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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 - July 1974 Box: P16 To see more digitized collections visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/archives/digital-library To see all Ronald Reagan Presidential Library inventories visit: https://reaganlibrary.gov/document-collection Contact a reference archivist at: [email protected] Citation Guidelines: https://reaganlibrary.gov/citing National Archives Catalogue: https://catalog.archives.gov/ OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-1-74 #367 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed the following bills: SB AB 1091-Beilenson This bill would require that every summons contain Chapter 363 the following introductory legend in Spanish and English: "Notice! You have been sued. The court may decide against you without your being heard unless you respond within 30 days. Read information below." The bill authorizes counties, by ordinance, to require that the legend be printed in additional foreign languages. Effective January 1, 1975. AB 3043 - Keysor Permits the county clerk, at his discretion, to place Chapter 376 the ballot on more than one ballot card or on one ballot card and a paper ballot at an election where the number of offices and measures to be voted upon cannot be accommodated on one ballot card. The bill also establishes nine election districts within the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District, and specifies the census tracts, or portions thereof, included in each election district. Effective immediately. AB 3839 - Chappie Exempts certain vehicles from the provisions of the Chapter 377 Chappie-Z 'berg Off-Highway Motor Vehicle Law of 1971. AB 4415 - Craven Deletes provision specifying that negotiable promis- Chapter 378 sory notes of a port district shall be general obli- gations of the district. Specifies that negotiable promissory notes of a port district may bear interest at a rate of not exceeding 7, rather than 6, percent per year, and shall be payable from revenues and taxes levied for purposes of the district other than the payment of principal and interest on any bonded debt of the district, rather than general obligations of the District payable from revenues and taxes in the same manner as bonds of the district. SB 1525 - Collier Budget Act of 1974. Chapter 375 SB 1772 - Biddle Deletes the requirement that the name of an irrigation Chapter 364 district contain the words "Irrigation District.' Effective January 1, 1975. AB 1041 - Chappie Creates the Tahoe Resource Conservation District in Chapter 365 the Tahoe Basin. Effective January 1, 1975. AB 3373 - Craven Provides that in counties using a mechanized Chapter 366 management reporting system for a uniform four-week period, the board of supervisors may provide for payment of moneys collected by each officer of a county or judicial district and certain related activities on a four-week period basis. The bill changes reference from "month" to "pay period" for the purpose of salary and service requirements in provisions regarding several municipal court districts in San Diego County. The bill also allows a board of supervisors to levy county service area bond tax on land only in an area or improvement area under specified circumstances. Effective January 1, 1975. AB 1926 - Dunlap Amends and relocates dedication provisions regarding Chapter 372 public access to navigable waters in the Subdivision Map Act. AB 2732 - Joint Requires an annual, rather than periodic, classifi- Committee on Fairs cation of fairs and preparation and distribution Allocation and of a fair director's manual. In addition, it Classification provides that fair classifