young people. This is a war we intend to escalate
and win, " he said.
As a part of "a new strategy" against crime and violence, he said
he will propose "an immediate major in-depth study of all correctional
processes in California."
He said the state "must be permitted to develop and implement a new
approach" to public assistance- "for welfare's purpose should be to
eliminate, as far as possible, the need for its own existence." He cited
the newly created Department of Human Resources Development as "a good
start in that direction."
The governor also said he will propose the organization of a new,
streamlined Department of Health ''so that we can more effectively administe.
and control the Medi-Cal program which, like welfare, is one of the major
and fastest rising costs of state government."
He said "education is still the high priority, and called for a
"tax reform package, this session to help finance schools and at the
same time provide relief from the far-too-heavy property tax burden."
Referring to higher education, he said, "We must achieve a greater
measure of accountability from these public institutions a greater
effectiveness in the management and priority of expenditures.
"Faculty members and administrators must continually remind
themselves---or be reminded---that their fundamental purpose is to provide
the conditions for effective learning, and to give the students the
first priority. The student must not be forgotten in the competition
for the academic establishment's drive for prestige and power" he said.
#######
EJG
- 2 -
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Im mediate
Sacramento, Californi
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-7-70
#9
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Richard H. Houts, chief engineer of the Los Angeles County Fire
Department and County Forester and Fire Warden, to a four-year-term
on the California State Disaster Council.
Houts, 45, a Republican, will represent fire services on the
council, which advises the Governor on policy determinations on civil
defense and disaster programs.
He succeeds Keith Klinger of San Gabriel who has resigned.
The post pays actual and necessary expenses.
A native of Los Angeles, Houts joined the department in
1942 as a forest fireman and, after World War II service with the
Air Force, returned to duty and advanced through the ranks to his
present position.
In addition to serving as Los Angeles County Fire Department
Engineer, County Forester and Fire Warden, he holds the post of Chief
Engineer of Fire Protection Districts of Los Angeles County.
His duties make him responsible for the fire protection of
a total population of nearly two million who live in a 2,161 square
mile area.
He is a member of the California Fire Chiefs Association, the
California Rural Fire Association, the California State Firemen's
Association, the International Association of Fire Chiefs and the
Western Fire Chiefs Association.
Houts and his wife Audrey have three children. The family
home is at 642 North Morris Avenue, West Covina.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Release: Immediate
Sacramento, Califor 3
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-8-70
#10
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced plans for an intensive study
of California's overall correctional system under auspices of the State
Board of Corrections.
He will issue an executive order establishing a special commission
to carry out the study, which is expected to be completed within a year.
The special commission will be composed of the State Board of Corrections
augmented by the Corrections and Juvenile Delinquency task forces of the
California Council on Criminal Justice.
The Governor proposed the in-depth study in his State-of-the-State
message.
Governor Reagan said the $266,000, one-year study is being financed
by federal funds under the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of
1968. The allocation was made by the California Council on Criminal
Justice at its meeting today.
The objective of the study, the governor said, will be to find ways
of increasing the effectiveness of the state's correctional system in
reducing crime and delinquency. He noted that there has never been a
detailed study of California's fragmented correctional system.
"California is recognized nationally as a leader in the field of
corrections,' the governor said. "This state and the county correctional
agencies have traditionally pioneered innovative methods of rehabilitation
which are aimed at reducing crime and delinquency by helping the offender
take his place as a productive member of society."
The study, he said, represents another effort by the state to find
ways to improve its total correctional system. The study will focus on
the jails, camps, juvenile institutions, prisons and systems of probation
and parole.
Governor Reagan noted that the vast majority of crimes in the state
are being committed by persons who already have been through some part
of the correctional system.
"For our own part, Governor Reagan said, "we simply must become
more effective in rehabilitating those who break the law so that they do
not repeat their offenses. Society as a whole will benefit immensely
if these offenders can become law-abiding and productive citizens."
- 1 -
#10
He noted that recent efforts to improve the state's correctional
system including legislation which has been enacted. have tended to
meet specific problems rather than provide for a more effective system
of criminal justice.
"The problem requires a unified and well-planned approach to
increase the effectiveness of the entire system," Governor Reagan said,
Members of the Board of Corrections include the secretary of the
Human Relations Agency, who is the chairman, the directors of the
California Youth Authority and Department of Corrections, other state
leaders in the field of corrections, and two public members.
Governor Reagan said he was referring the study to the Board of
Corrections because it is established by statute to consider the entire
subject of crime, including causes, prevention, methods of detection and
prosecution of criminals.
The two task forces of the California Council on Criminal Justice
/officials,
are composed of county probation officers, judges, law enforcement
educators and state correctional officials, as well as representatives
of the public.
#######
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, Califor a
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-8-70
#11
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
State Superintendent of Banks James M. Hall, 35, to succeed Gordon C.
Luce as Secretary of Business and Transportation.
"Jim Hall, who has been a valued member of this administration
since we took office, has demonstrated through his service to the
people of California and his devotion to good government that he is a
worthy successor to Gordon Luce," the governor said.
"He has brought vitality, sensitivity, creativity and
professional expertise to the office he has held and I'm proud to
appoint him to this new job that is so essential to our state's
continued progress."
As State Superintendent of Banks, Hall has had jurisdiction
over all state chartered banks and trust companies with more than
$12 billion in aggregate assets.
A Republican, Hall will take over the $35,000 a year post
on January 26.
In accepting the new position, Hall said, "It is an honor and
a challenge to attempt to follow in Gordon Luce's footsteps. He has
provided a quality of leadership and inspiration that will be difficult
to duplicate but I will do my best."
He is also first vice president and a board member of the
National Association of Supervisors of State Banks and a member of the
Board of Councilors of the University of Southern California Center for
Urban Affairs.
A native of San Diego, he holds an AB in economics from the
University of California at Berkeley and a law degree from University
of California's School of Law (Boalt Hall).
He is a member of the Order of the Coif, an honor granted to
the top 10 percent of law graduates and a member of the American, State
and San Diego Bar Associations.
Hall and his wife Margaret have two children.
####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELE'
:
Immediate
Sacramento, Califo .ia
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-8-70
#12
Governor Ronald Reagan said today his administration will
sponsor legislation authorizing each county of the state to set up
an Office of Consumer Affairs to be conducted by the County Sealer of
Weights and Measures.
"This is one of the innovative programs we are proposing to
enhance the role of government in solving consumer problems," Governor
Reagan said. "The primary area of concern to a consumer is usually the
marketplace near where he lives. We believe he needs a local
authority to turn to with his questions or complaints."
The bill will be carried by Assemblyman Don Mulford, (R-
Piedmont).
The state would assist the counties by providing direction,
information and coordination of the new county operation, he added.
Coordination of county weights and measures activities is through the
State Bureau of Weights and Measures in the California Department of
Agriculture.
Under the proposed Consumer Affairs bill, each county would
have the option of designating its County Sealer as also a Director
of Consumer Affairs with the authority to receive complaints and
conduct investigations relating to illegal, fraudulent or deceptive
practices and misrepresentation of quantity or quality of merchandise and
services.
As County Consumer Affairs Director, the Sealer would
cooperate with local, state and federal agencies to protect and
promote the interest of consumers, and would refer to the appropriate
agency any consumer complaint that does not fall within the duties of
the Office of Weights and Measures.
At the direction of his County Board of Supervisors, he
could also develop and conduct programs of consumer education, and
programs to inform local business and industry of their responsibilities
under consumer protection laws.
"Many counties are in the process of developing consumer
affairs activities, and many others would like to," Governor
Reagan said. "The legislation we are proposing would enable them to
do this on an orderly, statewide basis."
-1-
#12
Placing of the Consumer Affairs function in the Office of Weights
and Measures at the county level was dictated by logic, the governor
said.
"Every county has such an office, " he said. "It is most logical
that an arm of government already in existence, with very little
additional support required, should perform this function rather than
establish an entirely new governmental body to handle the job. The
existing office of County Sealer is the county service that the consumer
has most frequently turned to for help."
He noted that county weights and measures officials are presently
responsible for the enforcement of laws covering the sale of all
commodities sold on the basis of weight, measure or count, and that
weights and measures inspectors call upon the entire business community
in their normal day-to-day operations.
"In most counties, no other department or agency is as directly
involved with so wide a range of consumer affairs," he said.
In his recent "State-of-the-State" message to the legislature,
Governor Reagan announced that his administration will place great
emphasis on solving consumer problems, including the creation of a
Department of Consumer Affairs within the structure of state government.
#######
PB
-2-
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, Califory
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-8-70
#13
Edwin Meese III, executive secretary to Governor Ronald Reagan,
today announced approval of a one-year $1.6 million 0E0 grant to
/Rural
California Legal Assistance, Inc. of San Francisco based on the
"anticipated enforcement" of four conditions.
In making the announcement, Meese said "the program should be
closely monitored by State and Federal OEO to insure compliance with all
conditions imposed during the funding period Jan. 1-December 31, 1970.
The conditions were:
1) Multiple suits should not be filed in the same judicial district
in cases of multiple plaintiffs if the legal issue or issues are identical
or so similar, that the issue can be decided by the filing of a single
suit, or by the joinder of all plaintiffs.
2) Prior to the filing of court actions against governmental agencies
attempts, in good faith, should be made to negotiate and settle cases
without court action, but with due regard for the protection of the
clients' rights and the Canons of Professional Ethics.
3) No action should be filed where the dominant purpose is
harassment of the defendant or defendants or to unreasonably delay the
execution of a judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction.
4) Full consideration of the rights of the other party, the effect
upon society as a whole and the justice of the action shall be given
prior to filing any legal action.
########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: MONDAY A.Ms.
Sacramento, Californ
Jai ry 13, 1970
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-9-70
PLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE
RELEASE.
#14
Governor Ronald Reagan announced today that a Spanish translation
of the California Driver's Handbook is now available on request at all
offices of the State Department of Motor Vehicles.
He said the booklet entitled California, Guia Para El Motorista
"will enable hundreds of thousands of Spanish-speaking Californians to
better acquaint themselves with the state's driving laws and highway
safety procedures,"
This is the first time that a Spanish version of the familiar
handbook has been printed in California.
State Motor Vehicle Director Robert C. Cozens joined the governor
in welcoming publication of the multi-colored booklet "as another step
toward greater safety on our roads and highways."
Cozens pointed out that "getting a driver's license is a bigger
hurdle to many of our Spanish-speaking citizens than to most of the
rest of us. Not only must they be familiar enough with the rules of the
road to pass the standard 36-question test, but they must also take a
second test to prove that they can read and understand highway signs
printed in English."
The 48-page handbook explains in Spanish the meaning of a variety
of road signs and symbols.
Cozens expressed thanks for assistance given during translation of
the booklet by the University of California at Davis and the Driving
School Association of California.
######
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, Californi
Contact:
Paul Bec...
445-4571
1-9-70
#15
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Assistant Secretary Lucian B. Vandegrift, 43, as Secretary of the
Human Relations Agency, effective January 16, 1970.
A member of the administration since 1968, he succeeds Spencer
Williams in the $35,000 per year post. Williams has resigned to seek
the Republican nomination for Attorney General.
In announcing Vandegrift's appointment, Governor Reagan called
him "a dedicated public servant who has demonstrated the leadership and
professional qualities necessary to handle the complex problems of the
Human Relations Agency."
In accepting the promotion, Vandegrift said, "I'm proud of the
turst that Governor Reagan has placed in me and I pledge that I will
continue the work I began two years ago to the best of my ability."
The Governor also thanked Williams for his three years of
service to the people of California which "have been executed with
dedication, loyalty and ability."
In addition to his service as Assistant Secretary of the
agency he will now head, Vandegrift served as acting director of the
Department of Human Resources Development and chairman of the State Health
Planning Council.
He joined the administration after serving six years as Butte
County District Attorney and previous service as a deputy attorney
general in Macramento.
A native Californian, Vandegrift is a graduate of the
University of California at Berkeley and the Boalt Hall law school.
During World War II, he served in the U. S. Navy.
######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, Californ
Contact:
Paul BECK
445-4571
1-9-70
#16
Governor Ronald Reagan's executive secretary, Edwin Meese III,
today announced disapproval of a request by Berkeley Neighborhood
Legal Services that it be assigned up to 10 VISTA volunteers.
In a letter to Carl N. Shaw, acting director of the Regional
Office of Economic Opportunity, San Francisco, Meese said that while
there is a need for many types of helpful programs in the Berkeley
community, "it is our belief that VISTAs assigned to this organization
would be used for activities of a destructive nature.
"We have grave doubts about the type of programs to which these
VISTAs would be assigned and the type of supervision they would receive
at this time," Meese's letter said.
"While we have other concerns," he continued, "our major
objection is the philosophy as represented by the action in a
resolution of December, 1969, which was adopted by the board of
directors of the Berkeley organization."
The resolution recommended:
--The release of Huey P. Newton, convicted of manslaughter in
the killing of an Oakland policeman.
--The release of David Hilliard, recently convicted of a fire-
arms law violation and also pending trial on federal charges of
threatening the life of President Nixon.
--Amnesty for Eldridge Cleaver, a current fugitive from justice.
"From these examples, it is obvious that the activities of such
volunteers would heighten community tensions rather than achieve any
constructive benefits," Meese said.
# # #
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Sacramento, California
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-9-70
#17
GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE
January 12, 1970
through
January 18, 1970
Monday, January 12
4 p.m.
Presentation of plaque by Butte County Peace
Officers Association for Governor's strong
support of law enforcement (Governor's office).
Overnight - Sacramento
Tuesday, January 13
1:30 p.m.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Overnight - Sacramento
Wednesday, January 14
No public appointments scheduled
Overnight - Sacramento
Thursday, January 15
a.m.
Depart for Los Angeles
Overnight - Los Angeles
Friday, January 16
Meeting of Board of Regents
Los Angeles Extension Center
Overnight - Los Angeles
Saturday, January 17
p.m.
Depart for Sacramento
Overnight - Sacramento
Sunday, January 18
No appointments scheduled
Overnight - Sacramento
########
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-9-70
#18
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Donald G. Livingston, a member of the administration since May, 1967,
as deputy director of the State Department of General Services.
Livingston, 31, has served as chief of the Division of Consumer
Affairs in the Department of Professional and Vocational Standards for
the past three months. He previously was chief of the Bureau of
Furniture and Bedding Inspection prior to the formation, last September,
of the Consumer Affairs Division.
The governor also said he is naming Raymond M. Reid of Sacramento
to replace Livingston. As head of the Division of Consumer Affairs,
Reid also will have responsibility for the bureaus of Furniture and
Bedding Inspection, Electronic Repair Dealer Registration, and
Employment Agencies.
A Republican, Livingston served as an administrative assistant to
the Republican Assembly Caucus from March, 1965, until his appointment
with the administration.
He was associated with Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Sales, Inc.,
Oakland from 1961-64.
A former student body president and graduate of San Francisco State
College, he worked as an intern for the Coro Foundation, San Francisco,
from 1960-61.
He was a member and vice chairman of the Oakland Planning Commission
from 1962-65. He and his family reside in Carmichael.
Reid, 42, served as executive secretary of the State (Educational)
Television Advisory Committee from October 1967 until recently when, on
Reid's own recommendation, the office of Television Coordinator which
he headed was eliminated at a savings to the taxpayers of $50,322.
Under a reorganization plan, proposed by the Reagan administration
and approved by the 1969 legislature, the Television Advisory Committee
was eliminated and replaced by a non-statutory Educational Radio and
Television Advisory Committee of California.
Reid, worked on the sales staff of the Kelly Broadcasting Corporatic
Sacramento, from 1960 until joining the Reagan administration. He was
previously associated with the William Zinsser Company, Inc., New York,
a shellac importing and manufacturing firm, from 1956-60.
A 1951 graduate of Yale University, he helped found the Yale
Alumni Association of Sacramento in 1960.
He was a member of the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve from 1946-47 and
from 1951-53.
Reid and his wife, Joan, have four children and reside in Sacrament
#####
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-12-70
For your information, Governor Reagan is meeting
with student body presidents at 11 a.m. in the
Governor's Office. The meeting will be closed although
it is anticipated the Governor will meet briefly with
the press following the meeting.
# # #
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: IMMEDIATE
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-12-70
#19
Governor Reagan today presented the following memorandum at a
meeting with student leaders held in his office. The memorandum, which
also will be sent to other students and student groups throughout
California, is a follow-up to previous meetings held with students and
to his State-of-the-State message in which he asked for meaningful
involvement by students in state government.
"MEMORANDUM TO:
Students of the State of California
"FROM:
Governor Reagan
"SUBJECT:
Student Involvement in State Government.
"I would like to involve students in the decision-making process, in
the government of our state.
"To begin with particular projects, I would like to request nominations
for possible appointment to major boards and commissions in the area of
Environment and the Quality of Life. I would also like your help in the
specific areas of the State Exposition and Fair (of direct interest to our
agricultural students) and the Veterans Board (affecting many returning
GIs who are now enrolling as students). Some of the Commissions involved
are:
"1. Environment and Quality of Life
State Park and Recreation Commission
State Air Resources Board
Scenic Highway Advisory Committee
Advisory Committee, California Highway Safety Program
California Arts Commission
California Design Awards Committee
"2. California Exposition and State Fair
Executive Committee (Board of Directors)
Advisory Committee
"3. California Veterans Board
"The appointive power is one of any governor's most difficult burdens.
In attempting to pick qualified men and women to serve on the boards and
commissions which govern our state we must, as a matter of practical fact,
pass over dozens of candidates who might do equally well. As such, I can
nly guarantee that your nominations will receive careful consideration.
"Nominations for appointment in the above areas should be forwarded to
Miss Sue Sullivan, at 14431 Chase Street, Suite 3, Panorama City,
California. Or if you wish, you may send your suggestions to my
Appointments Secretary, Mr. Ned Hutchinson, at the State Capital,
Sacramento.
"I look forward to hearing from you on this subject before the end of
the month."
#######
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, Californi a
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-12-70
#20
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Karl A. Guntermann of Santa Barbara and the reappointment of Harry T.
Magill of Novato to four year terms on the State Board of Accountancy.
Gurtermann, 49, a partner in the Santa Barbara CPA firm of
Guntermann, Johnston, Ball and Thompson, is a former Santa Barbara City
Councilman and Harbor Commissioner. He is a Republican.
Active in numerous civic, service and youth organizations,
he is a director-at-large of the Californoa CPA Society and a past
president of the Society's Channel Counties Chapter.
He is a native Californian and a graduate of Stanford University
Guntermann and his wife Marian have three children. The
family home is at 1610 Las Canoas Road, Santa Barbara.
Guntermann succeeds Joseph F. Spilberg of Sherman Oaks
whose term has expired.
Magill, 48, is a member of the Arthur Anderson and Company
CPA firm in San Francisco. He has served on the board since 1966.
He is a Republican.
Magill and his wife Marjorie have four children. The family
home is at 450 Ridge Road, Novato.
Board members are paid $25.00 per diem while on official duty.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-12-70
#21
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment
of Dr. Richard H. Jahns, Dean of the School of Mineral Sciences at
Stanford University, to a four-year-term on the State Mining and
Geology Board.
Dr. Jahns, 54, lives at 2312 Branner Drive, Menlo Park. He
is a Republican and has served on the board since 1966. The post pays
necessary expenses.
#####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO..
RELEASE: Imm liate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-13-70
#22
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of three
members to four-year-terms on the State Board of Agriculture.
They are: Howard H. Leach, president of a Salinas food
company; Alfred Tisch, managing partner of a Hamilton City orchards
company; and Paul Ames, owner of an Indio farm management service.
All are Republicans. They will receive necessary expenses.
Leach, 40, of Box 146, Pebble Beach, is president of Fresh
Pict Foods, Inc. Active in agricultural and civic circles, he is
chairman of the Traffic Committee of the Grower Shipper Vegetable
Association at Salinas and is a director of the Monterey Boy Scout
Council.
He succeeds Joseph J. Corsetti of Watsonville, whose term
has expired, as vegetables representative on the board.
Tisch, 64, of 1698 Park Vista Drive, Chico, is a managing
partner of James Mills Orchards Company. He has been a member of the
Governor's Advisory Committee on Agricultural Foreign Trade since
1967 and served as a member of President Eisenhower's Latin American
Agricultural Trade Mission and the U. S. Fruit Industry Trade Mission
to Europe. He will serve as representative-at-large, succeeding
Ernest E. Hatch of Oroville whose term has expired.
Ames, 45, of 81485 Date Palm Avenue, Indio, is owner of the
Paul Ames Management Service. A member of a pioneer Cochella Valley
ranching family, he is a member of the Citrus Research Committee of the
University of California, is a past president of the Cochella Valley
Farm Bureau and is active in civic affairs.
He succeeds Lionel Steinberg of Thermal, whose term has
expired, as diversified crops representative on the board.
#######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-13-70
#23
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Laurence G. Warner of Lower Lake to a four-year-term on the 49th
District Agricultural Association Board of Directors and reappointed
two other board members.
Reappointed were Richard Miller of 105 North Tunis, Lakeport,
STeRbenk
assistant manager of a farm supply company, and William D. Sternek,
320 Lakeshore Boulevard, Lakeport, a cashier for Pacific Gas and Electric
Company. Both are Republicans.
Warner, 53, a realtor and rancher, is a member of the
Lake County Chamber of Commerce, the 1969 Lake County Grand Jury, the
Advisory Committee to the California State Exposition and Fair Committee
and a founding director of the Redbud Community Hospital.
He succeeds the late Carl J. Kettwig of Lucerne.
Warner and his wife, Hazel, live in Lower Lake, Their address
is P. O. Box 127, Lower Lake. He is a Republican.
The post pays necessary expenses.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-13-70
#24
Governor Ronald Reagan today issued the following statement:
Last September, as you know, I signed legislation authorizing the
state to finance a $500,000 pilot project designed to develop a truly
equitable school lunch program for needy children which would be
available in not just some, but all school districts in California.
I immediately directed members of my staff and the cabinet to
explore ways in which this could best be accomplished to guarantee
that matching funds would really be available to feed more hungry
children in all parts of the state.
Because the legislation which reached my desk contained a number
of serious technical defects flaws which had to be corrected before
the program could be expanded on a fair and equitable basis I was
forced to scale down the original appropriation.
For, had the full $5 million as called for in the bill been
appropriated, the money would have had to be used in only those school
districts which were participating in lunch subsidy programs the
previous year. It would have provided no help at all to needy children
in those districts which did not already have locally-funded school lunch
programs.
Los Angeles, for example, with its heavy concentration of poverty
children, would not have been eligible for any of the state aid.
In calling for the pilot program, I emphasized that I fully endorsed
the goal of providing meals for more of our hungry children.
On the basis of the findings of that pilot study, I am pleased to
announce that we will soon be proposing legislation, on an urgency basis,
to overcome the defects of the previous bill in line with our stated
goal.
The legislation would cover the balance of the current year and
fiscal 1970-71. It will not only assure that all school districts in the
state are covered, but it could mean up to $20 million for school lunch
programs, including federal, state and local matching funds.
We will recommend that up to $6 million of the $22.5 million in
unallocated surplus from the 1968-69 fiscal year be appropriated to help
finance this vastly improved school lunch program.
- 1 -
#24
To this state appropriation, we expect the federal department of
HEW to add at least $6 million in matching funds. In addition, we
anticipate the U.S. Department of Agriculture will provide some $5
million to the program. Three million dollars is already being
contributed to lunch subsidy programs through some local school
districts in California.
Without the social welfare orientation to needy children- which
our proposal will contain---the program could not qualify for matching
funds from HEW. Incidentally, last year's poorly drafted legislation
did not qualify for such matching.
The measure we are proposing is the result of a thorough study of
all the alternatives available to us, as well as extensive consultation
/the
with leadership of both houses of the legislature, and federal
agriculture and HEW officials.
I am confident that adoption of these recommendations by the
legislature can overcome the defects of last year's bill and go a long
way toward meeting the nutritional needs of many more needy California
school children.
#######
EJG
- 2 -
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-14-70
#25
Governor Ronald Reagan emphasizing "our solemn obligation to
assure the citizens of this state that government in California will be
beholden only to the people' today asked "every member of the
legislature to join together in unanimous approval "of a landmark
measure which will give California the toughest, most comprehensive
conflict-of-interest law ever enacted in the United States.
Details of the legislation proposed jointly by the governor and
the legislative leadership of both houses was outlined today in a
press conference called by Assembly Speaker Robert Monagan and Senate
President Pro Tem Howard Way.
"Is it too much to ask, even in an election year, that every member
of our legislature join together in unanimous approval of this landmark
legislation which can affirm, once and for all, our solemn obligation
to assure the citizens of this state that government in California will
be beholden only to the people?" the governor asked.
"I call upon every member of the Senate and Assembly, without regard
to party affiliation, to demonstrate to the people of California their
bi-partisan commitment to the important code of ethics set forth in this
landmark legislation. Such a commitment must concern each of us as
individuals if we are to maintain the people's confidence in their
government.
"While last year's partial disclosure law, which the legislature
passed and I signed, was a step in the right direction, it failed to go
nearly far enough in protecting against conflict of interest.
"At that time, I stated that the many gaps left open in the 1969
measure 'must be closed in 1970.' You may recall that another bill, which
was introduced on behalf of the administration last year by Assemblyman
Newton Russell would have closed such gaps but it failed to get out of
committee.
"Disclosure is only one of several necessary approaches to conflict
of interest. Unlike last year's partial disclosure law, this new
legislation will cover all state employees, including civil service and
elective and appointive officials.
- 1 -
#25
"The investigative powers of the two separate commissions, as
proposed in our new legislation, will put teeth into the efforts of both
the executive and legislative branches to root out instances where
conflict of interest may exist.
"In addition, the new measure would clarify many of the ambiguities
which are contained in the partial disclosure law, and consolidate into a
single section those provisions now scattered throughout the government
code.
"Finally, while hitting at the dishonest individual, and detecting
and punishing the guilty, the proposed law will also protect innocent
persons serving the public from unfounded and malicious attacks on their
character and reputation," the governor said.
########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-14-70
#26
Governor Ronald Reagan today proposed the sale of personalized.
vehicle license plates to help finance the war against air pollution.
Under the plan, a $25 fee would be charged for the special plates
with the bulk of the proceeds to be placed in a special environmental
protection fund. Legislation will be introduced to create the
environmental fund and authorize sale of the plates.
"If only two per cent of the owners of registered motor vehicles
in California apply for the plates, revenue for the fund would amount to
nearly $3.8 million annually," the governor said.
"This plan would provide every motorist with the opportunity to
help solve the problem he has helped to create," the governor pointed
out.
"The special plates would serve as a symbol of concern about the
pollution problem and identify the motorist as one who is doing something
to correct the problem."
The proposal would permit the Department of Motor Vehicles to sell
the plates, deduct the actual amount of the cost (approximately $6.80
per plate) and earmark the remaining amount for the campaign against air
pollution. The Resources Agency would supervise the dispersement of
the fund.
########
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO
.
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-14-70
#27
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
John E. Bennett of San Diego to fill the recently created post of
deputy director of the Department of Navigation and Ocean Development.
In his post, Bennett will report directly to Robert C. Walker,
director of the department.
Bennett, a retired Navy Captain with extensive experience in ocean
engineering, was manager of the Lockheed Ocean Laboratory in San Diego
from 1966 to late 1969.
Governor Reagan said Bennett's technical and management background
will be a valuable asset to the state in our coastal zone preservation
and development efforts, and to the department of navigation and ocean
development which was created in 1969 to coordinate all of California's
ocean-oriented activities.
In the Navy, Captain Bennett won the Navy Cross aboard the
illustrious cruiser SAN FRANCISCO in the Battle of Guadalcanal. Later,
shifting to submarine duty, he became the first program director of the
Navy's Deep Submergence Program.
Bennett, a 51-year-old Republican, was a 1941 graduate of the U.S.
Naval Academy. He has been a frequent public speaker on ocean-related
subjects and recently served as chairman of the Oceanography Committee
of the San Diego Chamber of Commerce,
He will be joined in Sacramento by his wife and teenage daughter.
His salary will be $21,516 per year.
#######
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE:
Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-14-70
#28
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of
Joseph F. Sinnott of San Diego and Winston R. Fuller of San Marino
to four year terms on the California Highway Commission, subject to
Senate confirmation.
Sinnott, 64, president of the San Diego Gas and Electric Company,
will succeed V. Earl Roberts of San Diego, whose term has expired.
Fuller, 59, a business executive and civic leader, will succeed
Alexander Pope of Los Angeles, whose term has also expired.
Both appointees are Republicans. The will be paid actual and
necessary expenses.
Sinott, who lives at 2265 Juan Street, San Diego, is a former
president of the San Diego Chamber of Commerce, San Diegans, Inc.
and a member of the Governor's Judicial Selection Advisory Board for
San Diego County.
Fuller, who lives at 30 Kewen Place, San Marino, is a trustee of
the Rose Hills Memorial Park Association, a trustee of the Desert
Charities (Bob Hope Desert Classic), a member of the Associated General
Contractors, a member of the Orthopaedic Council of the Orthopaedic
Hospital, a past president of the University of Southern California
General Alumni Association and a past alumni member of the USC Board
of Trustees and a past president of the Trojan Club.
# # # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-14-70
#29
Governor Ronald Reagan announced today that for the third straight
year he is reappointing Ralph Nissen of Williams as chairman of the
California Exposition and Fair Executive Committee.
Nissen, who was first appointed chairman February 1, 1968, will
continue to serve in that capacity during the coming year, until
February 1, 1971. The post is non-salaried.
A veteran Colusa County rancher, Nissen, 58, was first named to
the fair board for a four-year term February 1, 1967.
He was regional director of the California Farm Bureau for five
years and served as a vice president of the organization for four years.
He is a Republican.
#########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: IMMED LATE
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-15-70
#30
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Dr. L. H. Larson of Ventura and the reappointment of Dr. Herbert K. Yee
of Sacramento to four year terms on the Board of Dental Examiners of
California.
Both men are Republicans. They will be paid $25 per diem each
day they spend on official duty.
Dr. Larson, 53, who lives at 347 Dorothy Street, Ventura, is a
member of the Southern California Dental Association Legislative Council,
a former member of the Ventura City Council, a member of the Ventura-Santa
Barbara Dental Association and is active in civic groups.
He is a graduate of the State University of Iowa Dental School.
Dr. Yee, 46, has served on the board oince 1966. He is active
in the Sacramento, California and American Dental Associations and
Sacramento civic affairs. He received his degree from the College of
Physicians and Surgeons of the University of the Pacific.
His home is at 1301 Normandy Lane, Sacramento.
####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-15-70
#31
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Dr
R. Scott Jackson of Chino and Maxwell C. Pellish of Santa Barbara to the
Board of Examiners in Veterinary Medicine.
Dr. Jackson, 55, a political independent, was named to a three
year term succeeding Dr. Joseph E. Giambroni of Red Bluff, whose term
has expired. He will serve as veterinarians' representative on the
board.
Pellish, 70, a Republican, was named to fill the unexpired term
of Richard D. Moon of Hemet, which expires on January 15, 1971. Hemet
has resigned, Pellish will represent the public on the board.
The post pays $25 per diem while on official duty and necessary
expenses.
Dr. Jackson, a graduate of Howard Payne College and Colorado
State University, is active in numerous veterinary associations and
thoroughbred horse breeding groups. He lives at 14909 Archibald Avenue,
Chino.
Pellish, a retired army officer and graduate engineer and a
faculty member of the University of California at Santa Barbara, is
chairman of the Santa Barbara Board of Water Commissions.
His home address is 1502 Francheschi Road, Santa Barbara.
###
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: FRIDAY A.Ms.
Sacramento, California
January 16, 1970
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-15-70
#32
Governor Ronald Reagan today proposed a sweeping plan "to improve
the quality and hold down the cost of a wide array of state health-
related programs" by consolidating them into a single Department of Health
The plan, which the governor called "a whole new concept in the
field of health,' willbe presented to California's "Little Hoover
Commission" today the first in a series of formal steps leading to
implementation by July 1, 1971, subject to legislative approval.
Under the proposal, the departments of Mental Hygiene, Public Health
and Health Care Services would be transferred to the new department, with
the exception of Mental Hygiene's two neuropsychiatric institutes whose
primary functions are teaching and research.
The neuropsychiatric institutes would be assigned to the University
of California.
The new department also would include the social service functions
of the Department of Social Welfare, such as the placement of persons
discharged from state hospitals in out-of-home care facilities,
supervision of county adoption programs, identification of medical
treatment needs, promotion of adequate child nutrition, family planning
counseling, and provision of home health aides or homemakers.
Social Welfare would retain its money payment responsibilities.
In addition, the Department of Rehabilitation's alcoholism clinic
program, and 10 "healing arts" and social work licensing boards, now in
the Department of Professional and Vocational Standards, would be
transferred to the new department.
In carrying out his responsibilities, the person chosen to be the
director of the new department would be assisted in formulating policies
and programs by an Advisory Health Council which would replace the State
Board of Public Health, Health Planning Council and the Health Review and
Planning Council. Insofar as possible, the members of the new council
would be selected from the membership of the three discontinued boards.
Civil service employees performing the functions which would come
under the new department would be transferred, and their status, rights,
and positions would be protected. Should personnel reductions become
necessary, they would be accomplished through attrition.
1 I I
#32
Governor Reagan emphasized that the purpose for creating the new
department is not to effect personnel reductions, but to provide a more
effective and efficient delivery of health care services to the people
of California.
"In fact, he said, "the change will provide even greater career
opportunities to those working in the health field as we move to meet
the pressing challenges of the seventies.
"This plan represents our determination to move forward under a
whole new concept in the field of health."
He noted that "the need for a major change in the organization of
the state's health-oriented departments has grown increasingly more
apparent during the past several years as the demands for more
expenditures and services often fragmented between departments have
been undertaken by the state," the governor said.
"Due to the compounding of our already difficult problems of
administration, this administration activated the first of a series of
task forces in November, 1968, to examine the present system and make
recommendations for possible changes.
"These efforts have led to the development of the sweeping plan we
are proposing reorganization designed, in essence, to improve the
quality, while holding down the cost, of those health-related programs
which are administered or supervised by the state.
"Creation of the new department will enable the state to do a better
job in both evaluating the total health needs of our population and
developing effective programs to meet them.
"Besides providing much greater coordination of programs currently
split among departments, the plan will also enable the administration to
view health needs comprehensively so that we can increase program
effectiveness while making more efficient use of the taxpayers' money."
Governor Reagan said his plan transfers Health Care Services to the
new department because the Medi-Cal program, which it now administers,
"is aimed primarily at health restoration. Medi-Cal expenditures should
be viewed and analyzed alongside other health expenditures."
"In addition, he explained, "the state's Medi-Cal purchasing power,
which by its very nature will have an impact on the total health care
delivery system, should be used to improve the quality and lower the cost
of such services."
- 2 -
#32
The governor noted that the state is currently spending more than
one billion dollars a year on Medi-Cal, of which $454 million comes from
the federal government, $219 million from the counties, and $387 million
from the state general fund.
"An expenditure program of this magnitude requires that we cooperate
closely with the private sector to seek alternative ways of providing
quality care at lower cost.
"It is essential, in evaluating total health needs and priorities,
that we view this program in conjunction with other health programs, and
this can best be accomplished by placing the responsibility for Medi-Cal
in the new department."
Governor Reagan emphasized that "establishment of the Department of
Health is not going to be a panacea for all the state's problems related
to health.
"It will, however, improve substantially our ability to solve these
problems. It will permit us to do a more effective job of evaluating
total health needs and develop programs to meet them.
"It will enable us to fix responsibility and accountability for
program results, and provide an atmosphere which encourages innovation
in these important areas.
"The State of California has a vital role to play in meeting the
health needs of our citizens. Creation of a Department of Health is an
essential first step if we are to fulfill this role, " the governor said.
(The "healing arts" and social work licensing boards referred to on
page 1 of this release are:)
Board of Chiropractic Examiners
Board of Dental Examiners
Board of Medical Examiners
Board of Nursing Education and Nurse Registration
Board of Optometry
Board of Osteopathic Examiners
Board of Pharmacy
Board of Examiners in Veterinarian Medicine
Board of Vocational Nurse and Psychiatric Technician Examiners
Social Worker and Marriage Counselor Qualifications Board
#######
- 3 -
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-15-70
#33
Governor Ronald Reagan today proposed creation of the first
state Department of Consumer Affairs in the nation to provide "a direct
link between the consumer and those state agencies which work for his
protection."
The plan, which will be submitted to California's "Little Hoover
Commission" tomorrow, also calls for the appointment of public members
to agencies which are most directly concerned with consumer protection
and places investigative agencies into a single unit to eliminate
overlapping jurisdiction and duplication.
The proposal is being submitted under the governor's reorganization
authority and is subject to legislative approval.
"Under our proposal a citizen with a consumer complaint will be
able to call the new department and know that his complaint will be
processed by or referred to the proper agency," the governor said.
"We are providing a direct link between the consumer and those
state agencies which work for his protection and whether the citizen
has a complaint about a rotten potato or a quack who claims he can
cure baldness, he knows he can call a single number and the complaint
will be handled by the new department or other state departments
concerned with his protection."
Under the proposal
the Office of the Consumer Counsel will
officially be transferred to the new department to give the counsel
additional administrative support.
The office has been operating in the Department of Professional
and Vocational Standards since October in anticipation of the
reorganization plan.
The governor said that he also will announce other legislative
programs to further strengthen consumer protection and indicated that
it will call for increased public membership on other regulatory boards
and commissions in the state government and will include an educational
program for consumers.
Other proposals that will be included call for:
--Establishment of an umbrella agency to handle other repair
service if needed under a new Bureau of Repair Services.
Consolidation of the Collection Agency Licensing Bureau and the
Bureau of Private Investigators and Adjustors into the Bureau of
Collection and Investigative Services, responsible to a single chief.
#33
--Establishment of the Department's Division of Investigation on
a statutory basis to bring all of the investigative, inspectional and audi
audit services of the various boards into a single unit to provide
maximum service wiile reducing operating costs.
The plan ca lls for the substitution of a public member in the
place of a licensee member on the Board of Accountancy, Board of
Architectural Examiners, Board of Barber Examiners, Cemetery Board,
California Advisory Board of Collection Agencies, Contractors State
License Board, Board of Cosmetologh, Board of Registration for
Professional Engineers, Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers,
California Advisory Board of Furniture and Bedding, Board of Landscape
Architects and Structural Pest Control Boards.
"With additional public members on these boards, the voice of the
average citizen will be heard," the governor said.
#
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WAS
-2-
OFFICE OF THER GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-16-70
# 34
Governor Ronald Reagan today named William A. Evans, 31, as
Assistant Legislative Secretary and announced the reassignment of two
staff members.
Tom McMurray, 30, Assistant Cabinet Secretary, was appointed a
legislative and
Special Assistant, assigned to/program analysis, and Edwin Thomas, 38, wa
named to succeed him as Assistant Cabinet Secretary.
Evans, who will receive a salary of $20,700, has a background
in sales, banking and business and has been active in Republican groups.
He is a graduate of Stanford University and attended the University of
Arizona Law School.
He and his wife Dorothy have one son. They live at 2212 Royal
Road, Sacramento.
McMurray, who joined the administration in 1968, is a graduate
engineer and the former associate publisher and editor of an Illinois
newspaper. He and his wife have five children. They live at 5208 Galaxy
Parkway, Sacramento. McMurray will receive an annual salary of
$20,000.
Thomas, who joined the administration in 1967, has served as
coordinator of the Governor's Survey on Efficiency and Cost Control
task force, which implemented savings of $200 million in the cost of
state government. He and his wife Gretchen have two children. They
live at 447 Fairhills Drive, San Rafael. Thomas will receive an annual
salary of $20,000.
# ### #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-16-70
#35
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Thomas R.
Dolan of San Francisco to a four year term on the California Veterans
Board, subject to Senate confirmation.
Dolan, 44, a communications consultant with the Pacific Telephone
Company, is a Republican. He will succeed John Monaghan of San Francisco
whose term has expired. The post pays $20 per day, per meeting.
A Navy veteran of World War II, he is a past commander of
American Legion Post 505, the Veterans' Political Council and the
Veterans of Foreign Wars.
Dolan is also a past president of Golden Gate Parlor, Native Sons
of the Golden West and is active in the Sons of Norway, the Norwegian
Club and the Telephone Pioneers.
He and his wife Dolores have three sons. The family home is at
2207 27th Street, San Francisco.
####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-16-70
#36
GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE
January 19, 1970
through
January 25, 1970
Monday, January 19
3:00 E .m.
Swearing-in of Lucian Vandergrift,
Governor's Office
Overnight - Sacramento
Tuesday, January 20
10:00 a.m.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Overnight - Sacramento
Wednesday, January 21
Office appointments only
Overnight - Sacramento
Thursday, January 22
8:00 a.m.
Governor's Prayer Breakfast, Senator Hotel
4:00 p.m.
Depart for Los Angeles
7:00 p.m.
Ninth Annual Dinner of the Archemedes Circle
of the School of Engineering to commemorate the
dedication of the Seaver Science Center,
Beverly Hilton Hotel
Speech.
Overnight - Los Angeles
Friday, January 23
No appointments scheduled
Overnight - Los Angeles
Saturday, January 24
10:00 a.m.
Arrive Biltmore Bowl for brief remarks to
Los Angeles County Republican Precinct Workers
organizing meeting.
Overnight - Los Angeles
Sunday, January 25
Return to Sacramento
Overnight - Sacramento
########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Sacramento, California
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-19-70
The new Human Relations Secretary, Lucian Vandegrift, will be
sworn in this afternoon at 3 p.m. in the Governor's Office.
Press coverage is invited.
#########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-19-70
#37
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of ten
members to four year terms on the newly-created TOPICS Advisory Committee
(Urban Area Traffic Operations Improvement Committee).
Established by the 1969 legislature with the support of Governor
Reagan, the committee was created to provide cities and counties with
a greater voice in determining how federal funds will be spent in the
upgrading of local streets and county roads.
The committee members are:
montclair
Mayor Harold montclair M. Hayes of the City of Claremont. A Democrat, he has
served on the Clarement City Council since 1956, including two terms as
mayor, is a member of the Board of Directors of the League of
California Cities and served as chairman of its Transportation Committee
for five years. He lives at 4574 Orchard Street, Montclair, with his
wife Doris. They have two sons. Hayes will represent cities.
City Manager Jerome Keithley of Oakland. A Republican, Keithley
has served as City Manager of Stockton and Palo Alto and is a member of
the Advisory Committee to the California Highway Commission and the
Director of Public Works on freeway route adoption and design procedures.
He also served as secretary of the State Advisory Committee for Planning,
Statewide System of Freeways and Expressways, and has held executive
posts in the League of California Cities. Keithley will represent cities.
Public Works Director Richard F. Lovejoy of the City of Richmond.
A Republican, he has served as Director of Public Works for the City of
San Leandro, is a past president of the Northern California chapter of
the American Public Works Association and a past president of the Public
Works Officers Department of the League of California Cities. He lives
at 1475 Vista Road, El Cerrito. Lovejoy will represent city engineers.
Public Works Director Anthony R. Turturici of the City of San Jose.
A Republican, he has headed San Jose's Public Works Department since
1965. He is active in numerous state and national professional societies
including the Institute of Traffic and Transportation Engineers, the
American Public Works Association, the American Society of Civil Engineers
the Water Pollution Control Federation and the American Water Works
Association. He lives at 1836 Kenpark Court, San Jose with his wife
Barbara. They have one son. Turturici will represent city engineers.
-1-
#37
City Manager John Wentz of the City of Riverside. A Republican, he
has served as assistant city manager of Long Beach and Administrative
Officer of the City of Beverly Hills. He is an immediate past president
of the International City Management Association and has served two
previous state administrations as a member of the Regional Water
Pollution Control Board for the Los Angeles Region and the California
Regional Land Use Information System Project Steering Committee. He and
his wife Mary Jo have five children. They live at 3620 Castle Reagh
Place, Riverside. Wentz will represent cities.
County Executive Carl G. Johnson of Sacramento. A non-partisan,
Johnson served as a county administrator and county manager in Michigan,
North Carolina and Georgia before coming to Sacramento, He is a past
president of the National Association of County Administrators, a
former director of the National Association of Counties and a member of
the International City Managers Association. He lives at 6500 Greenhaven,
Sacramento. Johnson will represent counties.
Road Commissioner Irvin L. Morhar of Los Angeles County. A Democrat
he is a member of the National Association of County Engineers, the
County Engineers Association of California, the Metropolitan
Transportation Engineering Board, the Los Angeles Chapter of the American
Public Works Association and the Los Angeles County Watershed Commission.
His home is at 12405 Hortense Street, Studio City. He will represent
county engineers.
Public Works Director James T. Pott of Santa Clara County. A
Republican, he is a member of the Advisory Committee to the California
Highway Commission and the Director of Public Works on freeway route
location and design procedures, project director for the Santa Clara
County Technical Bus Study, and is a member of the County Supervisors
Association of California, the County Highway Safety Organization, the
County Engineers Association of California and other civic and professional
associations. His home is at 868 Richardson Court, Palo Alto. He will
represent county engineers.
-2-
#37
Supervisor Daniel D. Mikesell of San Bernardino County. A
Republican, he has been active in regional, local and state organizations
involved with viation, highways, recreation, water and conservation,
including the California Supervisors Association Aviation Committee,
Californians For Modern Highways and the California Wildlife Association.
He also ser ved as coordinator of the Southern California Inter-County
Plan of Highways. He lives at 811 West Granada Court, Ontario. He
will repres ent counties.
Publ ic Works Director James L. Martin of the City of Fresno. A
Republican, he is a former Public Works Director for the City of
Berkele - and a former Assistant City Engineer for the City of San
Leandr,). He is a member of the Governor's Committee on Traffic Safety
and the California Solid Waste Advisory Committee, a past president of
the Northern California Chapter of the American Public Works Association
and vice president of the Public Works Officers Section of the League of
California Cities. His home is at 4140 North Angus Street, Fresno. He
will represent city engineers.
Committee members receive no salary.
# # #
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WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-19-70
#38
Governor Ronald Reagan today praised President Nixon's
selection of Allan Oakley Hunter as president of the Federal National
Mortgage Association.
Hunter, Fresno attorney and former Congressman, was appointed
chairman of the California Commission on Housing and Community Develop-
ment by Governor Reagan in 1967.
"We will miss the creative services that Oakley Hunter has
provided this administration," the governor said, "but his appointment
to this sensitive and most important post in Washington will benefit
the whole nation as well as California."
# # #
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO.
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-19-70
#39
Governor Ronald Reagan today named Earl W. Brian, Jr., a former
Army flight surgeon and winner of the Silver Star for gallantry in action,
as director of the State Department of Health Care Services, succeeding
Carel W. Mulder who is resigning the $30,000-a-year post April 1.
Brian, who received his M.D. degree from Duke University, served
for two years with the Army Medical Corps, before being discharged last
month.
He received the Silver Star for administering first aid, under heavy
enemy fire, to his fellow soldiers on the battlefield last February 23
in Vietnam.
Prior to entering the service in January, 1968, Dr. Brian worked as
executive secretary to the California State Welfare Board for six months.
He was assistant administrator, and a member of the Department of
Surgery etaff, at the Stanford University Medical Center from July, 1966
to June, 1967.
He previously served a year and a half as assistant director of the
Lipid Metabolism Study Program at the Durham, North Carolina, Veterans
Administration Hospital.
He and his wife, Jane, live in Sacramento. Brian, 28, is a
Republican. His appointment is effective April 1.
Mulder said he is resigning to enter private health care consultant
work.
In a letter to the governor, he noted that when he took on the
responsibility for administering the state's Medi-Cal program he did so
"with the mutual understanding that I might wish to relinquish the
appointment upon becoming eligible for retirement in the Spring of 1970.
"It has been a distinct privilege to work with you and your
associates this past three years," Mulder said.
Governor Reagan said he accepted Mulder's resignation with "deep
regret.
"Your performance for this administration has been one of ability,
dedication and hard work, and I thank you for your fine service to the
state.
"All of us wish you well in your future endeavors," the governor .
added.
Mulder joined the administration as director of the Medi-Cal program
January 31, 1967.
#
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#
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-20-70
#40
Governor Ronald Reagan today named Stanislaus County Chief
Administrative Officer Charles E. Dixon, a former chief deputy director
of the State Department of Finance, as Director of the Department of
General Services.
The appointment becomes effective February 20.
Dixon, a 46 year-old Republican, will take over the $30,000-a-year
post held by Verne Orr until Orr was named state director of finance late
last December.
Earl Coke, secretary of Agriculture and Services, is serving as
acting director of the department, in addition to his duties as head of
the agency, until Dixon assumes his new responsibilities.
Dixon has held his county post since 1962, except for a one-year
period beginning in October, 1967, when he took a leave of absence to
serve in the Reagan administration as chief deputy director of finance.
Before taking the Stanislaus County job, he was an assistant
administrative officer in Fresno County for six years.
He has been a member of the state's prestigious "Little Hoover
Commission" since last May and the State Health Review and Program Council
for the past year.
Dixon also is a member of the California Functional Classification
Advisory Committee, the County Supervisors' Association legislative
committee, and the State Chamber of Commerce Tax Committee.
A 1948 graduate of UCLA in business administration, Dixon is an Army
Air Corps veteran currently serving as a lieutenant colonel in the 115th
General Support Group, California National Guard, headquartered in
Roseville.
His wife, Betty, is a graduate of the University of Southern
California and teaches kindergarten in the Sylvan School District, near
Modesto.
They have three children.
########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-20-70
#41
Governor Ronald Reagan today issued the following statement:
"Last week I outlined an administration plan to draw six million
/dollars
dollars from the state's unallocated surplus of 22.5 million to help
finance a vastly improved school lunch program totaling some 20 million
dollars for hungry children in not just some, but all parts of
California.
"Today, I am pleased to announce a proposal to the legislature which
will double the effectiveness of the remaining 16.5 million dollar
surplus by freeing a total of 33 million dollars for critically needed
classroom construction in the state.
"Here is how the plan works.
/dollars
"First, we will ask that the 16.5 million be used as a loan to the
State School Building Aid Bond Fund. The money would then be funneled
through the state's Local Allocations Board into those 16 school districts
with the most pressing construction needs.
"Second, in order to make the money on hand go just as far as
possible, we will recommend that the original 16.5 million dollar loan
be repaid from the first sale of school bonds next fall, and that these
proceeds then be appropriated for the construction of additional class-
rooms on a number of our community college campuses. Assuming an
improvement in the condition of the market for state bonds, such a sale
should occur in September.
"The classrooms which this money will help to build will go a long
way toward relieving the need for double and triple sessions in those
school districts most critically affected.
"At the same time, the additional facilities required to meet the
mushrooming enrollment needs of the community colleges are of equal
importance to the continued progress of our overall system of public
higher education in California.
"The plan we are proposing is an imaginative one which insures the
absolute maximum effectiveness of those dollars which are now available
for school purposes.
"I call on the legislature to give the proposal the strong and speedy
bipartisan support it deserves."
Here are the 16 school districts to which the governor makes
reference in the statement:
Napa Valley Unified
$5,035,806.59
Washington Union
$ 47,629.79
Igo-Ono Platina
60,000.00
Oak Grove
1,064,595.32
Geyserville Unified
861,565.04
San Joaquin
53,081.78
Shaffer Union
276,780.00
San Joaquin
767,682.18
Oak Grove
644,995.22
Murray
124,074.00
Hollister
855,895.66
Napa Valley Unified
2,725,676.63
Herlong
289,402.00
San Ysidro
239,524.31
Tustin Union High
2,119,494.70
Ceres Unified
1,540,440.37
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Sacramento, California
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-20-70
CORRECTION
Please correct press release #41 (4th paragraph of statement)
to read: 13 school districts (sted of 16).
Last paragraph should also be corrected to read 13 (sted of 16)
school districts.
(Here is a listing of these school districts itemized on the
release, by county:
Napa Valley Unified, Napa
Igo-Ono Platina, Shasta
Geyserville Unified, Sonoma
Shaffer Union, Lassen
Oak Grove, Santa Clara
Hollister, San Benito
Herlong, Lassen
Tustin Union High, Orange
Washington Union, Monterey
Oak Grove, Santa Clara
San Joaquin, Orange
San Joaquin, Orange
Murray, Alameda
Napa Valley Unified, Napa
San Ysidro, San Diego
Ceres Unified, Stanislaus
#########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
R
MEMO TO THE
RESS
Sacramento, Califor
1
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-20-70
#42
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the
signing of his first bill passed by the 1970
legislative session.
The bill, AB 131, authored by Assemblyman
Frank D. Lanterman (R-La Canada), validates the
Pasadena Area Junior College District Maximum
tax rate election held October 21, 1969.
# # #
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-20-70
#43
Governor Ronald Reagan today expressed great pleasure at the
announcement from Washington that one and one-half miles of the
Marine Corps' Southern California Beach is being offered to the state
for recreational use.
The ocean beach frontage lies immediately south of the San Onofre
Nuclear Power Plant in San Diego County, and is part of the Camp
Pendleton Marine Base.
"I am pleased that the federal government has joined us in
meeting the tremendous recreational needs of Southern California,"
the governor said. "This is the first breakthrough in several years
of negotiations spearheaded by Norman B. Livermore, Jr., Secretary for
Resources, and William Penn Mott, Jr., Director of the Department of
Parks and Recreation"
"We're hopeful that eventually several more miles of this
magnificent shoreline will be released to us for similar use."
Southern California ocean beaches have been given top priority
for acquisition and development, the governor noted.
The state will move immediately to make the new beach lands
available for public use, the governor said.
"We hope to have at least temporary facilities available for public
use by this summer," the governor said.
#####
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
#44
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of
William G. Maas, senior vice president of the First National Bank
of San Diego, to a four-year-term as a member of the Board of
Administration of the Public Employees Retirement System.
Maas, who has served on the board since 1967, will represent
bank officers on the board. He will receive $25 per diem plus
expenses.
Maas is a past president of the Financial Analysts Society of
San Diego and a member of the California Bankers Association's Committee
on Trust Investments. He is a Republican.
His address is Box 304, Rancho Santa Fe, San Diego.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
#45
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Timothy M. Doheny, Southern California rancher and sportsman, to a
six-year-term on the State Fish and Game Commission, subject to Senate
confirmation.
Doheny, 43, a Republican, succeeds James Y. Camp of Los Angeles
whose term has expired. The post pays $10 per day, not to exceed
$50 per member per month.
A breeder of cattle and horses, Doheny is active in fish and
game stocking experiments and conservation work. He is a member
of the Rodeo Cowboys Association, Ducks Unlimited and a governor
and trustee of the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History.
His home is at 409 North Bristol Avenue, Los Angeles.
####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
#46
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Hayward attorney Dallas S. Edgar to a newly-created San Leandro-
Hayward Judicial District Municipal Court bench.
Edgar, 48, a Republican, will receive an annual salary of
$29,270.
A director of the Hayward Area Recreation District, Edgar is
also active in the Bay Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America
and is an Associate Government Appeals Agent for Local Draft Board
54 (Hayward).
He is also a director of the Southern Alameda County Bar Association
and a member of the California and Alameda County Bar Associations,
the Hastings Alumni Association, the American Arbitration Association and
Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity.
An Air Force veteran of World War II, he attended the University
of Hawaii, graduated from the University of California and received
his law degree from Hastings College of Law.
He and his wife Patricia Ann have two children. The family
home is in Hayward.
###
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
#47
Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed three members to four-year
terms on the Board of Directors of the 21A District Agricultural
Association (Madera District Fair).
They are:
Robert A. Howe, a sales manager, of 19259 Raymond Road, Madera.
A Republican, he succeeds Rita A. Forte of Madera, whose term has
expired.
Joe D. Law, a farmer, 13431 Avenue 19, Chowchilla. A Republican,
he succeeds Mrs. Rosemary Boyle, whose term has expired.
Lloyd V. Taylor, businessman and farmer, 1701 West Fourth Street,
Madera. A Republican, he succeeds Louis B. Shein of Madera, whose
term has expired.
Board members are paid necessary expenses.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO..
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
#48
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of three
new members to four year terms on the Real Estate Commission and
reappointed one member.
The new members are William P. Beachem, a West Los Angeles real
estate broker; Grant B. Potter, president of a Dinuba forest products
company, and Phil Saenz, director of Job Opportunities in Electronics,
Inc., San Diego.
Harlan S. Geldermann, a Danville realtor, was reappointed
Beachem, a Republican, is a member of the Los Angeles Urban League,
the Los Angeles Realty Board, Inc., the National Association of Real
Estate Boards and the Educational Committee of the Consolidated Realty
Board. He succeeds Ralph H. Miller of Upland, whose term has expired,
and will represent real estate on the board. He lives at 10242 South
Van Ness Avenue, Los Angeles.
Potter, a graduate of the University of Idaho at Moscow, served
as Assistant State Forester of Idaho and as a member of the Idaho State
Legislature before coming to California. Since 1959, he has served
as president and general manager of Sequoia Forest Industries, Inc.
A Republican, he will serve as a public member of the board. He lives
at 785 Saginaw Street, Dinuba.
Saenz, active in numerous civic groups, is an administrator of
a private industry sponsored program to hire and train the disadvantaged
and unemployed. A Republican, he is a past director of the Economic
Opportunity Commission of San Diego County, a past director of the
Citizens Interracial Committee, a past chairman of the San Diego County
Advisory Committee of the Fair Employment Practice Commission, a
member of the San Diego Urban Coalition, and a member of the San Diego
Chapter of the Mexican American Political Association. He will represent
the public on the Commission. He lives at 4217 Spillman Drive, San
Diego.
Geldermann, a Republican, is a past president of the Contra Costa
Real Estate Board and a past chairman of the Land Development Committee
of the California Real Estate Association. His address is P. O. Box 415
Danville.
Commissioners are paid actual and necessary expenses.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contace:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
MEMO TO THE PRESS
New members of the State Real Estate Commission will be
sworn in at 1 p.m. Thursday, January 22, by Governor Reagan in the
Governor's Office. Among them will be William P. Beachem of Los Angeles,
the first Negro to be appointed to the commission. Press coverage is
invited.
# # #
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Sacramento, Californi
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
Judge MacBride, chairman of the Governor's
Prayer Breakfast, has respectfully requested that
no pictures be taken during the program at the
Senator Hotel tomorrow morning.
# # #
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-22-70
Governor Reagan is scheduled to sign a proclama-
tion at 10:30 a.m. today in the Governor's Office
proclaiming the city of Monterey the honorary
capital of California for 1970 in commemoration of
the Bicentennial Year.
Participating will be Senator Grunsky, Assembly-
man Wood, Mayor Al Madden and Ernest Osuna, official
ambassador of the Monterey Bicentennial celebration.
Press coverage is invited.
# # #
OFFICE OF THE GOVER.. JR
RELEASE: immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-22-70
#49
Governor Ronald Reagan announced today that his administration will
sponsor legislation to establish an Office of Transportation Planning
and Research to aid the state in charting a modern, coordinated network
to move Californians and their goods by land, sea and air.
The legislation will be introduced by Assemblyman John Foran
(D-San Francisco), chairman of the Assembly Transportation Committee,
and co-authored by Senator Donald Grunsky (R-Watsonville), Finance
Committee Chairman, Assemblyman Frank Lanterman (R-Pasadena), Ways
and Means Committee chairman, and Senator James Mills (D-San Diego),
chairman of the Senate Transportation Committee.
The bill will implement a recommendation made by the Governor's
Task Force on Transportation to coordinate the use of public funds
devoted to development of a balanced and economical statewide transpor-
tation system.
The Office of Transportation Planning and Research, to be situated
in the Business and Transportation Agency, will serve in an advisory
capacity to the Secretary of Business and Transportation and as the
principal staff unit for the State Transportation Board, created by
the 1969 legislature upon recommendation of Governor Reagan and spon-
sored by Assemblyman Foran.
The proposed office will be financed on a pro rata basis from the
highway users tax fund, the general fund, the aeronautics fund, and the
harbors and watercraft revolving fund, and will consist of a small
staff of specialists in economics, planning, engineering, and statistics.
Among the duties and functions of the office would be the following:
--To undertake special studies; recommend to the secretary and the
State Transportation Board legislation, regulations and administrative
policies in the transportation field;
--Coordinate planning for existing and future modes of transporta-
tion in the interest of economy, safety, and welfare of the people of
California;
--Coordinate research, demonstration projects and development
programs to encourage maximum use of existing knowledge and to foster
development of new knowledge in applicable fields;
--Provide information to and cooperate with the legislature and its
committees in connection with studies and matters relevant to the
development of transportation in the state.
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-21-70
#50
Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed three members to four-
year-terms on the Board of Directors of the 21st District Agricultural
Association ( Fresno District Fair).
They are:
Floyd A. Boyd, a Fresno farm equipment dealer; Harry S. Baker,
a Fresno cotton dealer, and Robert K. Kanagawa, a Sanger nursery owner.
Boyd, who lives at 5641 North Thorne Street, is active in the
Boy Scout movement, is a governor of the Fresno State College
Agricultural Foundation, a director of the Tulelake-Butte Valley District
Fair and other civic and service groups. A Republican, he succeeds
Sam J. Heath of Clovis, whose term has expired.
Baker, who lives at 945 South Clovis Street, is active in
numerous civic and agricultural associations, including the National
Cotton Council of America, the Westlands Water District, the National
Cottonseed Products Association, the Fresno State College Advisory
Board, the California State Chamber of Commerce, the California Taxpayers
Association and the National Association of Manufacturere. A Democrat,
he succeeds Archie M. Mathson of Fresno, whose term has expired.
Kanagawa, who lives at 16156 East McKinley, Sanger, is a director
of the Valley Children's Hospital, a former trustee of the Sanger
High School, Fairmont School and Sanger Unified School boards, has
served as chairman of the Sanger Grape Bowl Festival, is a director
of the Sanger Chamber of Commerce and is a past president of the
Japanese American Citizens League. A Republican, he succeeds Beverly H.
Jones of Fresno, whose term has expired.
Board members are paid necessary expenses.
#####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
#51
445-4571
1-22-70
Governor Ronald Reagan today proclaimed the City of Monterey
the Honorary Capital of California for 1970.
Text of the proclamation follows:
"WHEREAS, In 1603 mass was said at the foot of an oak tree on
the beach of Monterey Bay by the reverend Carmelite fathers who were
in the company of explorer Don Sebastian Vizcaino; and
"WHEREAS, On June 3, 1770, Don Gaspar de Portola, commander of
a land expedition, met with Fray Junipero Serra, a San Francisco priest,
on the beach of Monterey, and raised the flag of Spain to lay claim,
in the name of their Catholic Majesties, Carlos III of Spain, to all
Alta California, after which mass was celebrated near the same oak
tree, and the Mission San Carlos de Borromeo was founded for the
conversion of the Indians to Christianity; and
"WHEREAS, On April 11, 1822, news reached the town of Monterey
that Mexico had overthrown Spanish rule and gained its independence;
and
"WHEREAS, In 1825 California acknowledged jurisdiction of and
pledged allegiance to the Republic of Mexico; and
"WHEREAS, in 1849 the California Bear Flag was raised over Colton
Hall in Monterey when a state constitutional convention declared in
California, with its capital at Monterey, to be the first Pacific Coast
state of the United States of America; and
"WHEREAS, in 1850 California was admitted as a free state to the
Union under the Compromise of 1850,
"NOW, THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA, do
hereby proclaim the CITY OF MONTEREY THE HONORARY CAPITAL OF CALIFORNIA
FOR 1970 in commemoration of its bicentennial year.
####
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-22-70
#52
Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Walnut Creek attorney
William R. Channell as judge of a newly-created Contra Costa County
Superior Court.
Channell, 47, a Republican, will receive an annual salary
of $31,816. The court was established by the 1969 legislature.
A partner in a Walnut Creek law firm since 1963, Channell is a
former Deputy District Attorney of Alameda County. He is a Fellow
of the American College of Trial Lawyers, first vice president of
the Northern California Association of Defense Counsel, a member of
the American Arbitration Association and a member of the American,
California and Contra Costa Bar Associations.
His civic service has included work with the Happy Valley
Improvement Association, the Boy Scouts, the Lafayette-Moraga Youth
Association and the Contra Costa County Home Visiting Nurses.
Channell is a native of Oakland and an Army veteran of World
War II. He completed undergraduate work at Stanford University and
obtained his law degree from Hastings College of Law.
He and his wife Patricia have two children. The family home is
in Lafayette.
####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNO
Sacramento, Californ.
MEMO TO THE RESS
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-22-70
Following is the text of a filmed Report to the People by
Governor Reagan which has been distributed to California television
stations for use this evening.
An audiotape of the statement is available to radio stations by
calling 916-445-0101.
"Today, I asked the legislature to pass the most comprehensive and
far-reaching Omnibus Clean Air Law to battle smog ever proposed by any
state or nation.
"This progressive plan of action will further strengthen the state's
already tough controls on smog and provide the teeth needed to enforce
them.
"Our new program will crack down even harder on smog from cars and
trucks---and on stationary polluters like agricultural and industrial
burning.
"It will give our Air Resources Board the authority to regulate
the chemical make-up of gasoline so that smog-causing gas evaporation
and exhaust fumes from auto and truck engines can be cut significantly.
"It will require that smog controls on every new vehicle sold in
California are properly adjusted before that vehicle can be registered.
False certification will subject dealers to criminal prosecution.
"We are asking our Air Resources Board to come up with an assembly-
line method of testing every 1972 model vehicle sold in California, and
to find a workable device for roadside testing by the Highway Patrol.
"This program also will enable California to significantly reduce
the heavy volumes of smoke and fumes which pour into our atmosphere
daily---by restricting smokestack emission and open burning.
"In addition, the Clean Air Law will give us the necessary tools
to prevent future air pollution caused by the over-concentration of
fuel-burning power generating plants along the coast by providing a
20-year master plan for the location of such facilities.
"As = have said before, we are committed to an all-out war on smog.
This legislative package will give us more of the ammunition we need to
gain final victory."
#########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-22-70
#53
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of one
member and reappointment of two members to the Board of Directors of
the California Museum of Science and Industry.
The new board member is Ernest J. Loebbecke of 2000 East Braeburn
Road, Altadena, president of a Los Angeles title insurance and trust
company.
Reappointed were J. Howard Edgerton, president of a Los Angeles
savings and loan association and Quentin W. Best, president of a
Southern California rock products company.
All are Republicans. They will be paid necessary expenses
during their four-year-terms on the board which shares management of
the Los Angeles Coliseum and Sports Arena with the City and County of
Los Angeles and owns and manages Exposition Park and manages the
museum.
Loebbecke, who is active in civic affairs, has served as president
of the California State Chamber of Commerce and is active in the
Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce and the United States Chamber of
Commerce.
Both Edgerton and Best are also active in Southern California
civic affairs.
Edgerton lives at 1288 Lago Vista Drive, Beverly Hills and
Best lives at 1655 Rancho Avenue, Glendale.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-23-70
#54
GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE
January 26, 1970
through
February 1, 1970
Monday, January 26
Office Appointments.
Overnight - Sacramento
Tuesday, January 27
10:00 a.m.
Brief meeting with 9-year old Kenny Fried,
of Palo Alto, to discuss California Water
Project. Cabinet members in attendance.
Governor's Office.
11:30 a.m.
Presentation to California National Guard
Generals Glenn C. Ames and Bernard A. Nurre
certificates of accomplishment from the
President's Youth Opportunity Program,
Governor's Council Room.
11:45 a.m.
Swearing-in of James Hall as Secretary of
Business and Transportation, Governor's Office.
1:30 p.m.
PRESS CONFERENCE
3:15 p.m.
Signing of Junior Achievement Proclamation,
Governor's Council Room.
Overnight - Sacramento
Wednesday, January 28
a.m.
Trustees' meeting, Woodlake Inn.
Overnight - Sacramento
Thursday, January 29
4:00 p.m.
Presentation of awards to student winners of
Voice of Democracy Contest sponsored by the
VFW, Governor's Office.
Overnight - Sacramento
Friday, January 30
10:00 a.m.
Remarks to YMCA Model Legislature, Assembly
Chambers.
Overnight - Sacramento
Saturday, January 31 -
Sunday, February 1
No appointments scheduled
Overnight - Sacramento
# # #
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVE, OR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-27-70
#55
Governor Ronald Reagan today proclaimed a State of Disaster in the
counties of Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Modoc, Plumas,
Shasta, Siskiyou, Tehama and Trinity as a result of heavy winds, storms,
and flood damage during the past several weeks.
The governor's action paves the way for the Boards of Supervisors in
the affected areas to request assistance from state agencies to assist in
their efforts to protect life and property.
"As a result of heavy winds, storms, flooding and other conditions
which, by reason of their magnitude, were beyond the control of the
services, personnel, equipment and facilities (of the twelve counties),
I, therefore, proclaim the existence of a State of Disaster in the
counties of Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Modoc, Plumas,
Shasta, Siskiyou, Tehama and Trinity," the governor said.
His proclamation noted that the chairmen of the boards of
supervisors in the twelve counties requested the governor's action.
It also cited "conditions of extreme peril to the safety of persons
and property" in the counties since December 17, 1969.
########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVER
R
RELEASE: ....mediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-27-70
#56
Governor Ronald Reagan today awarded certificates of appreciation
signed by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew to the State of California's two
top military leaders in recognition of the California National Guard's
important role in President Nixon's Youth Opportunity Program.
Receiving the awards at a special ceremony in the Governor's Office
were Major General Glenn C. Ames, commanding general of the state's
military forces, and Brigadier General Bernard A. Nurre, commanding
general of the California Army National Guard's 49th Infantry Brigade.
General Nurre's brigade was specifically cited for providing
meaningful experiences and exciting recreational opportunities for
disadvantaged youngsters in the Hunters Point area of San Francisco.
General Ames received his certificate in recognition of the
contributions made by National Guard units throughout the state in
furthering the President's program for youths over the past year.
Governor Reagan characterized the ceremony as having "special
significance" because it calls to the attention of the public the
Guard's participation in, and sponsorship of, community projects which
might not otherwise be available to disadvantaged youngsters in the state.
Over 1,500 youngsters took part in the 49th Infantry Brigade's
program for youngsters during the past summer. The National Guard
provided medical and transportation support as well as meals to the
youngsters during the ten outings which it conducted. Funds to support
such projects were collected from individual guardsmen in the 49th
Infantry Brigade.
Governor Reagan noted that the Guard will continue to support and
expand its role in the President's Youth Opportunity Program during the
coming year.
Also attending the ceremony were Brigadier General Thomas K. Turnage,
Deputy Adjutant General, Army; Chaplain (Major) Charles H. Lee, Brigade
Chaplain; Mrs. Osceola Washington Means, a member of the community
service staff of the redevelopment agency of the Hunters Point-Bayview
area; Ernest Oliver, director of the Southeast Community Commission of
San Francisco; and six youngsters who participated in the program,
ranging in age from 9 to 13 years.
Also in attendance were LTC Cooper K. Pitsker, Commanding Officer,
49th Support Battalion and Lieutenant Patrick McGreevy, Commanding Officer
of the Battalion's Company B, who provided a majority of the support for
this program.
#########
EJG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERN
RELEASE:
mediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-27-70
#57
Governor Ronald Reagan today suggested that the California Horse
Racing Board immediately urge all parties to a labor-management dispute
at two race tracks in the state to agree to the use of a secret ballot
by union members and be guided by the results of the balloting.
The crippling dispute has halted thoroughbred racing at Santa Anita
in Southern California, and harness racing at Bay Meadows in Northern
California, since their current seasons opened last December 26. The
strike is causing an estimated $1,125,000 loss in revenues to the state
general fund each week.
The governor said he has been keeping close tabs on the dispute
since it began and noted that the California Horse Racing Board has
worked diligently to bring about a solution between all the parties
concerned.
"However," he said, "despite all the efforts which have been made,
there has been no progress toward resolving the strike.
"For this reason, I am suggesting that the Horse Racing Board
immediately urge all parties to the dispute to agree to the use of a
secret ballot by union members to determine if a majority of the workers
themselves can accept management's offer.
"To assure complete fairness in the conduct of the balloting, I am
further recommending that the secret ballot be supervised by the State
Conciliation Service.
"It is imperative that this costly dispute be settled equitably and
fairly, and as soon as possible. Use of the secret ballot would enable
every union member to express his own, individual preference as to the
latest wage and benefit offer, " the governor said.
########
F.JG
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-27-70
The attached pages represent a partial description of the
furniture and paintings which have been either loaned or permanently
donated to the State of California.
The first two pages show some of the antique furniture and
paintings which grace the governor's office. (However, most of the
items in the governor's private study belong to the Reagans.)
Pages 3 and 4 of the attached represent items which have been
permanently donated to the State of California and are presently
housed in the Sacramento executive residence.
Those paintings and antique furniture items which have been
loaned to the State of California and are located in either the
governor's office or at the Reagan residence, have an approximate
worth of $100,000.
Items which have been permanently donated to the State of
California, and currently located in the governor's residence, have
an approximate. worth of $25,000.
# # #
EJG
Offers of furniture, paintings and pictures both as gift
to the State or as loan came from all over the State--
Southern California, Bay Area, Northern California and Central
Valleys. The items in addition to being "antiques" in their
own right have special state historical significance. Some
of the paintings or sketches have no value as works of "art"
but they are priceless mementos of our past history. Others
range in value to $25,000 as a work of art plus the subject
matter being "Californian"; such as, "Pio Pico's Home",
"Sutter's Fort", "Yosemite", etc. Ninety-eight pictures,
paintings and sketches on loan from Sutter's Fort estimated
value $50,000.00. Eight paintings on loan from Mrs. Howard
Ahmanson are valued at $5,750.00.
Three outstanding pieces of furniture in the Governor's
Office which are particularly interesting are:
(1) The Rimpau Couch
A handsome "early California" - 1840 - hand carved,
leather covered couch from the Avila Adobe loaned to
Mrs. Reagan by Pueblo De Los Angeles. The couch was given
to the Pueblo project through Judge Ferris by Mrs. Maurice
Sparling, widow of Judge Sparling. She was a member of the
Rimpau family and lived in the Avila Adobe during her early
childhood. (Antique value, $1,500.00.)
(2) Banjo Clock
One day while poking around in the basement back rooms
of Sutter's Fort Mrs. Reagan spotted a large musty old clock
in which she expressed interest. After it was cleaned, it was
found to be an authentic Banjo Clock that was purchased in
1849 by the California National and D. O. Mills Bank in
Sacramento where it hung until 1934 when it was donated to
the State and long since forgotten. It now hangs in the
Governor's Office where it can be seen and appreciated by
all. As you know, the Banjo Clock is "American" both in
design and construction. (Antique value, $750.00)
(3) Columbia Grafonola, Deluxe 1890
Many antiques or old pieces are so priceless or fragile
that they cannot be utilized or enjoyed to their fullest. A
delightful exception to this is an 1890 Deluxe Columbia
Grafonola elaborately carved mahogany music box which stands
55 inches high, loaned through the courtesy of John Rice,
Sacramento; though not old enough to be properly classed as
an "antique" as the forerunner of the Juke Box, Record Player,
Hi Fi, it is true "Americana". It has to be hand wound, or
cranked, and the records are large metal discs. Visitors
and employees in the sedate Governor's Suite are frequently
startled by the discordant blasting of the Anvil Chorus or
other equally interesting renditions. (Value $750.00 -
$1,000.00 - Not for sale.)
-2-
Furniture donated to the State of California by Mr. and
Mrs. Reese Milner, 706 North Canon Drive, Beverly Hills,
California 90210
1 New flowered Spanish carpet, hand tuffted,
11' X 14'
$2,800.00
1 Venetian painted secretary
3,400.00
1 Blue & white French wood frame bed, hand carved
650.00
1 French wood hand carved arm chair, upholstered
in blue silk, Louis XV
750.00
1 Occasional imported French table, Louis XVI,
painted blue and white
285.00
1 French imported wood & cane bench, Louis XVI,
painted blue and white
350.00
1 Harpsichord, fruitwood (perfect condition)
1,800.00
1 Custom made 7' sofa, hand carved Louis XVI
frame, upholstered in white Scalamandre silk,
(perfect condition)
875.00
2 Custom upholstered - tuffted back arm chairs,
yellow Scalamandre silk (perfect condition)
$340.00 ea.
680.00
1 Custom made Credenza finished in Italian marbel-
ized top and paneling gold leaf moulding
1,200.00
6 Imported Louis XVI side chairs custom finished
in pink and gold, upholstered in blue Scalamandre
silk velvet, loose cushion seats
$350.00 ea.
2,100.00
1 Chinese teakwood arm chair, upholstered loose
velvet cushion
175.00
1 Antique French Regency secretary, fruitwood,
with black and grey marble top
2,800.00
$17,865.00
Furniture donated to the State of California by Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred Bloomingdale, 131 North Delfern, Los Angeles,
California
One specially designed mahogany table in the late
18th century manner. The table is in 3 parts.
Each reeded edge thick top rests upon a hand-
carved tripod base terminating with antiqued brass
members. The size of each table is 4'0" square
plus two 2' leaves that match, making a table
length, when joined, of 16'0".
$3,500.00
Furniture donated to the State of California by Mr. and
Mrs. Earle Jorgensen, 960 Bel-Air Road, Los Angeles,
California 90024
Two Queen Anne style armchairs, special lacquer
$3,000.00
finish, upholstered seats covered in top grain
leather. Ten side chairs to match.
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Sacramento, California
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
Mrs. Ronald Reagan will hold a press conference at the residence
at 1341 - 45th Street, Sacramento, tomorrow morning, January 29, at
10 a.m.
she will conduct a tour of the executive residence and relate how
California citizens have contributed furnishings and works of art to
the State of California.
Press coverage is invited.
#######
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Sacramento, California
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
Following is the text of a filmed Report to the People by
Governor Reagan which has been distributed to California television
stations for use this evening.
An audiotape of the statement embargoed for use after 5 p.m.
today---is now available to radio stations by calling 916-445-0101.
"Today I have submitted to the legislature the most comprehensive
battle plan for an all-out war against narcotics and drug abuse that has
ever been drawn in the nation's history.
"By executive order, I have created the State Office of Narcotics
and Drug Abuse Coordination. This new office will spearhead our campaign
by marshalling all public and private forces to concentrate on drug
abuse prevention, treatment and educational programs.
"We are increasing the number of State narcotics agents. And I am
offering specific suggestions to give law enforcement agencies the
weapons to crack down on dope pushers.
"This fight must begin in the first grade classroom by making our
children completely aware of the dangers they face through experimentation
with drugs. And it must be carried all the way to university research
centers where the scientific facts about drug usage can be assembled.
"I am proposing legislation that will enable us to account for
every shipment of dangerous drugs from the time it leaves the
manufacturer until it reaches the physician, pharmacy or hospital where
it is used.
"I am also suggesting that all government and private agencies join
forces to find the cures that will help us get the victims of drug
abuse back on the road to useful, productive lives.
"Our children are the prime target of the dope pusher and I am
proposing laws that will increase the penalties against those who pray
upon them.
"Make no mistake about it. This is a war. It requires not only the
cooperation of every local, state and federal agency concerned with drug
abuse, but also the cooperation of every citizen as well. If we don't
work together, we run the risk of losing a generation."
#######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: mediate
Sacramento, Califon a
Conatact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
#58
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of
Judge Ronald M. Crookshank, 63, a veteran jurist, to a newly-created
Orange County Superior Court bench.
Judge Crookshank served as an Orange County Superior Court
judge from 1957 until 1968, when he retired because of his wife's
illness. Mrs. Crookshank died two months after he left the bench.
Prior to his first appointment to the Superior Court,
Judge Crookshank had served as city judge of Santa Ana and judge
of the Santa Ana Municipal Court.
He is a native of Santa Ana, a graduate of local schools
and Stanford University. He received his law degree from Harvard in
1933.
A Republican, he will receive an annual salary of $31,816.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVEL
R
RELEASE:
ediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
#59
Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Adrian W. Adams,
Newhall Court Commissioner, to a newly-created Newhall Judicial District
Municipal Court bench.
Adams, 46, a Republican, will receive an annual salary of
$29,270. The court was created by the 1969 legislature.
Prior to his appointment as Court Commissioner in 1968, Adams
was engaged in private law practice in Los Angeles and Newhall. He
is also a former F. B. I. Agent.
His civic activities include service as a trustee of both
the William S. Hart High School District and the Newhall School District.
A native Californian, Adams attended Occidental College and
received his degree from Loyola Law School.
He is a member of the State Bar, the Los Angeles County Bar
Association, the San Fernando Valley Bar Association, the American
Judicature Society and the American Arbitration Association.
Adams and his wife Jane have two children.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVE
OR
RELEASE:
mediate
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
#60
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment
of Arthur E. Madrid, 35, of San Diego to a four-year-term on the
California Veterans Board, subject to Senate confirmation.
A Marine Corps veteran of the Korean conflict, Madrid is an
Urban Affairs Representative of the Pacific Telephone Company. He will
succeed George Sinopoli of Fresno whose term has expired.
A Republican, Madrid is a Member-at-Large of the G. I. Forum,
an organization of veterans from the Mexican-American community, a
member of the University of California at San Diego Urban Affairs
Committee, the Mexican-American Advisory Council for the University
of San Diego and the Chicano Federation of San Diego.
He and his wife Sally have three children. The family home
is at 5308 Tufts Street, La Mesa.
The post pays $20 per day while on official duty.
####
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOV' NOR
RELEASE:
mmediate
Sacramento, Calife nia
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
#61
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of
San Francisco attorneys Charles E. Goff and Victor M. Campilongo
as judges of two San Francisco Municipal Courts.
Goff, 39, a Democrat, was named to succeed Judge Robert
Merrill who has been elevated to the San Francisco County Superior
Court.
Campilongo, 41, a Republican, will succeed Judge Donald
Constine, who has also been elevated to the Superior Court.
A partner in the firm of Gudmundson, Siggins, Stone and
Goff since 1965, Goff received his degree from Stanford Law School
and has attended the University of Minnesota, the University of
Mexico and the University of California.
He is a member of the State Bar, the San Francisco Bar
Association, the Lawyers Club of San Francisco, the Association
of Defense Counsel of Northern California, the Stanford Law Society
of Northern California and Nevada and Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity.
He and his wife Sandra have two children.
Campilongo, a partner in the firm of Davis, Campilongo and
Schmidt since 1963, holds degrees from the University of San Francisco
and the San Francisco Law School. He is a member of the Lawyers
Club of San Francisco and the American Bar Association.
Campilongo and his wife Lucille have three children.
Municipal court judges receive an annual salary of $29,270.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOV
NOR
RELEASE: immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
#62
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the re-appointment
of Edward Hageman, Jr., San Rafael architect, to a three-year-term on
the Designers' Qualifications Advisory Committee.
A Republican, he will represent building designers on the
committee. The post pays per diem and necessary expenses.
Hageman lives at 310 Hidden Valley Lane, San Anselmo.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE:
Immediate
Sacramento, Calif hia
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-28-70
#63
Governor Ronald Reagan today sent the following telegram to members
of the California Horse Racing Board:
"Despite the diligent efforts which you and others have made to
resolve the crippling labor-management dispute at the Santa Anita and
Bay Meadows tracks during the past month, there still appears virtually
no prospect for a settlement of the strike---short of a new initiative
which I hereby suggest for your consideration.
"To get the dispute off dead center and to assure renewed progress
toward a satisfactory solution, I am asking you to immediately urge all
parties on both sides of the issue--to agree to the use of a secret
ballot by union members to determine if a majority of the workers them-
selves feel the latest management offer is acceptable, or if they wish
to continue the present strike.
"To guarantee complete fairness in the conduct of the balloting, I
am further recommending that the secret ballot be supervised by the
State Conciliation Service.
"Surely no party to the dispute--with a genuine desire to resolve
it fairly and equitably--could quarrel with this kind of initiative.
For, it would result in making known the will of each individual union
member on a matter of personal, vital concern to him.
"It is absolutely imperative that this costly dispute be settled at
the earliest possible moment.
"I believe the initiative I have suggested would provide the forward
step necessary to resolve the impasse which continues to halt all
progress toward a settlement.
"Sincerely, Ronald Reagan, Governor of California"
Copies of the telegram also were sent to Leo Geffner, Service
Employees International Union, Los Angeles; George Hardy, Service
Employees International Union, Los Angeles; Max Richardson, Local 399,
Los Angeles; Richard Trowbridge, Local 399, Los Angeles; George Ruehl,
Local 193, Los Angeles; Charles Mahoney, Local 280, Los Angeles;
James Haws, Local 102, San Diego; and Federation of California Racing
Association, Inc. members: Sidney Korshak, Los Angeles; Charles G.
Bakaly, Jr., Los Angeles; Jack Speyer, Director, Labor Relations,
Santa Anita Race Track; Dr. William J. Ward, Bay Meadows Race Track;
Robert Strub, President, Santa Anita Race Track; Fred Ryan, Vice President
and General Manager, Santa Anita Race Track; James E. Stewart, Hollywood
Park Race Track; Phillip Shepherd, Los Angeles County Fair; Marvin
Shapiro, President, Western Harness Racing Association, Hollywood Park
Race Track; Frank Vessells, Jr., Los Alamitos Race Course.
#
#
#
#
#
#
#
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PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-29-70
#64
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced a cooperative agreement
between two state agencies for the joint use of facilities that "will
establish a pattern for increased efficiency and significant economies."
Under the agreement, the Departments of Water Resources and Public
Works will jointly operate and maintain facilities that were planned
for separate use by the California Aqueduct of the State Water Project
and for Interstate 5, the Westside Freeway of the Division of Highways.
"Here is an example of good planning and a willingness on the part
of state employees and their department heads to cooperate in a
determination to give the people of California the best possible
service at the lowest possible cost," the governor said.
"Both agencies could have erected separate facilities but they got
together and determined that a single location would operate just as
effectively," the governor pointed out. "This is the type of
cooperation we have been encouraging. It will establish a pattern for
increased efficiency and significant economies."
The two facilities are the Lost Hills Operations and Maintenance
Center of the Water Project in Kern County and the Patterson Maintenance
Yard of the Division of Highways in Stanislaus County.
"Water Resources Director William R. Gianelli and Public Works
Director James A. Moe have informed me that they will also be happy to
extend the facility-sharing arrangement with other state agencies which
may have the need for office or other space along the west side of the
San Joaquin Valley," the governor said.
# # #
was
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, Califor
a
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-29-70
#65
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of
attorneys Richard Amerian and Peter E. Giannini as Los Angeles County
Municipal Court judges.
Both are Republicans. They will receive annual salaries of
$29,270.
Amerian, 32, succeeds Judge Thomas Murphy who has been elevated
to the Los Angeles County Superior Court, and Giannini, 48, succeeds
Judge Kenneth Holaday who has retired.
Associated with the firm of Cox, Castle and Nicholson, Amerian
holds a degree in political science, Magna Cum Laude from the
University of Southern California and received his law degree from
the U.S.C. Law School.
He is a member of the Los Angeles County, State and American Bar
Associations, Legion Lex, the American Judicature Society and is a
trustee of the U.S.C. Law Alumni Association, the Order of the Coif.
Giannini, who attended the University of Santa Clara, received
his law degree from the University of California's Boalt Hall, and is
a member of the Order of the Coif.
Active in numerous civic, cultural and youth groups, he is a past
president of the Wilshire and Brentwood Chambers of Commerce, a member
of the Junipero Serra Society, the Federated Italo-Americans of Southern
California and the Hollywood-Wilshire Symphony Orchestra Board.
He and his wife Mercedes have six children.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVER OR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, Califo:
la
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-29-70
#66
Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of
Dr. George I. Dean Jr. of Merced to a four-year term on the State
Board of Optometry and the appointment of two new members.
The new members are Dr. Jack O. Pence of Arroyo Grande and
attorney Eugene M. Azevedo of Modesto. The latter will represent the
public on the board.
Dr. Deane, active in civic affairs, is a past president of the
Merced Community Welfare Council, the Merced Board of Education and
a member of numerous optometric associations. He is a Republican. He
lives at 206 East 26th Street.
Dr. Pence, a former Arroyo Grande City Councilman, will succeed
Dr. Arthur B. Emmes of Castro Valley, whose term has expired.
A Fellow of the American Academy of Optometry, Dr. Pence is active
in the Tri-Counties Optometric Society, the California Optometric Asso-
ciation and the American Optometric Association. He and his wife Jerri
and their four children live at 134 East Branch Street, Arroyo Grande.
He is a Republican.
Azevedo, who is active in community, civic and youth affairs, is a
member of the American, California and Stanislaus County Bar
Associations, the American Trial Lawyers Association and the California
Trial Lawyers Association. He succeeds Loann Eagan of Fair Oaks, whose
term has expired. He and his wife Marlene have four children. The
family home is at 520 Greenwich Lane, Modesto. He is a Republican.
Board members are paid $25 per diem while on official duty.
# # #
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-30-70
The 1970-71 budget will be available to the
press in the press office beginning at 8:30 a.m.
Monday, February 2.
Finance Director Verne Orr and his staff will
conduct a briefing on the budget in the press
conference room (#1190) from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m.,
Monday.
The budget will be embargoed for release at
5 p.m. Tuesday, February 3.
As has been done in the past, the briefing
session is off the record therefore, no sound
cameras or recorders are allowed.
# # #
PB
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
RELEASE: Immediate
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
445-4571
1-30-70
#67
Governor Reagan announced today that the Department of Defense
has approved plans for creation of a long sought small craft harbor of
refuge at Cojo Bay on the eastern shore of Point Conception.
"All California boating associations and the state itself have given
this location top priority for the first true harbor of refuge along
the coast. This project, so important to California boaters, represents
a breakthrough in some 20 years of effort to provide safe refuge on the
hazardous passage between Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo,' the
governor said.
"Mariners are well aware of the usually adverse weather encountered
rounding Point Conception and the provision of a nearby safe anchorage
will gladden their hearts."
Cojo Bay is afforded natural protection from the wind and sea on
the north and west by Government Point but the eastern side of the
peninsula is exposed to the weather.
The state's participation will be under the direction of Robert C.
Walker, Director of the new Department of Navigation and Ocean
Development.
"This life-saving refuge was doubly important in view of the long
distances to the next closest harbors and because passage through the
nearby Vandenberg test range was restricted from time to time. This is
a gratifying example of the new State-Federal cooperation being enjoyed
by the people of California in increasing degree, # Walker said,
The state has adequately budgeted for the initiation of this
project and study proposals will be solicited in the immediate future.
The project would include sheltered water, navigation aids, fixed
anchorages, a landing with telephone, and emergency medical and fueling
facilities.
Additionally, beach erosion studies are planned to ensure that no
beaches are adversely affected by the harbor development. The
Department of Navigation and Ocean Development has assured the
Department of Defense that no provisions for population are proposed
at the point that might present an unreasonable risk or hazard to the
Air Force missile launching program at Vandenberg.
Strict rules will be prescribed for use of the water and adjacent
land area. The harbor will be known as a "bare" harbor of refuge
providing safety from storms but not recreational facilities,
######
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
Sacramento, California
Contact:
Paul Beck
MEMO TO THE PRESS
445-4571
1-30-70
Governor Ronald Reagan will launch his Program to Reduce
Occupational Injuries among the state's more than 100,000 employees
during a special program at noon Monday in the rotunda of the Capitol
Building.
Aim of the program, which will be directed by Paul Cossaboon of the
State Compensation Insurance Fund, will be to reduce the rate of
occupational injuries by 10 percent a year at an annual savings of
more than $1 million.
Other speakers during the ceremony will include Earl Coke,
Secretary of Agriculture and Services; Jerome W. Hull, president of
Pacific Telephone Company; and Eldon B. Roseberry, vice president of
the California State Employees Association.
The program will also include selections by the East Guadaljara
Iron Works Band.
Press coverage is invited.
########
WAS
OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR
MEMO TO THE PRESS
Sacramento, California
Contact: Paul Beck
445-4571
1-30-70
#68
GOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE
February 2, 1970
through
February 8, 1970
Monday, February 2
Noon
Kick-off of Governor's Program to Reduce
Occupational Injuries, Capitol Rotunda.
Brief remarks.
Overnight - Sacramento
Tuesday, February 3
1:30 p.m.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Overnight - Sacramento
Wednesday, February 4
No public appointments scheduled.
Overnight - Sacramento
Thursday, February 5
Noon
Full Gospel Business Men's Fellowship
Luncheon, Sacramento Inn.
Overnight - Sacramento
Friday, February 6
a.m.
Depart for Los Angeles
7:30 p.m.
California Newspaper Publishers Association
Annual Banquet, Century Plaza Hotel.
Overnight - Los Angeles
Saturday, February 7
7:30 p.m.
California Young Republican Convention
Dinner, Airport Marina. Speech.
Overnight - Los Angeles
Sunday, February 8
No appointments scheduled.
# # #
PB
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"ocrText": "Ronald Reagan Presidential Library\nDigital Library Collections\nThis is a PDF of a folder from our textual\ncollections.\nCollection: Reagan, Ronald: Gubernatorial Papers,\n1966-74: Press Unit\nFolder Title: Press Releases -January 1970\nBox: P10\nTo see more digitized collections visit:\nhttps://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library\nTo see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit:\nhttps://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection\nContact a reference archivist at: [email protected]\nCitation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing\nNational Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/\nRELEASE: su )AY A.Ms.\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nJanuary 4, 1970\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\nPLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE\n445-4571\n1-2-70\nRELEASE.\n#1\nA nine year old Palo Alto boy who wrote Governor Ronald Reagan that\nhe \"doesn't like what is going on around the state water project,\" is\ngoing to get a first-hand inspection of the project.\nThe boy, Kenny Fried of 707 De Soto Drive, Palo Alto, has been\ninvited by the governor to meet with him on Tuesday, January 27.\nState Resources Secretary Norman B. Livermore and State Water Project\nDirector William P. Gianelli will explain the water project to Kenny.\nKenny, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Fried, and his sister,\nSuzanne, 12, will meet briefly with the governor and his cabinet at\n10 a.m. and then be taken on a tour of some of the project facilities.\nIn his letter, dated November 25, Kenny wrote:\n\"Dear Governor Reagan, im nine years old and i do not like what is\ngoing on around the state water project. Sincerely, Kenny Fried.\"\nHere is the text of the governor's reply to Kenny:\n\"I have given a great deal of thought to the letter you wrote me,\nsaying that you did not like what was going on around the State Water\nProject. Although you are only nine years old, your thoughts are\nimportant to me because I try very hard to be the Governor of all the\npeople of California regardless of age.\n\"The boys and girls of your generation will, one day, be the men\nand women entrusted with the care of this state and dedicated, as we ar\nto making it a better place to live for all the generations to follow.\n\"I am very pleased to know that you are already aware of this f'\nresponsibility and that you are preparing yourself to be ready for :\n\"To help you in this effort, Kenny, I would like to invite you\nyour parents to come and see me in my office on Tuesday, January 27\n10 a.m. We could talk about your concerns for the state water proje\nand I will arrange to take you on a tour of some of the project\nfacilities. You will better understand the full benefits of our grea\nwater project if you see it in action.\"\n#######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nMEMO TO THE\nESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-2-70\n#2\nGOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE\nJanuary 5, 1970\nthrough\nJanuary 11, 1970\nMonday, January 5\n11:45 a.m.\nSwearing-in of Verne Orr as Finance Director,\nGovernor's Council Room\nOvernight - Sacramento\nTuesday, January 6\n11:00 a.m.\nState of the State Message to Joint Session of\nLegislature, Assembly Chambers\nOvernight - Sacramento\nWednesday, January 7\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Sacramento\nThursday, January 8\n10:00 a.m.\nPRESS CONFERENCE\nOvernight - Sacramento\nFriday, January 9\n9:00 a.m.\nArrive Resources Building for Fish and Game\nCommission meeting (Governor to receive\nfishing license No. 1)\nOvernight - Sacramento\nSaturday, January 10 - No public appointments scheduled\nSunday, January 11\nOvernight - Sacramento\n# # #\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nRELEASE: Im diate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-2-70\n#3\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has announced the appointments of four new\nmembers to four-year terms on the California Council on Criminal Justice.\nThe new posts, created by the 1969 legislature to provide additional\nrepresentation by counties and cities on the council, pay actual and\nnecessary expenses.\nThe appointees are Ventura County Supervisor John T. Conlan, Compton\nMayor Douglas F. Dollarhide, Shasta County Supervisor Patrick G. LaPointe\nand Modesto City Councilman Raymond C. Simon.\nConlan, 45, a Republican, was appointed to the Ventura County Board\nof Supervisors in 1967 and re-elected in 1968. He has served as chairman\nof the Sub-Regional Criminal Justice Advisory Board and as a member of the\nsix county Regional Council on Criminal Justice Advisory Board. He lives\nat 1476 Suffolk Avenue, Thousand Oaks. He will represent supervisors on\nthe council.\nDollarhide, 46, a Democrat, was first elected to the Compton City\nCouncil in 1963. He served the previous administration as a member of\nthe State Planning Advisory Committee and the Area Coordinating Committee\nof Los Angeles Regional Transportation Committee.\nActive in numerous civic and service organizations, he is a past\npresident of the Compton N.A.A.C.P., and served as a member of the Compton\nCouncil on Human Relations and the Welfare Planning Council of the South\nBay Area.\nDollarhide will represent cities on the council. He lives at 201\nNorth Willbrook Avenue, Compton.\nLaPointe, 48, a Democrat, was elected to the Shasta County Board of\nSupervisors in 1969. He has served as chairman of Region 11 of the\nCalifornia Council on Criminal Justice, is a member of the Redding Police\nAuxiliary and the Shasta County Sheriff's Posse and is County Coordinator\nof the Governor's Conference on Youth and Children. LaPointe, who will\nrepresent supervisors, lives at 2199 Oxford Road, Redding.\nSimon, 38, a Republican, has served on the Modesto City Council since\n1967. Active in numerous civic and service organizations, he is vice\nchairman of the Regional Advisory Board on Criminal Justice and is a\nmember of the Professional Criminologists Association.\nIn 1966, he was named Modesto's \"Outstanding Young Man\" and the\nfollowing year was named to the Outstanding Young Men. of America by the\nAdvisory Board of Editors.\nSimon, who lives at 2816 Hampshire Lane, Modesto, will represent\ncity councilmen on the council.\n#######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOP\nRELEASE: Imr diate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-2-70\n#4\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has announced the appointment of Jerome W.\nKomes, 58, of San Francisco, to a four-year term on the Commission on\nJudicial Qualifications.\nKomes, whose appointment requires Senate confirmation, is executive\nvice president of the Bechtel Corporation. He will succeed Benjamin\nSwig, who has resigned. The post pays necessary expenses.\nA Republican, Komes is active in numerous civic, service and\nprofessional groups, including the Middle East Institute, the American\nWelding Society, the World Affairs Council of Northern California, the\nSociety for Asian Art and the Bay Area Regional Council of the Near East\nFoundation.\nHe and his wife Flora live at 2006 Washington Street, San Francisco.\nThey have two sons and a daughter.\n#######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO\nRELEASE: It....ediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-2-70\n#5\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced a major breakthrough in his\nadministration's efforts to obtain 1,200 acres of U.S. Forest Service\nland at the Squaw Valley ski lift complex near Lake Tahoe.\nHe said the acquisition will enable the state to move toward\nsatisfying a legislative mandate which called for divestiture of property\nand facilities paid for by the state to stage the 1960 Winter Olympics.\nThe legislation, authored by Assemblyman Eugene Chappie (R-Cool), was\npassed by the 1967 legislature.\nIn order to obtain the Squaw Valley property, as well as additional\nacreage at Plumas-Eureka State Park and at three Upper Feather River\nReservoirs, the state will transfer a portion of its submerged and upland\nproperty at Davis, Antelope and Frenchman lakes to the U.S. Forest Service\nThe lands being exchanged are of comparable value.\nDeeds to the new state property will be presented to Governor Reagan\nby Regional Forester Jack Dienema and Deputy Regional Forester Joe Flynn\nof the U.S. Forest Service January 7 at 11:30 a.m. in the governor's\noffice (press coverage is invited).\nThe governor noted that in order for the administration to be in a\nposition to comply with the legislative mandate on Squaw Valley, it was\nnecessary for the state to gain control of Forest Service land on which\nmost of the state's ski lifts and facilities are located. Heretofore,\nthe lifts have been operated on lands under a special land use permit\ngranted by the Forest Service.\nThe state already owns 15 acres and has a permanent lease on 30\nmore at Squaw Valley, immediately adjacent to the Forest Service property,\nAcquisition of the additional Squaw Valley property will permit the\nstate to consolidate its holdings, providing a saleable package for\ninterested investors.\nGovernor Reagan said the administration will soon send to the\nlegislature a full report on the status of the state's interests at Squaw\nValley, and details of the U.S. Forest Service-State land transfer.\nThe property exchange includes:\n1) Forest Service land transferred to the state:\n--1,204 acres at Squaw Valley\n--2,119 acres at Plumas-Eureka State Park\n--41 acres underlying dams at Davis, Antelope and Frenchman lakes\nfor use by the Department of Water Resources in operating these reservoirs.\n2) State land transferred to the Forest Service\n--7,000 acres of submerged and upland property at Frenchman,\nAntelope and Davis reservoirs.\n######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-5-70\nCORRECTION\nRe Press Release #677, dated 12-17-69:\nThe name of the second appointee listed should be\nDr. Wheeler James North instead of Dr. James N.\nWheeler.\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVER\nR\nRELEASE: 1 ediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-5-70\n#6\nGovernor Ronald Reagan has announced the reappointments of\nEarnest M. Smith of Glen Ellen and Herbert G. Osborne of Fullerton to\nfour-year-terms on the Water Quality Advisory Committee.\nSmith, a Democrat, is county government representative on the\ncommittee and Osborne, a Republican, is public sewage disposal\nrepresentative. The posts pay actual and necessary expenses.\nSmith, a retired businessman and rancher, lives in Glen Ellen.\nHis address is P. O. Box 418.\nOsborne, Orange County Water Pollution Engineer, lives\nat 1225 Crestview Drive, Fullerton.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nRELEASE: I ediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-5-70\n#7\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\ntwo new members to the non-statutory Educational Radio and Television\nAdvisory Committee for California.\nUnder a reorganization plan, proposed by the Reagan administrat\nand approved by the 1969 legislature, the new committee replaces the\nstatutory Television Advisory Committee.\nUnder the plan, the office of Television Coordinator was\neliminated at a saving to taxpayers of $50,322 on the recommendation\nof Raymond Reid, the committee's former executive secretary.\nThe new committee will continue to serve the educational\nneeds of the state under the Department of General Services and will\nmake recommendations to the federal government on allocations of federal\nfunds to the educational television and radio stations in Califomia.\nThe new members are Dr. James Loper, General Manager of\nCommunity Television of Southern California, KCET-TV, Los Angeles,\nand Dr. Warren Wade, manager of the Santa Clara County Educational\nStation, KTEH-TV.\nOther committee members are:\nDr. Gary N. Hess, coordinator of educational TV at the\nUniversity of California at Santa Barbara;\nDr. Herman J. Sheffield, superintendent of the Ventura City\nJunior College District;\nDr. Robert A. Thornton, dean of natural sciences of San\nFrancisco State College;\nHarry Diner of Corte Madera, account executive with KPIX,\nSan Francisco;\nPercy Holliday, Napa County Superintendent of Schools; and\nNorman C. Cissna. Eureka attorney.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE:\nTUESDAY, P.Ms.\nSacramento, California\nJanuary 6, 1970\nContact:\nPaul Beck\nPLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE\n445-4571\n1-5-70\nRELEASE.\n#8\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today called on the people of California to\nhelp him \"make the decade of the seventies a benchmark in man's search\nfor a better world- a return to the original purpose and spirit of\nAmerica.'\nIn his annual \"State-of-the-State Message\" to a joint session of\nthe legislature, the governor said \"The 'Spirit of the 70s' must be on\nquality rather than quantity.\n\"Our task for the seventies is not more government, but better\ngovernment\nmore responsive to the citizenry, so that once again the\nindividual citizen can exercise control over the affairs of state.\n\"The new decade, he said, \"introduces its own imperatives, and\nstirs our souls for a new spirit. Dare we imagine what the 1970s could\nbe if the spirit of those first American seventies\nthe\n1770s\ncould\nbe reawakened in our land?\"\nHe challenged the young people of our society\n\"those who want to\nserve and become meaningfully involved, those who are really looking for\naction to seek it \"by working within the system, reforming it, making\nit more responsive to the citizenry, and helping to get it out of our\npockets and off our backs.\"\nThe governor cited \"the need, indeed the absolute necessity, to hold\ndown\nthe\ncost\nof\ngovernment\nthe need to bring government to heel.'\nRecalling the words of a former president at the beginning of the\nlast decade, the governor said: \"Now on the threshold of a new decade\nwe might well add, 'Ask also what we can do for ourselves. Ask what we\ncan do to solve the problems of human misery without waiting for another\ngovernment program.'\n\"The imperatives of the seventies, he said, \"should bind us\ntogether in a common effort. They demand a common commitment greater\nthan any personal ambition and stronger than any partisanship.\"\nGovernor Reagan emphasized \"the absolute necessity of waging an\nall-out war against the debauching of our environment,\" and committed\nhis administration to a continuing program \"to preserve the magic of\nCalifornia,\"\n- 1 -\n#8\nYet, he said, \"We must avoid those extremes on either end which\ncould destroy our state, Progress and preservation are compatible; it\nis the refusal to work together for the proper balance that is\nincompatible with the spirit of the seventies.\n\"We must be concerned about the quality of our environment; we must\nalso be concerned with the quality of government, and the integrity of\nthose who serve in it.\"\nHe promised that again this year he will propose conflict-of-\ninterest legislation which will give California \"the most comprehensive\nlaws of any state.\"\nIn the consumer protection field, he said his administration will\n\"accelerate programs to protect the consumer from the possibility of\nthe unscrupulous entrepreneur,\" including a reorganization proposal\nwhich would create within state government a Department of Consumer\nAffairs, \"the first of its kind in the nation.\"\nTo fight the growing problems caused by drug abuse and narcotics,\nhe said he will create a State Office of Narcotics and Drug Abuse\nCoordination. He noted that his administration has \"already embarked\non a widescale public education campaign to bring the facts of the horrors\nof drug abuse to our young people. This is a war we intend to escalate\nand win, \" he said.\nAs a part of \"a new strategy\" against crime and violence, he said\nhe will propose \"an immediate major in-depth study of all correctional\nprocesses in California.\"\nHe said the state \"must be permitted to develop and implement a new\napproach\" to public assistance- \"for welfare's purpose should be to\neliminate, as far as possible, the need for its own existence.\" He cited\nthe newly created Department of Human Resources Development as \"a good\nstart in that direction.\"\nThe governor also said he will propose the organization of a new,\nstreamlined Department of Health ''so that we can more effectively administe.\nand control the Medi-Cal program which, like welfare, is one of the major\nand fastest rising costs of state government.\"\nHe said \"education is still the high priority, and called for a\n\"tax reform package, this session to help finance schools and at the\nsame time provide relief from the far-too-heavy property tax burden.\"\nReferring to higher education, he said, \"We must achieve a greater\nmeasure of accountability from these public institutions a greater\neffectiveness in the management and priority of expenditures.\n\"Faculty members and administrators must continually remind\nthemselves---or be reminded---that their fundamental purpose is to provide\nthe conditions for effective learning, and to give the students the\nfirst priority. The student must not be forgotten in the competition\nfor the academic establishment's drive for prestige and power\" he said.\n#######\nEJG\n- 2 -\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Im mediate\nSacramento, Californi\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-7-70\n#9\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nRichard H. Houts, chief engineer of the Los Angeles County Fire\nDepartment and County Forester and Fire Warden, to a four-year-term\non the California State Disaster Council.\nHouts, 45, a Republican, will represent fire services on the\ncouncil, which advises the Governor on policy determinations on civil\ndefense and disaster programs.\nHe succeeds Keith Klinger of San Gabriel who has resigned.\nThe post pays actual and necessary expenses.\nA native of Los Angeles, Houts joined the department in\n1942 as a forest fireman and, after World War II service with the\nAir Force, returned to duty and advanced through the ranks to his\npresent position.\nIn addition to serving as Los Angeles County Fire Department\nEngineer, County Forester and Fire Warden, he holds the post of Chief\nEngineer of Fire Protection Districts of Los Angeles County.\nHis duties make him responsible for the fire protection of\na total population of nearly two million who live in a 2,161 square\nmile area.\nHe is a member of the California Fire Chiefs Association, the\nCalifornia Rural Fire Association, the California State Firemen's\nAssociation, the International Association of Fire Chiefs and the\nWestern Fire Chiefs Association.\nHouts and his wife Audrey have three children. The family\nhome is at 642 North Morris Avenue, West Covina.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRelease: Immediate\nSacramento, Califor 3\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-8-70\n#10\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced plans for an intensive study\nof California's overall correctional system under auspices of the State\nBoard of Corrections.\nHe will issue an executive order establishing a special commission\nto carry out the study, which is expected to be completed within a year.\nThe special commission will be composed of the State Board of Corrections\naugmented by the Corrections and Juvenile Delinquency task forces of the\nCalifornia Council on Criminal Justice.\nThe Governor proposed the in-depth study in his State-of-the-State\nmessage.\nGovernor Reagan said the $266,000, one-year study is being financed\nby federal funds under the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of\n1968. The allocation was made by the California Council on Criminal\nJustice at its meeting today.\nThe objective of the study, the governor said, will be to find ways\nof increasing the effectiveness of the state's correctional system in\nreducing crime and delinquency. He noted that there has never been a\ndetailed study of California's fragmented correctional system.\n\"California is recognized nationally as a leader in the field of\ncorrections,' the governor said. \"This state and the county correctional\nagencies have traditionally pioneered innovative methods of rehabilitation\nwhich are aimed at reducing crime and delinquency by helping the offender\ntake his place as a productive member of society.\"\nThe study, he said, represents another effort by the state to find\nways to improve its total correctional system. The study will focus on\nthe jails, camps, juvenile institutions, prisons and systems of probation\nand parole.\nGovernor Reagan noted that the vast majority of crimes in the state\nare being committed by persons who already have been through some part\nof the correctional system.\n\"For our own part, Governor Reagan said, \"we simply must become\nmore effective in rehabilitating those who break the law so that they do\nnot repeat their offenses. Society as a whole will benefit immensely\nif these offenders can become law-abiding and productive citizens.\"\n- 1 -\n#10\nHe noted that recent efforts to improve the state's correctional\nsystem including legislation which has been enacted. have tended to\nmeet specific problems rather than provide for a more effective system\nof criminal justice.\n\"The problem requires a unified and well-planned approach to\nincrease the effectiveness of the entire system,\" Governor Reagan said,\nMembers of the Board of Corrections include the secretary of the\nHuman Relations Agency, who is the chairman, the directors of the\nCalifornia Youth Authority and Department of Corrections, other state\nleaders in the field of corrections, and two public members.\nGovernor Reagan said he was referring the study to the Board of\nCorrections because it is established by statute to consider the entire\nsubject of crime, including causes, prevention, methods of detection and\nprosecution of criminals.\nThe two task forces of the California Council on Criminal Justice\n/officials,\nare composed of county probation officers, judges, law enforcement\neducators and state correctional officials, as well as representatives\nof the public.\n#######\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Califor a\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-8-70\n#11\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nState Superintendent of Banks James M. Hall, 35, to succeed Gordon C.\nLuce as Secretary of Business and Transportation.\n\"Jim Hall, who has been a valued member of this administration\nsince we took office, has demonstrated through his service to the\npeople of California and his devotion to good government that he is a\nworthy successor to Gordon Luce,\" the governor said.\n\"He has brought vitality, sensitivity, creativity and\nprofessional expertise to the office he has held and I'm proud to\nappoint him to this new job that is so essential to our state's\ncontinued progress.\"\nAs State Superintendent of Banks, Hall has had jurisdiction\nover all state chartered banks and trust companies with more than\n$12 billion in aggregate assets.\nA Republican, Hall will take over the $35,000 a year post\non January 26.\nIn accepting the new position, Hall said, \"It is an honor and\na challenge to attempt to follow in Gordon Luce's footsteps. He has\nprovided a quality of leadership and inspiration that will be difficult\nto duplicate but I will do my best.\"\nHe is also first vice president and a board member of the\nNational Association of Supervisors of State Banks and a member of the\nBoard of Councilors of the University of Southern California Center for\nUrban Affairs.\nA native of San Diego, he holds an AB in economics from the\nUniversity of California at Berkeley and a law degree from University\nof California's School of Law (Boalt Hall).\nHe is a member of the Order of the Coif, an honor granted to\nthe top 10 percent of law graduates and a member of the American, State\nand San Diego Bar Associations.\nHall and his wife Margaret have two children.\n####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELE'\n:\nImmediate\nSacramento, Califo .ia\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-8-70\n#12\nGovernor Ronald Reagan said today his administration will\nsponsor legislation authorizing each county of the state to set up\nan Office of Consumer Affairs to be conducted by the County Sealer of\nWeights and Measures.\n\"This is one of the innovative programs we are proposing to\nenhance the role of government in solving consumer problems,\" Governor\nReagan said. \"The primary area of concern to a consumer is usually the\nmarketplace near where he lives. We believe he needs a local\nauthority to turn to with his questions or complaints.\"\nThe bill will be carried by Assemblyman Don Mulford, (R-\nPiedmont).\nThe state would assist the counties by providing direction,\ninformation and coordination of the new county operation, he added.\nCoordination of county weights and measures activities is through the\nState Bureau of Weights and Measures in the California Department of\nAgriculture.\nUnder the proposed Consumer Affairs bill, each county would\nhave the option of designating its County Sealer as also a Director\nof Consumer Affairs with the authority to receive complaints and\nconduct investigations relating to illegal, fraudulent or deceptive\npractices and misrepresentation of quantity or quality of merchandise and\nservices.\nAs County Consumer Affairs Director, the Sealer would\ncooperate with local, state and federal agencies to protect and\npromote the interest of consumers, and would refer to the appropriate\nagency any consumer complaint that does not fall within the duties of\nthe Office of Weights and Measures.\nAt the direction of his County Board of Supervisors, he\ncould also develop and conduct programs of consumer education, and\nprograms to inform local business and industry of their responsibilities\nunder consumer protection laws.\n\"Many counties are in the process of developing consumer\naffairs activities, and many others would like to,\" Governor\nReagan said. \"The legislation we are proposing would enable them to\ndo this on an orderly, statewide basis.\"\n-1-\n#12\nPlacing of the Consumer Affairs function in the Office of Weights\nand Measures at the county level was dictated by logic, the governor\nsaid.\n\"Every county has such an office, \" he said. \"It is most logical\nthat an arm of government already in existence, with very little\nadditional support required, should perform this function rather than\nestablish an entirely new governmental body to handle the job. The\nexisting office of County Sealer is the county service that the consumer\nhas most frequently turned to for help.\"\nHe noted that county weights and measures officials are presently\nresponsible for the enforcement of laws covering the sale of all\ncommodities sold on the basis of weight, measure or count, and that\nweights and measures inspectors call upon the entire business community\nin their normal day-to-day operations.\n\"In most counties, no other department or agency is as directly\ninvolved with so wide a range of consumer affairs,\" he said.\nIn his recent \"State-of-the-State\" message to the legislature,\nGovernor Reagan announced that his administration will place great\nemphasis on solving consumer problems, including the creation of a\nDepartment of Consumer Affairs within the structure of state government.\n#######\nPB\n-2-\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Califory\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-8-70\n#13\nEdwin Meese III, executive secretary to Governor Ronald Reagan,\ntoday announced approval of a one-year $1.6 million 0E0 grant to\n/Rural\nCalifornia Legal Assistance, Inc. of San Francisco based on the\n\"anticipated enforcement\" of four conditions.\nIn making the announcement, Meese said \"the program should be\nclosely monitored by State and Federal OEO to insure compliance with all\nconditions imposed during the funding period Jan. 1-December 31, 1970.\nThe conditions were:\n1) Multiple suits should not be filed in the same judicial district\nin cases of multiple plaintiffs if the legal issue or issues are identical\nor so similar, that the issue can be decided by the filing of a single\nsuit, or by the joinder of all plaintiffs.\n2) Prior to the filing of court actions against governmental agencies\nattempts, in good faith, should be made to negotiate and settle cases\nwithout court action, but with due regard for the protection of the\nclients' rights and the Canons of Professional Ethics.\n3) No action should be filed where the dominant purpose is\nharassment of the defendant or defendants or to unreasonably delay the\nexecution of a judgment by a court of competent jurisdiction.\n4) Full consideration of the rights of the other party, the effect\nupon society as a whole and the justice of the action shall be given\nprior to filing any legal action.\n########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: MONDAY A.Ms.\nSacramento, Californ\nJai ry 13, 1970\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-9-70\nPLEASE GUARD AGAINST PREMATURE\nRELEASE.\n#14\nGovernor Ronald Reagan announced today that a Spanish translation\nof the California Driver's Handbook is now available on request at all\noffices of the State Department of Motor Vehicles.\nHe said the booklet entitled California, Guia Para El Motorista\n\"will enable hundreds of thousands of Spanish-speaking Californians to\nbetter acquaint themselves with the state's driving laws and highway\nsafety procedures,\"\nThis is the first time that a Spanish version of the familiar\nhandbook has been printed in California.\nState Motor Vehicle Director Robert C. Cozens joined the governor\nin welcoming publication of the multi-colored booklet \"as another step\ntoward greater safety on our roads and highways.\"\nCozens pointed out that \"getting a driver's license is a bigger\nhurdle to many of our Spanish-speaking citizens than to most of the\nrest of us. Not only must they be familiar enough with the rules of the\nroad to pass the standard 36-question test, but they must also take a\nsecond test to prove that they can read and understand highway signs\nprinted in English.\"\nThe 48-page handbook explains in Spanish the meaning of a variety\nof road signs and symbols.\nCozens expressed thanks for assistance given during translation of\nthe booklet by the University of California at Davis and the Driving\nSchool Association of California.\n######\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi\nContact:\nPaul Bec...\n445-4571\n1-9-70\n#15\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nAssistant Secretary Lucian B. Vandegrift, 43, as Secretary of the\nHuman Relations Agency, effective January 16, 1970.\nA member of the administration since 1968, he succeeds Spencer\nWilliams in the $35,000 per year post. Williams has resigned to seek\nthe Republican nomination for Attorney General.\nIn announcing Vandegrift's appointment, Governor Reagan called\nhim \"a dedicated public servant who has demonstrated the leadership and\nprofessional qualities necessary to handle the complex problems of the\nHuman Relations Agency.\"\nIn accepting the promotion, Vandegrift said, \"I'm proud of the\nturst that Governor Reagan has placed in me and I pledge that I will\ncontinue the work I began two years ago to the best of my ability.\"\nThe Governor also thanked Williams for his three years of\nservice to the people of California which \"have been executed with\ndedication, loyalty and ability.\"\nIn addition to his service as Assistant Secretary of the\nagency he will now head, Vandegrift served as acting director of the\nDepartment of Human Resources Development and chairman of the State Health\nPlanning Council.\nHe joined the administration after serving six years as Butte\nCounty District Attorney and previous service as a deputy attorney\ngeneral in Macramento.\nA native Californian, Vandegrift is a graduate of the\nUniversity of California at Berkeley and the Boalt Hall law school.\nDuring World War II, he served in the U. S. Navy.\n######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californ\nContact:\nPaul BECK\n445-4571\n1-9-70\n#16\nGovernor Ronald Reagan's executive secretary, Edwin Meese III,\ntoday announced disapproval of a request by Berkeley Neighborhood\nLegal Services that it be assigned up to 10 VISTA volunteers.\nIn a letter to Carl N. Shaw, acting director of the Regional\nOffice of Economic Opportunity, San Francisco, Meese said that while\nthere is a need for many types of helpful programs in the Berkeley\ncommunity, \"it is our belief that VISTAs assigned to this organization\nwould be used for activities of a destructive nature.\n\"We have grave doubts about the type of programs to which these\nVISTAs would be assigned and the type of supervision they would receive\nat this time,\" Meese's letter said.\n\"While we have other concerns,\" he continued, \"our major\nobjection is the philosophy as represented by the action in a\nresolution of December, 1969, which was adopted by the board of\ndirectors of the Berkeley organization.\"\nThe resolution recommended:\n--The release of Huey P. Newton, convicted of manslaughter in\nthe killing of an Oakland policeman.\n--The release of David Hilliard, recently convicted of a fire-\narms law violation and also pending trial on federal charges of\nthreatening the life of President Nixon.\n--Amnesty for Eldridge Cleaver, a current fugitive from justice.\n\"From these examples, it is obvious that the activities of such\nvolunteers would heighten community tensions rather than achieve any\nconstructive benefits,\" Meese said.\n# # #\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-9-70\n#17\nGOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE\nJanuary 12, 1970\nthrough\nJanuary 18, 1970\nMonday, January 12\n4 p.m.\nPresentation of plaque by Butte County Peace\nOfficers Association for Governor's strong\nsupport of law enforcement (Governor's office).\nOvernight - Sacramento\nTuesday, January 13\n1:30 p.m.\nPRESS CONFERENCE\nOvernight - Sacramento\nWednesday, January 14\nNo public appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Sacramento\nThursday, January 15\na.m.\nDepart for Los Angeles\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nFriday, January 16\nMeeting of Board of Regents\nLos Angeles Extension Center\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nSaturday, January 17\np.m.\nDepart for Sacramento\nOvernight - Sacramento\nSunday, January 18\nNo appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Sacramento\n########\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-9-70\n#18\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nDonald G. Livingston, a member of the administration since May, 1967,\nas deputy director of the State Department of General Services.\nLivingston, 31, has served as chief of the Division of Consumer\nAffairs in the Department of Professional and Vocational Standards for\nthe past three months. He previously was chief of the Bureau of\nFurniture and Bedding Inspection prior to the formation, last September,\nof the Consumer Affairs Division.\nThe governor also said he is naming Raymond M. Reid of Sacramento\nto replace Livingston. As head of the Division of Consumer Affairs,\nReid also will have responsibility for the bureaus of Furniture and\nBedding Inspection, Electronic Repair Dealer Registration, and\nEmployment Agencies.\nA Republican, Livingston served as an administrative assistant to\nthe Republican Assembly Caucus from March, 1965, until his appointment\nwith the administration.\nHe was associated with Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Sales, Inc.,\nOakland from 1961-64.\nA former student body president and graduate of San Francisco State\nCollege, he worked as an intern for the Coro Foundation, San Francisco,\nfrom 1960-61.\nHe was a member and vice chairman of the Oakland Planning Commission\nfrom 1962-65. He and his family reside in Carmichael.\nReid, 42, served as executive secretary of the State (Educational)\nTelevision Advisory Committee from October 1967 until recently when, on\nReid's own recommendation, the office of Television Coordinator which\nhe headed was eliminated at a savings to the taxpayers of $50,322.\nUnder a reorganization plan, proposed by the Reagan administration\nand approved by the 1969 legislature, the Television Advisory Committee\nwas eliminated and replaced by a non-statutory Educational Radio and\nTelevision Advisory Committee of California.\nReid, worked on the sales staff of the Kelly Broadcasting Corporatic\nSacramento, from 1960 until joining the Reagan administration. He was\npreviously associated with the William Zinsser Company, Inc., New York,\na shellac importing and manufacturing firm, from 1956-60.\nA 1951 graduate of Yale University, he helped found the Yale\nAlumni Association of Sacramento in 1960.\nHe was a member of the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve from 1946-47 and\nfrom 1951-53.\nReid and his wife, Joan, have four children and reside in Sacrament\n#####\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-12-70\nFor your information, Governor Reagan is meeting\nwith student body presidents at 11 a.m. in the\nGovernor's Office. The meeting will be closed although\nit is anticipated the Governor will meet briefly with\nthe press following the meeting.\n# # #\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: IMMEDIATE\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-12-70\n#19\nGovernor Reagan today presented the following memorandum at a\nmeeting with student leaders held in his office. The memorandum, which\nalso will be sent to other students and student groups throughout\nCalifornia, is a follow-up to previous meetings held with students and\nto his State-of-the-State message in which he asked for meaningful\ninvolvement by students in state government.\n\"MEMORANDUM TO:\nStudents of the State of California\n\"FROM:\nGovernor Reagan\n\"SUBJECT:\nStudent Involvement in State Government.\n\"I would like to involve students in the decision-making process, in\nthe government of our state.\n\"To begin with particular projects, I would like to request nominations\nfor possible appointment to major boards and commissions in the area of\nEnvironment and the Quality of Life. I would also like your help in the\nspecific areas of the State Exposition and Fair (of direct interest to our\nagricultural students) and the Veterans Board (affecting many returning\nGIs who are now enrolling as students). Some of the Commissions involved\nare:\n\"1. Environment and Quality of Life\nState Park and Recreation Commission\nState Air Resources Board\nScenic Highway Advisory Committee\nAdvisory Committee, California Highway Safety Program\nCalifornia Arts Commission\nCalifornia Design Awards Committee\n\"2. California Exposition and State Fair\nExecutive Committee (Board of Directors)\nAdvisory Committee\n\"3. California Veterans Board\n\"The appointive power is one of any governor's most difficult burdens.\nIn attempting to pick qualified men and women to serve on the boards and\ncommissions which govern our state we must, as a matter of practical fact,\npass over dozens of candidates who might do equally well. As such, I can\nnly guarantee that your nominations will receive careful consideration.\n\"Nominations for appointment in the above areas should be forwarded to\nMiss Sue Sullivan, at 14431 Chase Street, Suite 3, Panorama City,\nCalifornia. Or if you wish, you may send your suggestions to my\nAppointments Secretary, Mr. Ned Hutchinson, at the State Capital,\nSacramento.\n\"I look forward to hearing from you on this subject before the end of\nthe month.\"\n#######\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Californi a\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-12-70\n#20\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nKarl A. Guntermann of Santa Barbara and the reappointment of Harry T.\nMagill of Novato to four year terms on the State Board of Accountancy.\nGurtermann, 49, a partner in the Santa Barbara CPA firm of\nGuntermann, Johnston, Ball and Thompson, is a former Santa Barbara City\nCouncilman and Harbor Commissioner. He is a Republican.\nActive in numerous civic, service and youth organizations,\nhe is a director-at-large of the Californoa CPA Society and a past\npresident of the Society's Channel Counties Chapter.\nHe is a native Californian and a graduate of Stanford University\nGuntermann and his wife Marian have three children. The\nfamily home is at 1610 Las Canoas Road, Santa Barbara.\nGuntermann succeeds Joseph F. Spilberg of Sherman Oaks\nwhose term has expired.\nMagill, 48, is a member of the Arthur Anderson and Company\nCPA firm in San Francisco. He has served on the board since 1966.\nHe is a Republican.\nMagill and his wife Marjorie have four children. The family\nhome is at 450 Ridge Road, Novato.\nBoard members are paid $25.00 per diem while on official duty.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-12-70\n#21\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment\nof Dr. Richard H. Jahns, Dean of the School of Mineral Sciences at\nStanford University, to a four-year-term on the State Mining and\nGeology Board.\nDr. Jahns, 54, lives at 2312 Branner Drive, Menlo Park. He\nis a Republican and has served on the board since 1966. The post pays\nnecessary expenses.\n#####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO..\nRELEASE: Imm liate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-13-70\n#22\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of three\nmembers to four-year-terms on the State Board of Agriculture.\nThey are: Howard H. Leach, president of a Salinas food\ncompany; Alfred Tisch, managing partner of a Hamilton City orchards\ncompany; and Paul Ames, owner of an Indio farm management service.\nAll are Republicans. They will receive necessary expenses.\nLeach, 40, of Box 146, Pebble Beach, is president of Fresh\nPict Foods, Inc. Active in agricultural and civic circles, he is\nchairman of the Traffic Committee of the Grower Shipper Vegetable\nAssociation at Salinas and is a director of the Monterey Boy Scout\nCouncil.\nHe succeeds Joseph J. Corsetti of Watsonville, whose term\nhas expired, as vegetables representative on the board.\nTisch, 64, of 1698 Park Vista Drive, Chico, is a managing\npartner of James Mills Orchards Company. He has been a member of the\nGovernor's Advisory Committee on Agricultural Foreign Trade since\n1967 and served as a member of President Eisenhower's Latin American\nAgricultural Trade Mission and the U. S. Fruit Industry Trade Mission\nto Europe. He will serve as representative-at-large, succeeding\nErnest E. Hatch of Oroville whose term has expired.\nAmes, 45, of 81485 Date Palm Avenue, Indio, is owner of the\nPaul Ames Management Service. A member of a pioneer Cochella Valley\nranching family, he is a member of the Citrus Research Committee of the\nUniversity of California, is a past president of the Cochella Valley\nFarm Bureau and is active in civic affairs.\nHe succeeds Lionel Steinberg of Thermal, whose term has\nexpired, as diversified crops representative on the board.\n#######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-13-70\n#23\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nLaurence G. Warner of Lower Lake to a four-year-term on the 49th\nDistrict Agricultural Association Board of Directors and reappointed\ntwo other board members.\nReappointed were Richard Miller of 105 North Tunis, Lakeport,\nSTeRbenk\nassistant manager of a farm supply company, and William D. Sternek,\n320 Lakeshore Boulevard, Lakeport, a cashier for Pacific Gas and Electric\nCompany. Both are Republicans.\nWarner, 53, a realtor and rancher, is a member of the\nLake County Chamber of Commerce, the 1969 Lake County Grand Jury, the\nAdvisory Committee to the California State Exposition and Fair Committee\nand a founding director of the Redbud Community Hospital.\nHe succeeds the late Carl J. Kettwig of Lucerne.\nWarner and his wife, Hazel, live in Lower Lake, Their address\nis P. O. Box 127, Lower Lake. He is a Republican.\nThe post pays necessary expenses.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-13-70\n#24\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today issued the following statement:\nLast September, as you know, I signed legislation authorizing the\nstate to finance a $500,000 pilot project designed to develop a truly\nequitable school lunch program for needy children which would be\navailable in not just some, but all school districts in California.\nI immediately directed members of my staff and the cabinet to\nexplore ways in which this could best be accomplished to guarantee\nthat matching funds would really be available to feed more hungry\nchildren in all parts of the state.\nBecause the legislation which reached my desk contained a number\nof serious technical defects flaws which had to be corrected before\nthe program could be expanded on a fair and equitable basis I was\nforced to scale down the original appropriation.\nFor, had the full $5 million as called for in the bill been\nappropriated, the money would have had to be used in only those school\ndistricts which were participating in lunch subsidy programs the\nprevious year. It would have provided no help at all to needy children\nin those districts which did not already have locally-funded school lunch\nprograms.\nLos Angeles, for example, with its heavy concentration of poverty\nchildren, would not have been eligible for any of the state aid.\nIn calling for the pilot program, I emphasized that I fully endorsed\nthe goal of providing meals for more of our hungry children.\nOn the basis of the findings of that pilot study, I am pleased to\nannounce that we will soon be proposing legislation, on an urgency basis,\nto overcome the defects of the previous bill in line with our stated\ngoal.\nThe legislation would cover the balance of the current year and\nfiscal 1970-71. It will not only assure that all school districts in the\nstate are covered, but it could mean up to $20 million for school lunch\nprograms, including federal, state and local matching funds.\nWe will recommend that up to $6 million of the $22.5 million in\nunallocated surplus from the 1968-69 fiscal year be appropriated to help\nfinance this vastly improved school lunch program.\n- 1 -\n#24\nTo this state appropriation, we expect the federal department of\nHEW to add at least $6 million in matching funds. In addition, we\nanticipate the U.S. Department of Agriculture will provide some $5\nmillion to the program. Three million dollars is already being\ncontributed to lunch subsidy programs through some local school\ndistricts in California.\nWithout the social welfare orientation to needy children- which\nour proposal will contain---the program could not qualify for matching\nfunds from HEW. Incidentally, last year's poorly drafted legislation\ndid not qualify for such matching.\nThe measure we are proposing is the result of a thorough study of\nall the alternatives available to us, as well as extensive consultation\n/the\nwith leadership of both houses of the legislature, and federal\nagriculture and HEW officials.\nI am confident that adoption of these recommendations by the\nlegislature can overcome the defects of last year's bill and go a long\nway toward meeting the nutritional needs of many more needy California\nschool children.\n#######\nEJG\n- 2 -\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-14-70\n#25\nGovernor Ronald Reagan emphasizing \"our solemn obligation to\nassure the citizens of this state that government in California will be\nbeholden only to the people' today asked \"every member of the\nlegislature to join together in unanimous approval \"of a landmark\nmeasure which will give California the toughest, most comprehensive\nconflict-of-interest law ever enacted in the United States.\nDetails of the legislation proposed jointly by the governor and\nthe legislative leadership of both houses was outlined today in a\npress conference called by Assembly Speaker Robert Monagan and Senate\nPresident Pro Tem Howard Way.\n\"Is it too much to ask, even in an election year, that every member\nof our legislature join together in unanimous approval of this landmark\nlegislation which can affirm, once and for all, our solemn obligation\nto assure the citizens of this state that government in California will\nbe beholden only to the people?\" the governor asked.\n\"I call upon every member of the Senate and Assembly, without regard\nto party affiliation, to demonstrate to the people of California their\nbi-partisan commitment to the important code of ethics set forth in this\nlandmark legislation. Such a commitment must concern each of us as\nindividuals if we are to maintain the people's confidence in their\ngovernment.\n\"While last year's partial disclosure law, which the legislature\npassed and I signed, was a step in the right direction, it failed to go\nnearly far enough in protecting against conflict of interest.\n\"At that time, I stated that the many gaps left open in the 1969\nmeasure 'must be closed in 1970.' You may recall that another bill, which\nwas introduced on behalf of the administration last year by Assemblyman\nNewton Russell would have closed such gaps but it failed to get out of\ncommittee.\n\"Disclosure is only one of several necessary approaches to conflict\nof interest. Unlike last year's partial disclosure law, this new\nlegislation will cover all state employees, including civil service and\nelective and appointive officials.\n- 1 -\n#25\n\"The investigative powers of the two separate commissions, as\nproposed in our new legislation, will put teeth into the efforts of both\nthe executive and legislative branches to root out instances where\nconflict of interest may exist.\n\"In addition, the new measure would clarify many of the ambiguities\nwhich are contained in the partial disclosure law, and consolidate into a\nsingle section those provisions now scattered throughout the government\ncode.\n\"Finally, while hitting at the dishonest individual, and detecting\nand punishing the guilty, the proposed law will also protect innocent\npersons serving the public from unfounded and malicious attacks on their\ncharacter and reputation,\" the governor said.\n########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-14-70\n#26\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today proposed the sale of personalized.\nvehicle license plates to help finance the war against air pollution.\nUnder the plan, a $25 fee would be charged for the special plates\nwith the bulk of the proceeds to be placed in a special environmental\nprotection fund. Legislation will be introduced to create the\nenvironmental fund and authorize sale of the plates.\n\"If only two per cent of the owners of registered motor vehicles\nin California apply for the plates, revenue for the fund would amount to\nnearly $3.8 million annually,\" the governor said.\n\"This plan would provide every motorist with the opportunity to\nhelp solve the problem he has helped to create,\" the governor pointed\nout.\n\"The special plates would serve as a symbol of concern about the\npollution problem and identify the motorist as one who is doing something\nto correct the problem.\"\nThe proposal would permit the Department of Motor Vehicles to sell\nthe plates, deduct the actual amount of the cost (approximately $6.80\nper plate) and earmark the remaining amount for the campaign against air\npollution. The Resources Agency would supervise the dispersement of\nthe fund.\n########\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO\n.\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-14-70\n#27\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nJohn E. Bennett of San Diego to fill the recently created post of\ndeputy director of the Department of Navigation and Ocean Development.\nIn his post, Bennett will report directly to Robert C. Walker,\ndirector of the department.\nBennett, a retired Navy Captain with extensive experience in ocean\nengineering, was manager of the Lockheed Ocean Laboratory in San Diego\nfrom 1966 to late 1969.\nGovernor Reagan said Bennett's technical and management background\nwill be a valuable asset to the state in our coastal zone preservation\nand development efforts, and to the department of navigation and ocean\ndevelopment which was created in 1969 to coordinate all of California's\nocean-oriented activities.\nIn the Navy, Captain Bennett won the Navy Cross aboard the\nillustrious cruiser SAN FRANCISCO in the Battle of Guadalcanal. Later,\nshifting to submarine duty, he became the first program director of the\nNavy's Deep Submergence Program.\nBennett, a 51-year-old Republican, was a 1941 graduate of the U.S.\nNaval Academy. He has been a frequent public speaker on ocean-related\nsubjects and recently served as chairman of the Oceanography Committee\nof the San Diego Chamber of Commerce,\nHe will be joined in Sacramento by his wife and teenage daughter.\nHis salary will be $21,516 per year.\n#######\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-14-70\n#28\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of\nJoseph F. Sinnott of San Diego and Winston R. Fuller of San Marino\nto four year terms on the California Highway Commission, subject to\nSenate confirmation.\nSinnott, 64, president of the San Diego Gas and Electric Company,\nwill succeed V. Earl Roberts of San Diego, whose term has expired.\nFuller, 59, a business executive and civic leader, will succeed\nAlexander Pope of Los Angeles, whose term has also expired.\nBoth appointees are Republicans. The will be paid actual and\nnecessary expenses.\nSinott, who lives at 2265 Juan Street, San Diego, is a former\npresident of the San Diego Chamber of Commerce, San Diegans, Inc.\nand a member of the Governor's Judicial Selection Advisory Board for\nSan Diego County.\nFuller, who lives at 30 Kewen Place, San Marino, is a trustee of\nthe Rose Hills Memorial Park Association, a trustee of the Desert\nCharities (Bob Hope Desert Classic), a member of the Associated General\nContractors, a member of the Orthopaedic Council of the Orthopaedic\nHospital, a past president of the University of Southern California\nGeneral Alumni Association and a past alumni member of the USC Board\nof Trustees and a past president of the Trojan Club.\n# # # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-14-70\n#29\nGovernor Ronald Reagan announced today that for the third straight\nyear he is reappointing Ralph Nissen of Williams as chairman of the\nCalifornia Exposition and Fair Executive Committee.\nNissen, who was first appointed chairman February 1, 1968, will\ncontinue to serve in that capacity during the coming year, until\nFebruary 1, 1971. The post is non-salaried.\nA veteran Colusa County rancher, Nissen, 58, was first named to\nthe fair board for a four-year term February 1, 1967.\nHe was regional director of the California Farm Bureau for five\nyears and served as a vice president of the organization for four years.\nHe is a Republican.\n#########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: IMMED LATE\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-15-70\n#30\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nDr. L. H. Larson of Ventura and the reappointment of Dr. Herbert K. Yee\nof Sacramento to four year terms on the Board of Dental Examiners of\nCalifornia.\nBoth men are Republicans. They will be paid $25 per diem each\nday they spend on official duty.\nDr. Larson, 53, who lives at 347 Dorothy Street, Ventura, is a\nmember of the Southern California Dental Association Legislative Council,\na former member of the Ventura City Council, a member of the Ventura-Santa\nBarbara Dental Association and is active in civic groups.\nHe is a graduate of the State University of Iowa Dental School.\nDr. Yee, 46, has served on the board oince 1966. He is active\nin the Sacramento, California and American Dental Associations and\nSacramento civic affairs. He received his degree from the College of\nPhysicians and Surgeons of the University of the Pacific.\nHis home is at 1301 Normandy Lane, Sacramento.\n####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-15-70\n#31\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Dr\nR. Scott Jackson of Chino and Maxwell C. Pellish of Santa Barbara to the\nBoard of Examiners in Veterinary Medicine.\nDr. Jackson, 55, a political independent, was named to a three\nyear term succeeding Dr. Joseph E. Giambroni of Red Bluff, whose term\nhas expired. He will serve as veterinarians' representative on the\nboard.\nPellish, 70, a Republican, was named to fill the unexpired term\nof Richard D. Moon of Hemet, which expires on January 15, 1971. Hemet\nhas resigned, Pellish will represent the public on the board.\nThe post pays $25 per diem while on official duty and necessary\nexpenses.\nDr. Jackson, a graduate of Howard Payne College and Colorado\nState University, is active in numerous veterinary associations and\nthoroughbred horse breeding groups. He lives at 14909 Archibald Avenue,\nChino.\nPellish, a retired army officer and graduate engineer and a\nfaculty member of the University of California at Santa Barbara, is\nchairman of the Santa Barbara Board of Water Commissions.\nHis home address is 1502 Francheschi Road, Santa Barbara.\n###\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: FRIDAY A.Ms.\nSacramento, California\nJanuary 16, 1970\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-15-70\n#32\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today proposed a sweeping plan \"to improve\nthe quality and hold down the cost of a wide array of state health-\nrelated programs\" by consolidating them into a single Department of Health\nThe plan, which the governor called \"a whole new concept in the\nfield of health,' willbe presented to California's \"Little Hoover\nCommission\" today the first in a series of formal steps leading to\nimplementation by July 1, 1971, subject to legislative approval.\nUnder the proposal, the departments of Mental Hygiene, Public Health\nand Health Care Services would be transferred to the new department, with\nthe exception of Mental Hygiene's two neuropsychiatric institutes whose\nprimary functions are teaching and research.\nThe neuropsychiatric institutes would be assigned to the University\nof California.\nThe new department also would include the social service functions\nof the Department of Social Welfare, such as the placement of persons\ndischarged from state hospitals in out-of-home care facilities,\nsupervision of county adoption programs, identification of medical\ntreatment needs, promotion of adequate child nutrition, family planning\ncounseling, and provision of home health aides or homemakers.\nSocial Welfare would retain its money payment responsibilities.\nIn addition, the Department of Rehabilitation's alcoholism clinic\nprogram, and 10 \"healing arts\" and social work licensing boards, now in\nthe Department of Professional and Vocational Standards, would be\ntransferred to the new department.\nIn carrying out his responsibilities, the person chosen to be the\ndirector of the new department would be assisted in formulating policies\nand programs by an Advisory Health Council which would replace the State\nBoard of Public Health, Health Planning Council and the Health Review and\nPlanning Council. Insofar as possible, the members of the new council\nwould be selected from the membership of the three discontinued boards.\nCivil service employees performing the functions which would come\nunder the new department would be transferred, and their status, rights,\nand positions would be protected. Should personnel reductions become\nnecessary, they would be accomplished through attrition.\n1 I I\n#32\nGovernor Reagan emphasized that the purpose for creating the new\ndepartment is not to effect personnel reductions, but to provide a more\neffective and efficient delivery of health care services to the people\nof California.\n\"In fact, he said, \"the change will provide even greater career\nopportunities to those working in the health field as we move to meet\nthe pressing challenges of the seventies.\n\"This plan represents our determination to move forward under a\nwhole new concept in the field of health.\"\nHe noted that \"the need for a major change in the organization of\nthe state's health-oriented departments has grown increasingly more\napparent during the past several years as the demands for more\nexpenditures and services often fragmented between departments have\nbeen undertaken by the state,\" the governor said.\n\"Due to the compounding of our already difficult problems of\nadministration, this administration activated the first of a series of\ntask forces in November, 1968, to examine the present system and make\nrecommendations for possible changes.\n\"These efforts have led to the development of the sweeping plan we\nare proposing reorganization designed, in essence, to improve the\nquality, while holding down the cost, of those health-related programs\nwhich are administered or supervised by the state.\n\"Creation of the new department will enable the state to do a better\njob in both evaluating the total health needs of our population and\ndeveloping effective programs to meet them.\n\"Besides providing much greater coordination of programs currently\nsplit among departments, the plan will also enable the administration to\nview health needs comprehensively so that we can increase program\neffectiveness while making more efficient use of the taxpayers' money.\"\nGovernor Reagan said his plan transfers Health Care Services to the\nnew department because the Medi-Cal program, which it now administers,\n\"is aimed primarily at health restoration. Medi-Cal expenditures should\nbe viewed and analyzed alongside other health expenditures.\"\n\"In addition, he explained, \"the state's Medi-Cal purchasing power,\nwhich by its very nature will have an impact on the total health care\ndelivery system, should be used to improve the quality and lower the cost\nof such services.\"\n- 2 -\n#32\nThe governor noted that the state is currently spending more than\none billion dollars a year on Medi-Cal, of which $454 million comes from\nthe federal government, $219 million from the counties, and $387 million\nfrom the state general fund.\n\"An expenditure program of this magnitude requires that we cooperate\nclosely with the private sector to seek alternative ways of providing\nquality care at lower cost.\n\"It is essential, in evaluating total health needs and priorities,\nthat we view this program in conjunction with other health programs, and\nthis can best be accomplished by placing the responsibility for Medi-Cal\nin the new department.\"\nGovernor Reagan emphasized that \"establishment of the Department of\nHealth is not going to be a panacea for all the state's problems related\nto health.\n\"It will, however, improve substantially our ability to solve these\nproblems. It will permit us to do a more effective job of evaluating\ntotal health needs and develop programs to meet them.\n\"It will enable us to fix responsibility and accountability for\nprogram results, and provide an atmosphere which encourages innovation\nin these important areas.\n\"The State of California has a vital role to play in meeting the\nhealth needs of our citizens. Creation of a Department of Health is an\nessential first step if we are to fulfill this role, \" the governor said.\n(The \"healing arts\" and social work licensing boards referred to on\npage 1 of this release are:)\nBoard of Chiropractic Examiners\nBoard of Dental Examiners\nBoard of Medical Examiners\nBoard of Nursing Education and Nurse Registration\nBoard of Optometry\nBoard of Osteopathic Examiners\nBoard of Pharmacy\nBoard of Examiners in Veterinarian Medicine\nBoard of Vocational Nurse and Psychiatric Technician Examiners\nSocial Worker and Marriage Counselor Qualifications Board\n#######\n- 3 -\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-15-70\n#33\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today proposed creation of the first\nstate Department of Consumer Affairs in the nation to provide \"a direct\nlink between the consumer and those state agencies which work for his\nprotection.\"\nThe plan, which will be submitted to California's \"Little Hoover\nCommission\" tomorrow, also calls for the appointment of public members\nto agencies which are most directly concerned with consumer protection\nand places investigative agencies into a single unit to eliminate\noverlapping jurisdiction and duplication.\nThe proposal is being submitted under the governor's reorganization\nauthority and is subject to legislative approval.\n\"Under our proposal a citizen with a consumer complaint will be\nable to call the new department and know that his complaint will be\nprocessed by or referred to the proper agency,\" the governor said.\n\"We are providing a direct link between the consumer and those\nstate agencies which work for his protection and whether the citizen\nhas a complaint about a rotten potato or a quack who claims he can\ncure baldness, he knows he can call a single number and the complaint\nwill be handled by the new department or other state departments\nconcerned with his protection.\"\nUnder the proposal\nthe Office of the Consumer Counsel will\nofficially be transferred to the new department to give the counsel\nadditional administrative support.\nThe office has been operating in the Department of Professional\nand Vocational Standards since October in anticipation of the\nreorganization plan.\nThe governor said that he also will announce other legislative\nprograms to further strengthen consumer protection and indicated that\nit will call for increased public membership on other regulatory boards\nand commissions in the state government and will include an educational\nprogram for consumers.\nOther proposals that will be included call for:\n--Establishment of an umbrella agency to handle other repair\nservice if needed under a new Bureau of Repair Services.\nConsolidation of the Collection Agency Licensing Bureau and the\nBureau of Private Investigators and Adjustors into the Bureau of\nCollection and Investigative Services, responsible to a single chief.\n#33\n--Establishment of the Department's Division of Investigation on\na statutory basis to bring all of the investigative, inspectional and audi\naudit services of the various boards into a single unit to provide\nmaximum service wiile reducing operating costs.\nThe plan ca lls for the substitution of a public member in the\nplace of a licensee member on the Board of Accountancy, Board of\nArchitectural Examiners, Board of Barber Examiners, Cemetery Board,\nCalifornia Advisory Board of Collection Agencies, Contractors State\nLicense Board, Board of Cosmetologh, Board of Registration for\nProfessional Engineers, Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers,\nCalifornia Advisory Board of Furniture and Bedding, Board of Landscape\nArchitects and Structural Pest Control Boards.\n\"With additional public members on these boards, the voice of the\naverage citizen will be heard,\" the governor said.\n#\n#\n#\n#\n#\nWAS\n-2-\nOFFICE OF THER GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-16-70\n# 34\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today named William A. Evans, 31, as\nAssistant Legislative Secretary and announced the reassignment of two\nstaff members.\nTom McMurray, 30, Assistant Cabinet Secretary, was appointed a\nlegislative and\nSpecial Assistant, assigned to/program analysis, and Edwin Thomas, 38, wa\nnamed to succeed him as Assistant Cabinet Secretary.\nEvans, who will receive a salary of $20,700, has a background\nin sales, banking and business and has been active in Republican groups.\nHe is a graduate of Stanford University and attended the University of\nArizona Law School.\nHe and his wife Dorothy have one son. They live at 2212 Royal\nRoad, Sacramento.\nMcMurray, who joined the administration in 1968, is a graduate\nengineer and the former associate publisher and editor of an Illinois\nnewspaper. He and his wife have five children. They live at 5208 Galaxy\nParkway, Sacramento. McMurray will receive an annual salary of\n$20,000.\nThomas, who joined the administration in 1967, has served as\ncoordinator of the Governor's Survey on Efficiency and Cost Control\ntask force, which implemented savings of $200 million in the cost of\nstate government. He and his wife Gretchen have two children. They\nlive at 447 Fairhills Drive, San Rafael. Thomas will receive an annual\nsalary of $20,000.\n# ### #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-16-70\n#35\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Thomas R.\nDolan of San Francisco to a four year term on the California Veterans\nBoard, subject to Senate confirmation.\nDolan, 44, a communications consultant with the Pacific Telephone\nCompany, is a Republican. He will succeed John Monaghan of San Francisco\nwhose term has expired. The post pays $20 per day, per meeting.\nA Navy veteran of World War II, he is a past commander of\nAmerican Legion Post 505, the Veterans' Political Council and the\nVeterans of Foreign Wars.\nDolan is also a past president of Golden Gate Parlor, Native Sons\nof the Golden West and is active in the Sons of Norway, the Norwegian\nClub and the Telephone Pioneers.\nHe and his wife Dolores have three sons. The family home is at\n2207 27th Street, San Francisco.\n####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-16-70\n#36\nGOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE\nJanuary 19, 1970\nthrough\nJanuary 25, 1970\nMonday, January 19\n3:00 E .m.\nSwearing-in of Lucian Vandergrift,\nGovernor's Office\nOvernight - Sacramento\nTuesday, January 20\n10:00 a.m.\nPRESS CONFERENCE\nOvernight - Sacramento\nWednesday, January 21\nOffice appointments only\nOvernight - Sacramento\nThursday, January 22\n8:00 a.m.\nGovernor's Prayer Breakfast, Senator Hotel\n4:00 p.m.\nDepart for Los Angeles\n7:00 p.m.\nNinth Annual Dinner of the Archemedes Circle\nof the School of Engineering to commemorate the\ndedication of the Seaver Science Center,\nBeverly Hilton Hotel\nSpeech.\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nFriday, January 23\nNo appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nSaturday, January 24\n10:00 a.m.\nArrive Biltmore Bowl for brief remarks to\nLos Angeles County Republican Precinct Workers\norganizing meeting.\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nSunday, January 25\nReturn to Sacramento\nOvernight - Sacramento\n########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-19-70\nThe new Human Relations Secretary, Lucian Vandegrift, will be\nsworn in this afternoon at 3 p.m. in the Governor's Office.\nPress coverage is invited.\n#########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-19-70\n#37\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of ten\nmembers to four year terms on the newly-created TOPICS Advisory Committee\n(Urban Area Traffic Operations Improvement Committee).\nEstablished by the 1969 legislature with the support of Governor\nReagan, the committee was created to provide cities and counties with\na greater voice in determining how federal funds will be spent in the\nupgrading of local streets and county roads.\nThe committee members are:\nmontclair\nMayor Harold montclair M. Hayes of the City of Claremont. A Democrat, he has\nserved on the Clarement City Council since 1956, including two terms as\nmayor, is a member of the Board of Directors of the League of\nCalifornia Cities and served as chairman of its Transportation Committee\nfor five years. He lives at 4574 Orchard Street, Montclair, with his\nwife Doris. They have two sons. Hayes will represent cities.\nCity Manager Jerome Keithley of Oakland. A Republican, Keithley\nhas served as City Manager of Stockton and Palo Alto and is a member of\nthe Advisory Committee to the California Highway Commission and the\nDirector of Public Works on freeway route adoption and design procedures.\nHe also served as secretary of the State Advisory Committee for Planning,\nStatewide System of Freeways and Expressways, and has held executive\nposts in the League of California Cities. Keithley will represent cities.\nPublic Works Director Richard F. Lovejoy of the City of Richmond.\nA Republican, he has served as Director of Public Works for the City of\nSan Leandro, is a past president of the Northern California chapter of\nthe American Public Works Association and a past president of the Public\nWorks Officers Department of the League of California Cities. He lives\nat 1475 Vista Road, El Cerrito. Lovejoy will represent city engineers.\nPublic Works Director Anthony R. Turturici of the City of San Jose.\nA Republican, he has headed San Jose's Public Works Department since\n1965. He is active in numerous state and national professional societies\nincluding the Institute of Traffic and Transportation Engineers, the\nAmerican Public Works Association, the American Society of Civil Engineers\nthe Water Pollution Control Federation and the American Water Works\nAssociation. He lives at 1836 Kenpark Court, San Jose with his wife\nBarbara. They have one son. Turturici will represent city engineers.\n-1-\n#37\nCity Manager John Wentz of the City of Riverside. A Republican, he\nhas served as assistant city manager of Long Beach and Administrative\nOfficer of the City of Beverly Hills. He is an immediate past president\nof the International City Management Association and has served two\nprevious state administrations as a member of the Regional Water\nPollution Control Board for the Los Angeles Region and the California\nRegional Land Use Information System Project Steering Committee. He and\nhis wife Mary Jo have five children. They live at 3620 Castle Reagh\nPlace, Riverside. Wentz will represent cities.\nCounty Executive Carl G. Johnson of Sacramento. A non-partisan,\nJohnson served as a county administrator and county manager in Michigan,\nNorth Carolina and Georgia before coming to Sacramento, He is a past\npresident of the National Association of County Administrators, a\nformer director of the National Association of Counties and a member of\nthe International City Managers Association. He lives at 6500 Greenhaven,\nSacramento. Johnson will represent counties.\nRoad Commissioner Irvin L. Morhar of Los Angeles County. A Democrat\nhe is a member of the National Association of County Engineers, the\nCounty Engineers Association of California, the Metropolitan\nTransportation Engineering Board, the Los Angeles Chapter of the American\nPublic Works Association and the Los Angeles County Watershed Commission.\nHis home is at 12405 Hortense Street, Studio City. He will represent\ncounty engineers.\nPublic Works Director James T. Pott of Santa Clara County. A\nRepublican, he is a member of the Advisory Committee to the California\nHighway Commission and the Director of Public Works on freeway route\nlocation and design procedures, project director for the Santa Clara\nCounty Technical Bus Study, and is a member of the County Supervisors\nAssociation of California, the County Highway Safety Organization, the\nCounty Engineers Association of California and other civic and professional\nassociations. His home is at 868 Richardson Court, Palo Alto. He will\nrepresent county engineers.\n-2-\n#37\nSupervisor Daniel D. Mikesell of San Bernardino County. A\nRepublican, he has been active in regional, local and state organizations\ninvolved with viation, highways, recreation, water and conservation,\nincluding the California Supervisors Association Aviation Committee,\nCalifornians For Modern Highways and the California Wildlife Association.\nHe also ser ved as coordinator of the Southern California Inter-County\nPlan of Highways. He lives at 811 West Granada Court, Ontario. He\nwill repres ent counties.\nPubl ic Works Director James L. Martin of the City of Fresno. A\nRepublican, he is a former Public Works Director for the City of\nBerkele - and a former Assistant City Engineer for the City of San\nLeandr,). He is a member of the Governor's Committee on Traffic Safety\nand the California Solid Waste Advisory Committee, a past president of\nthe Northern California Chapter of the American Public Works Association\nand vice president of the Public Works Officers Section of the League of\nCalifornia Cities. His home is at 4140 North Angus Street, Fresno. He\nwill represent city engineers.\nCommittee members receive no salary.\n# # #\n-3-\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-19-70\n#38\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today praised President Nixon's\nselection of Allan Oakley Hunter as president of the Federal National\nMortgage Association.\nHunter, Fresno attorney and former Congressman, was appointed\nchairman of the California Commission on Housing and Community Develop-\nment by Governor Reagan in 1967.\n\"We will miss the creative services that Oakley Hunter has\nprovided this administration,\" the governor said, \"but his appointment\nto this sensitive and most important post in Washington will benefit\nthe whole nation as well as California.\"\n# # #\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO.\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-19-70\n#39\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today named Earl W. Brian, Jr., a former\nArmy flight surgeon and winner of the Silver Star for gallantry in action,\nas director of the State Department of Health Care Services, succeeding\nCarel W. Mulder who is resigning the $30,000-a-year post April 1.\nBrian, who received his M.D. degree from Duke University, served\nfor two years with the Army Medical Corps, before being discharged last\nmonth.\nHe received the Silver Star for administering first aid, under heavy\nenemy fire, to his fellow soldiers on the battlefield last February 23\nin Vietnam.\nPrior to entering the service in January, 1968, Dr. Brian worked as\nexecutive secretary to the California State Welfare Board for six months.\nHe was assistant administrator, and a member of the Department of\nSurgery etaff, at the Stanford University Medical Center from July, 1966\nto June, 1967.\nHe previously served a year and a half as assistant director of the\nLipid Metabolism Study Program at the Durham, North Carolina, Veterans\nAdministration Hospital.\nHe and his wife, Jane, live in Sacramento. Brian, 28, is a\nRepublican. His appointment is effective April 1.\nMulder said he is resigning to enter private health care consultant\nwork.\nIn a letter to the governor, he noted that when he took on the\nresponsibility for administering the state's Medi-Cal program he did so\n\"with the mutual understanding that I might wish to relinquish the\nappointment upon becoming eligible for retirement in the Spring of 1970.\n\"It has been a distinct privilege to work with you and your\nassociates this past three years,\" Mulder said.\nGovernor Reagan said he accepted Mulder's resignation with \"deep\nregret.\n\"Your performance for this administration has been one of ability,\ndedication and hard work, and I thank you for your fine service to the\nstate.\n\"All of us wish you well in your future endeavors,\" the governor .\nadded.\nMulder joined the administration as director of the Medi-Cal program\nJanuary 31, 1967.\n#\n#\n#\n#\n#\n#\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-20-70\n#40\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today named Stanislaus County Chief\nAdministrative Officer Charles E. Dixon, a former chief deputy director\nof the State Department of Finance, as Director of the Department of\nGeneral Services.\nThe appointment becomes effective February 20.\nDixon, a 46 year-old Republican, will take over the $30,000-a-year\npost held by Verne Orr until Orr was named state director of finance late\nlast December.\nEarl Coke, secretary of Agriculture and Services, is serving as\nacting director of the department, in addition to his duties as head of\nthe agency, until Dixon assumes his new responsibilities.\nDixon has held his county post since 1962, except for a one-year\nperiod beginning in October, 1967, when he took a leave of absence to\nserve in the Reagan administration as chief deputy director of finance.\nBefore taking the Stanislaus County job, he was an assistant\nadministrative officer in Fresno County for six years.\nHe has been a member of the state's prestigious \"Little Hoover\nCommission\" since last May and the State Health Review and Program Council\nfor the past year.\nDixon also is a member of the California Functional Classification\nAdvisory Committee, the County Supervisors' Association legislative\ncommittee, and the State Chamber of Commerce Tax Committee.\nA 1948 graduate of UCLA in business administration, Dixon is an Army\nAir Corps veteran currently serving as a lieutenant colonel in the 115th\nGeneral Support Group, California National Guard, headquartered in\nRoseville.\nHis wife, Betty, is a graduate of the University of Southern\nCalifornia and teaches kindergarten in the Sylvan School District, near\nModesto.\nThey have three children.\n########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-20-70\n#41\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today issued the following statement:\n\"Last week I outlined an administration plan to draw six million\n/dollars\ndollars from the state's unallocated surplus of 22.5 million to help\nfinance a vastly improved school lunch program totaling some 20 million\ndollars for hungry children in not just some, but all parts of\nCalifornia.\n\"Today, I am pleased to announce a proposal to the legislature which\nwill double the effectiveness of the remaining 16.5 million dollar\nsurplus by freeing a total of 33 million dollars for critically needed\nclassroom construction in the state.\n\"Here is how the plan works.\n/dollars\n\"First, we will ask that the 16.5 million be used as a loan to the\nState School Building Aid Bond Fund. The money would then be funneled\nthrough the state's Local Allocations Board into those 16 school districts\nwith the most pressing construction needs.\n\"Second, in order to make the money on hand go just as far as\npossible, we will recommend that the original 16.5 million dollar loan\nbe repaid from the first sale of school bonds next fall, and that these\nproceeds then be appropriated for the construction of additional class-\nrooms on a number of our community college campuses. Assuming an\nimprovement in the condition of the market for state bonds, such a sale\nshould occur in September.\n\"The classrooms which this money will help to build will go a long\nway toward relieving the need for double and triple sessions in those\nschool districts most critically affected.\n\"At the same time, the additional facilities required to meet the\nmushrooming enrollment needs of the community colleges are of equal\nimportance to the continued progress of our overall system of public\nhigher education in California.\n\"The plan we are proposing is an imaginative one which insures the\nabsolute maximum effectiveness of those dollars which are now available\nfor school purposes.\n\"I call on the legislature to give the proposal the strong and speedy\nbipartisan support it deserves.\"\nHere are the 16 school districts to which the governor makes\nreference in the statement:\nNapa Valley Unified\n$5,035,806.59\nWashington Union\n$ 47,629.79\nIgo-Ono Platina\n60,000.00\nOak Grove\n1,064,595.32\nGeyserville Unified\n861,565.04\nSan Joaquin\n53,081.78\nShaffer Union\n276,780.00\nSan Joaquin\n767,682.18\nOak Grove\n644,995.22\nMurray\n124,074.00\nHollister\n855,895.66\nNapa Valley Unified\n2,725,676.63\nHerlong\n289,402.00\nSan Ysidro\n239,524.31\nTustin Union High\n2,119,494.70\nCeres Unified\n1,540,440.37\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-20-70\nCORRECTION\nPlease correct press release #41 (4th paragraph of statement)\nto read: 13 school districts (sted of 16).\nLast paragraph should also be corrected to read 13 (sted of 16)\nschool districts.\n(Here is a listing of these school districts itemized on the\nrelease, by county:\nNapa Valley Unified, Napa\nIgo-Ono Platina, Shasta\nGeyserville Unified, Sonoma\nShaffer Union, Lassen\nOak Grove, Santa Clara\nHollister, San Benito\nHerlong, Lassen\nTustin Union High, Orange\nWashington Union, Monterey\nOak Grove, Santa Clara\nSan Joaquin, Orange\nSan Joaquin, Orange\nMurray, Alameda\nNapa Valley Unified, Napa\nSan Ysidro, San Diego\nCeres Unified, Stanislaus\n#########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nR\nMEMO TO THE\nRESS\nSacramento, Califor\n1\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-20-70\n#42\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the\nsigning of his first bill passed by the 1970\nlegislative session.\nThe bill, AB 131, authored by Assemblyman\nFrank D. Lanterman (R-La Canada), validates the\nPasadena Area Junior College District Maximum\ntax rate election held October 21, 1969.\n# # #\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-20-70\n#43\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today expressed great pleasure at the\nannouncement from Washington that one and one-half miles of the\nMarine Corps' Southern California Beach is being offered to the state\nfor recreational use.\nThe ocean beach frontage lies immediately south of the San Onofre\nNuclear Power Plant in San Diego County, and is part of the Camp\nPendleton Marine Base.\n\"I am pleased that the federal government has joined us in\nmeeting the tremendous recreational needs of Southern California,\"\nthe governor said. \"This is the first breakthrough in several years\nof negotiations spearheaded by Norman B. Livermore, Jr., Secretary for\nResources, and William Penn Mott, Jr., Director of the Department of\nParks and Recreation\"\n\"We're hopeful that eventually several more miles of this\nmagnificent shoreline will be released to us for similar use.\"\nSouthern California ocean beaches have been given top priority\nfor acquisition and development, the governor noted.\nThe state will move immediately to make the new beach lands\navailable for public use, the governor said.\n\"We hope to have at least temporary facilities available for public\nuse by this summer,\" the governor said.\n#####\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\n#44\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of\nWilliam G. Maas, senior vice president of the First National Bank\nof San Diego, to a four-year-term as a member of the Board of\nAdministration of the Public Employees Retirement System.\nMaas, who has served on the board since 1967, will represent\nbank officers on the board. He will receive $25 per diem plus\nexpenses.\nMaas is a past president of the Financial Analysts Society of\nSan Diego and a member of the California Bankers Association's Committee\non Trust Investments. He is a Republican.\nHis address is Box 304, Rancho Santa Fe, San Diego.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\n#45\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nTimothy M. Doheny, Southern California rancher and sportsman, to a\nsix-year-term on the State Fish and Game Commission, subject to Senate\nconfirmation.\nDoheny, 43, a Republican, succeeds James Y. Camp of Los Angeles\nwhose term has expired. The post pays $10 per day, not to exceed\n$50 per member per month.\nA breeder of cattle and horses, Doheny is active in fish and\ngame stocking experiments and conservation work. He is a member\nof the Rodeo Cowboys Association, Ducks Unlimited and a governor\nand trustee of the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History.\nHis home is at 409 North Bristol Avenue, Los Angeles.\n####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\n#46\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nHayward attorney Dallas S. Edgar to a newly-created San Leandro-\nHayward Judicial District Municipal Court bench.\nEdgar, 48, a Republican, will receive an annual salary of\n$29,270.\nA director of the Hayward Area Recreation District, Edgar is\nalso active in the Bay Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America\nand is an Associate Government Appeals Agent for Local Draft Board\n54 (Hayward).\nHe is also a director of the Southern Alameda County Bar Association\nand a member of the California and Alameda County Bar Associations,\nthe Hastings Alumni Association, the American Arbitration Association and\nPhi Alpha Delta legal fraternity.\nAn Air Force veteran of World War II, he attended the University\nof Hawaii, graduated from the University of California and received\nhis law degree from Hastings College of Law.\nHe and his wife Patricia Ann have two children. The family\nhome is in Hayward.\n###\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\n#47\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today appointed three members to four-year\nterms on the Board of Directors of the 21A District Agricultural\nAssociation (Madera District Fair).\nThey are:\nRobert A. Howe, a sales manager, of 19259 Raymond Road, Madera.\nA Republican, he succeeds Rita A. Forte of Madera, whose term has\nexpired.\nJoe D. Law, a farmer, 13431 Avenue 19, Chowchilla. A Republican,\nhe succeeds Mrs. Rosemary Boyle, whose term has expired.\nLloyd V. Taylor, businessman and farmer, 1701 West Fourth Street,\nMadera. A Republican, he succeeds Louis B. Shein of Madera, whose\nterm has expired.\nBoard members are paid necessary expenses.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO..\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\n#48\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of three\nnew members to four year terms on the Real Estate Commission and\nreappointed one member.\nThe new members are William P. Beachem, a West Los Angeles real\nestate broker; Grant B. Potter, president of a Dinuba forest products\ncompany, and Phil Saenz, director of Job Opportunities in Electronics,\nInc., San Diego.\nHarlan S. Geldermann, a Danville realtor, was reappointed\nBeachem, a Republican, is a member of the Los Angeles Urban League,\nthe Los Angeles Realty Board, Inc., the National Association of Real\nEstate Boards and the Educational Committee of the Consolidated Realty\nBoard. He succeeds Ralph H. Miller of Upland, whose term has expired,\nand will represent real estate on the board. He lives at 10242 South\nVan Ness Avenue, Los Angeles.\nPotter, a graduate of the University of Idaho at Moscow, served\nas Assistant State Forester of Idaho and as a member of the Idaho State\nLegislature before coming to California. Since 1959, he has served\nas president and general manager of Sequoia Forest Industries, Inc.\nA Republican, he will serve as a public member of the board. He lives\nat 785 Saginaw Street, Dinuba.\nSaenz, active in numerous civic groups, is an administrator of\na private industry sponsored program to hire and train the disadvantaged\nand unemployed. A Republican, he is a past director of the Economic\nOpportunity Commission of San Diego County, a past director of the\nCitizens Interracial Committee, a past chairman of the San Diego County\nAdvisory Committee of the Fair Employment Practice Commission, a\nmember of the San Diego Urban Coalition, and a member of the San Diego\nChapter of the Mexican American Political Association. He will represent\nthe public on the Commission. He lives at 4217 Spillman Drive, San\nDiego.\nGeldermann, a Republican, is a past president of the Contra Costa\nReal Estate Board and a past chairman of the Land Development Committee\nof the California Real Estate Association. His address is P. O. Box 415\nDanville.\nCommissioners are paid actual and necessary expenses.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContace:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nNew members of the State Real Estate Commission will be\nsworn in at 1 p.m. Thursday, January 22, by Governor Reagan in the\nGovernor's Office. Among them will be William P. Beachem of Los Angeles,\nthe first Negro to be appointed to the commission. Press coverage is\ninvited.\n# # #\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nSacramento, Californi\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\nJudge MacBride, chairman of the Governor's\nPrayer Breakfast, has respectfully requested that\nno pictures be taken during the program at the\nSenator Hotel tomorrow morning.\n# # #\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-22-70\nGovernor Reagan is scheduled to sign a proclama-\ntion at 10:30 a.m. today in the Governor's Office\nproclaiming the city of Monterey the honorary\ncapital of California for 1970 in commemoration of\nthe Bicentennial Year.\nParticipating will be Senator Grunsky, Assembly-\nman Wood, Mayor Al Madden and Ernest Osuna, official\nambassador of the Monterey Bicentennial celebration.\nPress coverage is invited.\n# # #\nOFFICE OF THE GOVER.. JR\nRELEASE: immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-22-70\n#49\nGovernor Ronald Reagan announced today that his administration will\nsponsor legislation to establish an Office of Transportation Planning\nand Research to aid the state in charting a modern, coordinated network\nto move Californians and their goods by land, sea and air.\nThe legislation will be introduced by Assemblyman John Foran\n(D-San Francisco), chairman of the Assembly Transportation Committee,\nand co-authored by Senator Donald Grunsky (R-Watsonville), Finance\nCommittee Chairman, Assemblyman Frank Lanterman (R-Pasadena), Ways\nand Means Committee chairman, and Senator James Mills (D-San Diego),\nchairman of the Senate Transportation Committee.\nThe bill will implement a recommendation made by the Governor's\nTask Force on Transportation to coordinate the use of public funds\ndevoted to development of a balanced and economical statewide transpor-\ntation system.\nThe Office of Transportation Planning and Research, to be situated\nin the Business and Transportation Agency, will serve in an advisory\ncapacity to the Secretary of Business and Transportation and as the\nprincipal staff unit for the State Transportation Board, created by\nthe 1969 legislature upon recommendation of Governor Reagan and spon-\nsored by Assemblyman Foran.\nThe proposed office will be financed on a pro rata basis from the\nhighway users tax fund, the general fund, the aeronautics fund, and the\nharbors and watercraft revolving fund, and will consist of a small\nstaff of specialists in economics, planning, engineering, and statistics.\nAmong the duties and functions of the office would be the following:\n--To undertake special studies; recommend to the secretary and the\nState Transportation Board legislation, regulations and administrative\npolicies in the transportation field;\n--Coordinate planning for existing and future modes of transporta-\ntion in the interest of economy, safety, and welfare of the people of\nCalifornia;\n--Coordinate research, demonstration projects and development\nprograms to encourage maximum use of existing knowledge and to foster\ndevelopment of new knowledge in applicable fields;\n--Provide information to and cooperate with the legislature and its\ncommittees in connection with studies and matters relevant to the\ndevelopment of transportation in the state.\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-21-70\n#50\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today appointed three members to four-\nyear-terms on the Board of Directors of the 21st District Agricultural\nAssociation ( Fresno District Fair).\nThey are:\nFloyd A. Boyd, a Fresno farm equipment dealer; Harry S. Baker,\na Fresno cotton dealer, and Robert K. Kanagawa, a Sanger nursery owner.\nBoyd, who lives at 5641 North Thorne Street, is active in the\nBoy Scout movement, is a governor of the Fresno State College\nAgricultural Foundation, a director of the Tulelake-Butte Valley District\nFair and other civic and service groups. A Republican, he succeeds\nSam J. Heath of Clovis, whose term has expired.\nBaker, who lives at 945 South Clovis Street, is active in\nnumerous civic and agricultural associations, including the National\nCotton Council of America, the Westlands Water District, the National\nCottonseed Products Association, the Fresno State College Advisory\nBoard, the California State Chamber of Commerce, the California Taxpayers\nAssociation and the National Association of Manufacturere. A Democrat,\nhe succeeds Archie M. Mathson of Fresno, whose term has expired.\nKanagawa, who lives at 16156 East McKinley, Sanger, is a director\nof the Valley Children's Hospital, a former trustee of the Sanger\nHigh School, Fairmont School and Sanger Unified School boards, has\nserved as chairman of the Sanger Grape Bowl Festival, is a director\nof the Sanger Chamber of Commerce and is a past president of the\nJapanese American Citizens League. A Republican, he succeeds Beverly H.\nJones of Fresno, whose term has expired.\nBoard members are paid necessary expenses.\n#####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n#51\n445-4571\n1-22-70\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today proclaimed the City of Monterey\nthe Honorary Capital of California for 1970.\nText of the proclamation follows:\n\"WHEREAS, In 1603 mass was said at the foot of an oak tree on\nthe beach of Monterey Bay by the reverend Carmelite fathers who were\nin the company of explorer Don Sebastian Vizcaino; and\n\"WHEREAS, On June 3, 1770, Don Gaspar de Portola, commander of\na land expedition, met with Fray Junipero Serra, a San Francisco priest,\non the beach of Monterey, and raised the flag of Spain to lay claim,\nin the name of their Catholic Majesties, Carlos III of Spain, to all\nAlta California, after which mass was celebrated near the same oak\ntree, and the Mission San Carlos de Borromeo was founded for the\nconversion of the Indians to Christianity; and\n\"WHEREAS, On April 11, 1822, news reached the town of Monterey\nthat Mexico had overthrown Spanish rule and gained its independence;\nand\n\"WHEREAS, In 1825 California acknowledged jurisdiction of and\npledged allegiance to the Republic of Mexico; and\n\"WHEREAS, in 1849 the California Bear Flag was raised over Colton\nHall in Monterey when a state constitutional convention declared in\nCalifornia, with its capital at Monterey, to be the first Pacific Coast\nstate of the United States of America; and\n\"WHEREAS, in 1850 California was admitted as a free state to the\nUnion under the Compromise of 1850,\n\"NOW, THEREFORE, I, RONALD REAGAN, GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA, do\nhereby proclaim the CITY OF MONTEREY THE HONORARY CAPITAL OF CALIFORNIA\nFOR 1970 in commemoration of its bicentennial year.\n####\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-22-70\n#52\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today appointed Walnut Creek attorney\nWilliam R. Channell as judge of a newly-created Contra Costa County\nSuperior Court.\nChannell, 47, a Republican, will receive an annual salary\nof $31,816. The court was established by the 1969 legislature.\nA partner in a Walnut Creek law firm since 1963, Channell is a\nformer Deputy District Attorney of Alameda County. He is a Fellow\nof the American College of Trial Lawyers, first vice president of\nthe Northern California Association of Defense Counsel, a member of\nthe American Arbitration Association and a member of the American,\nCalifornia and Contra Costa Bar Associations.\nHis civic service has included work with the Happy Valley\nImprovement Association, the Boy Scouts, the Lafayette-Moraga Youth\nAssociation and the Contra Costa County Home Visiting Nurses.\nChannell is a native of Oakland and an Army veteran of World\nWar II. He completed undergraduate work at Stanford University and\nobtained his law degree from Hastings College of Law.\nHe and his wife Patricia have two children. The family home is\nin Lafayette.\n####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNO\nSacramento, Californ.\nMEMO TO THE RESS\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-22-70\nFollowing is the text of a filmed Report to the People by\nGovernor Reagan which has been distributed to California television\nstations for use this evening.\nAn audiotape of the statement is available to radio stations by\ncalling 916-445-0101.\n\"Today, I asked the legislature to pass the most comprehensive and\nfar-reaching Omnibus Clean Air Law to battle smog ever proposed by any\nstate or nation.\n\"This progressive plan of action will further strengthen the state's\nalready tough controls on smog and provide the teeth needed to enforce\nthem.\n\"Our new program will crack down even harder on smog from cars and\ntrucks---and on stationary polluters like agricultural and industrial\nburning.\n\"It will give our Air Resources Board the authority to regulate\nthe chemical make-up of gasoline so that smog-causing gas evaporation\nand exhaust fumes from auto and truck engines can be cut significantly.\n\"It will require that smog controls on every new vehicle sold in\nCalifornia are properly adjusted before that vehicle can be registered.\nFalse certification will subject dealers to criminal prosecution.\n\"We are asking our Air Resources Board to come up with an assembly-\nline method of testing every 1972 model vehicle sold in California, and\nto find a workable device for roadside testing by the Highway Patrol.\n\"This program also will enable California to significantly reduce\nthe heavy volumes of smoke and fumes which pour into our atmosphere\ndaily---by restricting smokestack emission and open burning.\n\"In addition, the Clean Air Law will give us the necessary tools\nto prevent future air pollution caused by the over-concentration of\nfuel-burning power generating plants along the coast by providing a\n20-year master plan for the location of such facilities.\n\"As = have said before, we are committed to an all-out war on smog.\nThis legislative package will give us more of the ammunition we need to\ngain final victory.\"\n#########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-22-70\n#53\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of one\nmember and reappointment of two members to the Board of Directors of\nthe California Museum of Science and Industry.\nThe new board member is Ernest J. Loebbecke of 2000 East Braeburn\nRoad, Altadena, president of a Los Angeles title insurance and trust\ncompany.\nReappointed were J. Howard Edgerton, president of a Los Angeles\nsavings and loan association and Quentin W. Best, president of a\nSouthern California rock products company.\nAll are Republicans. They will be paid necessary expenses\nduring their four-year-terms on the board which shares management of\nthe Los Angeles Coliseum and Sports Arena with the City and County of\nLos Angeles and owns and manages Exposition Park and manages the\nmuseum.\nLoebbecke, who is active in civic affairs, has served as president\nof the California State Chamber of Commerce and is active in the\nLos Angeles Chamber of Commerce and the United States Chamber of\nCommerce.\nBoth Edgerton and Best are also active in Southern California\ncivic affairs.\nEdgerton lives at 1288 Lago Vista Drive, Beverly Hills and\nBest lives at 1655 Rancho Avenue, Glendale.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-23-70\n#54\nGOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE\nJanuary 26, 1970\nthrough\nFebruary 1, 1970\nMonday, January 26\nOffice Appointments.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nTuesday, January 27\n10:00 a.m.\nBrief meeting with 9-year old Kenny Fried,\nof Palo Alto, to discuss California Water\nProject. Cabinet members in attendance.\nGovernor's Office.\n11:30 a.m.\nPresentation to California National Guard\nGenerals Glenn C. Ames and Bernard A. Nurre\ncertificates of accomplishment from the\nPresident's Youth Opportunity Program,\nGovernor's Council Room.\n11:45 a.m.\nSwearing-in of James Hall as Secretary of\nBusiness and Transportation, Governor's Office.\n1:30 p.m.\nPRESS CONFERENCE\n3:15 p.m.\nSigning of Junior Achievement Proclamation,\nGovernor's Council Room.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nWednesday, January 28\na.m.\nTrustees' meeting, Woodlake Inn.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nThursday, January 29\n4:00 p.m.\nPresentation of awards to student winners of\nVoice of Democracy Contest sponsored by the\nVFW, Governor's Office.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nFriday, January 30\n10:00 a.m.\nRemarks to YMCA Model Legislature, Assembly\nChambers.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nSaturday, January 31 -\nSunday, February 1\nNo appointments scheduled\nOvernight - Sacramento\n# # #\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVE, OR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-27-70\n#55\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today proclaimed a State of Disaster in the\ncounties of Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Modoc, Plumas,\nShasta, Siskiyou, Tehama and Trinity as a result of heavy winds, storms,\nand flood damage during the past several weeks.\nThe governor's action paves the way for the Boards of Supervisors in\nthe affected areas to request assistance from state agencies to assist in\ntheir efforts to protect life and property.\n\"As a result of heavy winds, storms, flooding and other conditions\nwhich, by reason of their magnitude, were beyond the control of the\nservices, personnel, equipment and facilities (of the twelve counties),\nI, therefore, proclaim the existence of a State of Disaster in the\ncounties of Butte, Colusa, Glenn, Lake, Lassen, Marin, Modoc, Plumas,\nShasta, Siskiyou, Tehama and Trinity,\" the governor said.\nHis proclamation noted that the chairmen of the boards of\nsupervisors in the twelve counties requested the governor's action.\nIt also cited \"conditions of extreme peril to the safety of persons\nand property\" in the counties since December 17, 1969.\n########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVER\nR\nRELEASE: ....mediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-27-70\n#56\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today awarded certificates of appreciation\nsigned by Vice President Spiro T. Agnew to the State of California's two\ntop military leaders in recognition of the California National Guard's\nimportant role in President Nixon's Youth Opportunity Program.\nReceiving the awards at a special ceremony in the Governor's Office\nwere Major General Glenn C. Ames, commanding general of the state's\nmilitary forces, and Brigadier General Bernard A. Nurre, commanding\ngeneral of the California Army National Guard's 49th Infantry Brigade.\nGeneral Nurre's brigade was specifically cited for providing\nmeaningful experiences and exciting recreational opportunities for\ndisadvantaged youngsters in the Hunters Point area of San Francisco.\nGeneral Ames received his certificate in recognition of the\ncontributions made by National Guard units throughout the state in\nfurthering the President's program for youths over the past year.\nGovernor Reagan characterized the ceremony as having \"special\nsignificance\" because it calls to the attention of the public the\nGuard's participation in, and sponsorship of, community projects which\nmight not otherwise be available to disadvantaged youngsters in the state.\nOver 1,500 youngsters took part in the 49th Infantry Brigade's\nprogram for youngsters during the past summer. The National Guard\nprovided medical and transportation support as well as meals to the\nyoungsters during the ten outings which it conducted. Funds to support\nsuch projects were collected from individual guardsmen in the 49th\nInfantry Brigade.\nGovernor Reagan noted that the Guard will continue to support and\nexpand its role in the President's Youth Opportunity Program during the\ncoming year.\nAlso attending the ceremony were Brigadier General Thomas K. Turnage,\nDeputy Adjutant General, Army; Chaplain (Major) Charles H. Lee, Brigade\nChaplain; Mrs. Osceola Washington Means, a member of the community\nservice staff of the redevelopment agency of the Hunters Point-Bayview\narea; Ernest Oliver, director of the Southeast Community Commission of\nSan Francisco; and six youngsters who participated in the program,\nranging in age from 9 to 13 years.\nAlso in attendance were LTC Cooper K. Pitsker, Commanding Officer,\n49th Support Battalion and Lieutenant Patrick McGreevy, Commanding Officer\nof the Battalion's Company B, who provided a majority of the support for\nthis program.\n#########\nEJG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERN\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-27-70\n#57\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today suggested that the California Horse\nRacing Board immediately urge all parties to a labor-management dispute\nat two race tracks in the state to agree to the use of a secret ballot\nby union members and be guided by the results of the balloting.\nThe crippling dispute has halted thoroughbred racing at Santa Anita\nin Southern California, and harness racing at Bay Meadows in Northern\nCalifornia, since their current seasons opened last December 26. The\nstrike is causing an estimated $1,125,000 loss in revenues to the state\ngeneral fund each week.\nThe governor said he has been keeping close tabs on the dispute\nsince it began and noted that the California Horse Racing Board has\nworked diligently to bring about a solution between all the parties\nconcerned.\n\"However,\" he said, \"despite all the efforts which have been made,\nthere has been no progress toward resolving the strike.\n\"For this reason, I am suggesting that the Horse Racing Board\nimmediately urge all parties to the dispute to agree to the use of a\nsecret ballot by union members to determine if a majority of the workers\nthemselves can accept management's offer.\n\"To assure complete fairness in the conduct of the balloting, I am\nfurther recommending that the secret ballot be supervised by the State\nConciliation Service.\n\"It is imperative that this costly dispute be settled equitably and\nfairly, and as soon as possible. Use of the secret ballot would enable\nevery union member to express his own, individual preference as to the\nlatest wage and benefit offer, \" the governor said.\n########\nF.JG\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-27-70\nThe attached pages represent a partial description of the\nfurniture and paintings which have been either loaned or permanently\ndonated to the State of California.\nThe first two pages show some of the antique furniture and\npaintings which grace the governor's office. (However, most of the\nitems in the governor's private study belong to the Reagans.)\nPages 3 and 4 of the attached represent items which have been\npermanently donated to the State of California and are presently\nhoused in the Sacramento executive residence.\nThose paintings and antique furniture items which have been\nloaned to the State of California and are located in either the\ngovernor's office or at the Reagan residence, have an approximate\nworth of $100,000.\nItems which have been permanently donated to the State of\nCalifornia, and currently located in the governor's residence, have\nan approximate. worth of $25,000.\n# # #\nEJG\nOffers of furniture, paintings and pictures both as gift\nto the State or as loan came from all over the State--\nSouthern California, Bay Area, Northern California and Central\nValleys. The items in addition to being \"antiques\" in their\nown right have special state historical significance. Some\nof the paintings or sketches have no value as works of \"art\"\nbut they are priceless mementos of our past history. Others\nrange in value to $25,000 as a work of art plus the subject\nmatter being \"Californian\"; such as, \"Pio Pico's Home\",\n\"Sutter's Fort\", \"Yosemite\", etc. Ninety-eight pictures,\npaintings and sketches on loan from Sutter's Fort estimated\nvalue $50,000.00. Eight paintings on loan from Mrs. Howard\nAhmanson are valued at $5,750.00.\nThree outstanding pieces of furniture in the Governor's\nOffice which are particularly interesting are:\n(1) The Rimpau Couch\nA handsome \"early California\" - 1840 - hand carved,\nleather covered couch from the Avila Adobe loaned to\nMrs. Reagan by Pueblo De Los Angeles. The couch was given\nto the Pueblo project through Judge Ferris by Mrs. Maurice\nSparling, widow of Judge Sparling. She was a member of the\nRimpau family and lived in the Avila Adobe during her early\nchildhood. (Antique value, $1,500.00.)\n(2) Banjo Clock\nOne day while poking around in the basement back rooms\nof Sutter's Fort Mrs. Reagan spotted a large musty old clock\nin which she expressed interest. After it was cleaned, it was\nfound to be an authentic Banjo Clock that was purchased in\n1849 by the California National and D. O. Mills Bank in\nSacramento where it hung until 1934 when it was donated to\nthe State and long since forgotten. It now hangs in the\nGovernor's Office where it can be seen and appreciated by\nall. As you know, the Banjo Clock is \"American\" both in\ndesign and construction. (Antique value, $750.00)\n(3) Columbia Grafonola, Deluxe 1890\nMany antiques or old pieces are so priceless or fragile\nthat they cannot be utilized or enjoyed to their fullest. A\ndelightful exception to this is an 1890 Deluxe Columbia\nGrafonola elaborately carved mahogany music box which stands\n55 inches high, loaned through the courtesy of John Rice,\nSacramento; though not old enough to be properly classed as\nan \"antique\" as the forerunner of the Juke Box, Record Player,\nHi Fi, it is true \"Americana\". It has to be hand wound, or\ncranked, and the records are large metal discs. Visitors\nand employees in the sedate Governor's Suite are frequently\nstartled by the discordant blasting of the Anvil Chorus or\nother equally interesting renditions. (Value $750.00 -\n$1,000.00 - Not for sale.)\n-2-\nFurniture donated to the State of California by Mr. and\nMrs. Reese Milner, 706 North Canon Drive, Beverly Hills,\nCalifornia 90210\n1 New flowered Spanish carpet, hand tuffted,\n11' X 14'\n$2,800.00\n1 Venetian painted secretary\n3,400.00\n1 Blue & white French wood frame bed, hand carved\n650.00\n1 French wood hand carved arm chair, upholstered\nin blue silk, Louis XV\n750.00\n1 Occasional imported French table, Louis XVI,\npainted blue and white\n285.00\n1 French imported wood & cane bench, Louis XVI,\npainted blue and white\n350.00\n1 Harpsichord, fruitwood (perfect condition)\n1,800.00\n1 Custom made 7' sofa, hand carved Louis XVI\nframe, upholstered in white Scalamandre silk,\n(perfect condition)\n875.00\n2 Custom upholstered - tuffted back arm chairs,\nyellow Scalamandre silk (perfect condition)\n$340.00 ea.\n680.00\n1 Custom made Credenza finished in Italian marbel-\nized top and paneling gold leaf moulding\n1,200.00\n6 Imported Louis XVI side chairs custom finished\nin pink and gold, upholstered in blue Scalamandre\nsilk velvet, loose cushion seats\n$350.00 ea.\n2,100.00\n1 Chinese teakwood arm chair, upholstered loose\nvelvet cushion\n175.00\n1 Antique French Regency secretary, fruitwood,\nwith black and grey marble top\n2,800.00\n$17,865.00\nFurniture donated to the State of California by Mr. and\nMrs. Alfred Bloomingdale, 131 North Delfern, Los Angeles,\nCalifornia\nOne specially designed mahogany table in the late\n18th century manner. The table is in 3 parts.\nEach reeded edge thick top rests upon a hand-\ncarved tripod base terminating with antiqued brass\nmembers. The size of each table is 4'0\" square\nplus two 2' leaves that match, making a table\nlength, when joined, of 16'0\".\n$3,500.00\nFurniture donated to the State of California by Mr. and\nMrs. Earle Jorgensen, 960 Bel-Air Road, Los Angeles,\nCalifornia 90024\nTwo Queen Anne style armchairs, special lacquer\n$3,000.00\nfinish, upholstered seats covered in top grain\nleather. Ten side chairs to match.\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\nMrs. Ronald Reagan will hold a press conference at the residence\nat 1341 - 45th Street, Sacramento, tomorrow morning, January 29, at\n10 a.m.\nshe will conduct a tour of the executive residence and relate how\nCalifornia citizens have contributed furnishings and works of art to\nthe State of California.\nPress coverage is invited.\n#######\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\nFollowing is the text of a filmed Report to the People by\nGovernor Reagan which has been distributed to California television\nstations for use this evening.\nAn audiotape of the statement embargoed for use after 5 p.m.\ntoday---is now available to radio stations by calling 916-445-0101.\n\"Today I have submitted to the legislature the most comprehensive\nbattle plan for an all-out war against narcotics and drug abuse that has\never been drawn in the nation's history.\n\"By executive order, I have created the State Office of Narcotics\nand Drug Abuse Coordination. This new office will spearhead our campaign\nby marshalling all public and private forces to concentrate on drug\nabuse prevention, treatment and educational programs.\n\"We are increasing the number of State narcotics agents. And I am\noffering specific suggestions to give law enforcement agencies the\nweapons to crack down on dope pushers.\n\"This fight must begin in the first grade classroom by making our\nchildren completely aware of the dangers they face through experimentation\nwith drugs. And it must be carried all the way to university research\ncenters where the scientific facts about drug usage can be assembled.\n\"I am proposing legislation that will enable us to account for\nevery shipment of dangerous drugs from the time it leaves the\nmanufacturer until it reaches the physician, pharmacy or hospital where\nit is used.\n\"I am also suggesting that all government and private agencies join\nforces to find the cures that will help us get the victims of drug\nabuse back on the road to useful, productive lives.\n\"Our children are the prime target of the dope pusher and I am\nproposing laws that will increase the penalties against those who pray\nupon them.\n\"Make no mistake about it. This is a war. It requires not only the\ncooperation of every local, state and federal agency concerned with drug\nabuse, but also the cooperation of every citizen as well. If we don't\nwork together, we run the risk of losing a generation.\"\n#######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: mediate\nSacramento, Califon a\nConatact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\n#58\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of\nJudge Ronald M. Crookshank, 63, a veteran jurist, to a newly-created\nOrange County Superior Court bench.\nJudge Crookshank served as an Orange County Superior Court\njudge from 1957 until 1968, when he retired because of his wife's\nillness. Mrs. Crookshank died two months after he left the bench.\nPrior to his first appointment to the Superior Court,\nJudge Crookshank had served as city judge of Santa Ana and judge\nof the Santa Ana Municipal Court.\nHe is a native of Santa Ana, a graduate of local schools\nand Stanford University. He received his law degree from Harvard in\n1933.\nA Republican, he will receive an annual salary of $31,816.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVEL\nR\nRELEASE:\nediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\n#59\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today appointed Adrian W. Adams,\nNewhall Court Commissioner, to a newly-created Newhall Judicial District\nMunicipal Court bench.\nAdams, 46, a Republican, will receive an annual salary of\n$29,270. The court was created by the 1969 legislature.\nPrior to his appointment as Court Commissioner in 1968, Adams\nwas engaged in private law practice in Los Angeles and Newhall. He\nis also a former F. B. I. Agent.\nHis civic activities include service as a trustee of both\nthe William S. Hart High School District and the Newhall School District.\nA native Californian, Adams attended Occidental College and\nreceived his degree from Loyola Law School.\nHe is a member of the State Bar, the Los Angeles County Bar\nAssociation, the San Fernando Valley Bar Association, the American\nJudicature Society and the American Arbitration Association.\nAdams and his wife Jane have two children.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVE\nOR\nRELEASE:\nmediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\n#60\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment\nof Arthur E. Madrid, 35, of San Diego to a four-year-term on the\nCalifornia Veterans Board, subject to Senate confirmation.\nA Marine Corps veteran of the Korean conflict, Madrid is an\nUrban Affairs Representative of the Pacific Telephone Company. He will\nsucceed George Sinopoli of Fresno whose term has expired.\nA Republican, Madrid is a Member-at-Large of the G. I. Forum,\nan organization of veterans from the Mexican-American community, a\nmember of the University of California at San Diego Urban Affairs\nCommittee, the Mexican-American Advisory Council for the University\nof San Diego and the Chicano Federation of San Diego.\nHe and his wife Sally have three children. The family home\nis at 5308 Tufts Street, La Mesa.\nThe post pays $20 per day while on official duty.\n####\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOV' NOR\nRELEASE:\nmmediate\nSacramento, Calife nia\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\n#61\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of\nSan Francisco attorneys Charles E. Goff and Victor M. Campilongo\nas judges of two San Francisco Municipal Courts.\nGoff, 39, a Democrat, was named to succeed Judge Robert\nMerrill who has been elevated to the San Francisco County Superior\nCourt.\nCampilongo, 41, a Republican, will succeed Judge Donald\nConstine, who has also been elevated to the Superior Court.\nA partner in the firm of Gudmundson, Siggins, Stone and\nGoff since 1965, Goff received his degree from Stanford Law School\nand has attended the University of Minnesota, the University of\nMexico and the University of California.\nHe is a member of the State Bar, the San Francisco Bar\nAssociation, the Lawyers Club of San Francisco, the Association\nof Defense Counsel of Northern California, the Stanford Law Society\nof Northern California and Nevada and Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity.\nHe and his wife Sandra have two children.\nCampilongo, a partner in the firm of Davis, Campilongo and\nSchmidt since 1963, holds degrees from the University of San Francisco\nand the San Francisco Law School. He is a member of the Lawyers\nClub of San Francisco and the American Bar Association.\nCampilongo and his wife Lucille have three children.\nMunicipal court judges receive an annual salary of $29,270.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOV\nNOR\nRELEASE: immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\n#62\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the re-appointment\nof Edward Hageman, Jr., San Rafael architect, to a three-year-term on\nthe Designers' Qualifications Advisory Committee.\nA Republican, he will represent building designers on the\ncommittee. The post pays per diem and necessary expenses.\nHageman lives at 310 Hidden Valley Lane, San Anselmo.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE:\nImmediate\nSacramento, Calif hia\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-28-70\n#63\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today sent the following telegram to members\nof the California Horse Racing Board:\n\"Despite the diligent efforts which you and others have made to\nresolve the crippling labor-management dispute at the Santa Anita and\nBay Meadows tracks during the past month, there still appears virtually\nno prospect for a settlement of the strike---short of a new initiative\nwhich I hereby suggest for your consideration.\n\"To get the dispute off dead center and to assure renewed progress\ntoward a satisfactory solution, I am asking you to immediately urge all\nparties on both sides of the issue--to agree to the use of a secret\nballot by union members to determine if a majority of the workers them-\nselves feel the latest management offer is acceptable, or if they wish\nto continue the present strike.\n\"To guarantee complete fairness in the conduct of the balloting, I\nam further recommending that the secret ballot be supervised by the\nState Conciliation Service.\n\"Surely no party to the dispute--with a genuine desire to resolve\nit fairly and equitably--could quarrel with this kind of initiative.\nFor, it would result in making known the will of each individual union\nmember on a matter of personal, vital concern to him.\n\"It is absolutely imperative that this costly dispute be settled at\nthe earliest possible moment.\n\"I believe the initiative I have suggested would provide the forward\nstep necessary to resolve the impasse which continues to halt all\nprogress toward a settlement.\n\"Sincerely, Ronald Reagan, Governor of California\"\nCopies of the telegram also were sent to Leo Geffner, Service\nEmployees International Union, Los Angeles; George Hardy, Service\nEmployees International Union, Los Angeles; Max Richardson, Local 399,\nLos Angeles; Richard Trowbridge, Local 399, Los Angeles; George Ruehl,\nLocal 193, Los Angeles; Charles Mahoney, Local 280, Los Angeles;\nJames Haws, Local 102, San Diego; and Federation of California Racing\nAssociation, Inc. members: Sidney Korshak, Los Angeles; Charles G.\nBakaly, Jr., Los Angeles; Jack Speyer, Director, Labor Relations,\nSanta Anita Race Track; Dr. William J. Ward, Bay Meadows Race Track;\nRobert Strub, President, Santa Anita Race Track; Fred Ryan, Vice President\nand General Manager, Santa Anita Race Track; James E. Stewart, Hollywood\nPark Race Track; Phillip Shepherd, Los Angeles County Fair; Marvin\nShapiro, President, Western Harness Racing Association, Hollywood Park\nRace Track; Frank Vessells, Jr., Los Alamitos Race Course.\n#\n#\n#\n#\n#\n#\n#\n#\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-29-70\n#64\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced a cooperative agreement\nbetween two state agencies for the joint use of facilities that \"will\nestablish a pattern for increased efficiency and significant economies.\"\nUnder the agreement, the Departments of Water Resources and Public\nWorks will jointly operate and maintain facilities that were planned\nfor separate use by the California Aqueduct of the State Water Project\nand for Interstate 5, the Westside Freeway of the Division of Highways.\n\"Here is an example of good planning and a willingness on the part\nof state employees and their department heads to cooperate in a\ndetermination to give the people of California the best possible\nservice at the lowest possible cost,\" the governor said.\n\"Both agencies could have erected separate facilities but they got\ntogether and determined that a single location would operate just as\neffectively,\" the governor pointed out. \"This is the type of\ncooperation we have been encouraging. It will establish a pattern for\nincreased efficiency and significant economies.\"\nThe two facilities are the Lost Hills Operations and Maintenance\nCenter of the Water Project in Kern County and the Patterson Maintenance\nYard of the Division of Highways in Stanislaus County.\n\"Water Resources Director William R. Gianelli and Public Works\nDirector James A. Moe have informed me that they will also be happy to\nextend the facility-sharing arrangement with other state agencies which\nmay have the need for office or other space along the west side of the\nSan Joaquin Valley,\" the governor said.\n# # #\nwas\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Califor\na\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-29-70\n#65\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of\nattorneys Richard Amerian and Peter E. Giannini as Los Angeles County\nMunicipal Court judges.\nBoth are Republicans. They will receive annual salaries of\n$29,270.\nAmerian, 32, succeeds Judge Thomas Murphy who has been elevated\nto the Los Angeles County Superior Court, and Giannini, 48, succeeds\nJudge Kenneth Holaday who has retired.\nAssociated with the firm of Cox, Castle and Nicholson, Amerian\nholds a degree in political science, Magna Cum Laude from the\nUniversity of Southern California and received his law degree from\nthe U.S.C. Law School.\nHe is a member of the Los Angeles County, State and American Bar\nAssociations, Legion Lex, the American Judicature Society and is a\ntrustee of the U.S.C. Law Alumni Association, the Order of the Coif.\nGiannini, who attended the University of Santa Clara, received\nhis law degree from the University of California's Boalt Hall, and is\na member of the Order of the Coif.\nActive in numerous civic, cultural and youth groups, he is a past\npresident of the Wilshire and Brentwood Chambers of Commerce, a member\nof the Junipero Serra Society, the Federated Italo-Americans of Southern\nCalifornia and the Hollywood-Wilshire Symphony Orchestra Board.\nHe and his wife Mercedes have six children.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVER OR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, Califo:\nla\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-29-70\n#66\nGovernor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of\nDr. George I. Dean Jr. of Merced to a four-year term on the State\nBoard of Optometry and the appointment of two new members.\nThe new members are Dr. Jack O. Pence of Arroyo Grande and\nattorney Eugene M. Azevedo of Modesto. The latter will represent the\npublic on the board.\nDr. Deane, active in civic affairs, is a past president of the\nMerced Community Welfare Council, the Merced Board of Education and\na member of numerous optometric associations. He is a Republican. He\nlives at 206 East 26th Street.\nDr. Pence, a former Arroyo Grande City Councilman, will succeed\nDr. Arthur B. Emmes of Castro Valley, whose term has expired.\nA Fellow of the American Academy of Optometry, Dr. Pence is active\nin the Tri-Counties Optometric Society, the California Optometric Asso-\nciation and the American Optometric Association. He and his wife Jerri\nand their four children live at 134 East Branch Street, Arroyo Grande.\nHe is a Republican.\nAzevedo, who is active in community, civic and youth affairs, is a\nmember of the American, California and Stanislaus County Bar\nAssociations, the American Trial Lawyers Association and the California\nTrial Lawyers Association. He succeeds Loann Eagan of Fair Oaks, whose\nterm has expired. He and his wife Marlene have four children. The\nfamily home is at 520 Greenwich Lane, Modesto. He is a Republican.\nBoard members are paid $25 per diem while on official duty.\n# # #\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-30-70\nThe 1970-71 budget will be available to the\npress in the press office beginning at 8:30 a.m.\nMonday, February 2.\nFinance Director Verne Orr and his staff will\nconduct a briefing on the budget in the press\nconference room (#1190) from 1:30 to 2:30 p.m.,\nMonday.\nThe budget will be embargoed for release at\n5 p.m. Tuesday, February 3.\nAs has been done in the past, the briefing\nsession is off the record therefore, no sound\ncameras or recorders are allowed.\n# # #\nPB\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nRELEASE: Immediate\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\n445-4571\n1-30-70\n#67\nGovernor Reagan announced today that the Department of Defense\nhas approved plans for creation of a long sought small craft harbor of\nrefuge at Cojo Bay on the eastern shore of Point Conception.\n\"All California boating associations and the state itself have given\nthis location top priority for the first true harbor of refuge along\nthe coast. This project, so important to California boaters, represents\na breakthrough in some 20 years of effort to provide safe refuge on the\nhazardous passage between Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo,' the\ngovernor said.\n\"Mariners are well aware of the usually adverse weather encountered\nrounding Point Conception and the provision of a nearby safe anchorage\nwill gladden their hearts.\"\nCojo Bay is afforded natural protection from the wind and sea on\nthe north and west by Government Point but the eastern side of the\npeninsula is exposed to the weather.\nThe state's participation will be under the direction of Robert C.\nWalker, Director of the new Department of Navigation and Ocean\nDevelopment.\n\"This life-saving refuge was doubly important in view of the long\ndistances to the next closest harbors and because passage through the\nnearby Vandenberg test range was restricted from time to time. This is\na gratifying example of the new State-Federal cooperation being enjoyed\nby the people of California in increasing degree, # Walker said,\nThe state has adequately budgeted for the initiation of this\nproject and study proposals will be solicited in the immediate future.\nThe project would include sheltered water, navigation aids, fixed\nanchorages, a landing with telephone, and emergency medical and fueling\nfacilities.\nAdditionally, beach erosion studies are planned to ensure that no\nbeaches are adversely affected by the harbor development. The\nDepartment of Navigation and Ocean Development has assured the\nDepartment of Defense that no provisions for population are proposed\nat the point that might present an unreasonable risk or hazard to the\nAir Force missile launching program at Vandenberg.\nStrict rules will be prescribed for use of the water and adjacent\nland area. The harbor will be known as a \"bare\" harbor of refuge\nproviding safety from storms but not recreational facilities,\n######\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nSacramento, California\nContact:\nPaul Beck\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\n445-4571\n1-30-70\nGovernor Ronald Reagan will launch his Program to Reduce\nOccupational Injuries among the state's more than 100,000 employees\nduring a special program at noon Monday in the rotunda of the Capitol\nBuilding.\nAim of the program, which will be directed by Paul Cossaboon of the\nState Compensation Insurance Fund, will be to reduce the rate of\noccupational injuries by 10 percent a year at an annual savings of\nmore than $1 million.\nOther speakers during the ceremony will include Earl Coke,\nSecretary of Agriculture and Services; Jerome W. Hull, president of\nPacific Telephone Company; and Eldon B. Roseberry, vice president of\nthe California State Employees Association.\nThe program will also include selections by the East Guadaljara\nIron Works Band.\nPress coverage is invited.\n########\nWAS\nOFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR\nMEMO TO THE PRESS\nSacramento, California\nContact: Paul Beck\n445-4571\n1-30-70\n#68\nGOVERNOR'S SCHEDULE\nFebruary 2, 1970\nthrough\nFebruary 8, 1970\nMonday, February 2\nNoon\nKick-off of Governor's Program to Reduce\nOccupational Injuries, Capitol Rotunda.\nBrief remarks.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nTuesday, February 3\n1:30 p.m.\nPRESS CONFERENCE\nOvernight - Sacramento\nWednesday, February 4\nNo public appointments scheduled.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nThursday, February 5\nNoon\nFull Gospel Business Men's Fellowship\nLuncheon, Sacramento Inn.\nOvernight - Sacramento\nFriday, February 6\na.m.\nDepart for Los Angeles\n7:30 p.m.\nCalifornia Newspaper Publishers Association\nAnnual Banquet, Century Plaza Hotel.\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nSaturday, February 7\n7:30 p.m.\nCalifornia Young Republican Convention\nDinner, Airport Marina. Speech.\nOvernight - Los Angeles\nSunday, February 8\nNo appointments scheduled.\n# # #\nPB"
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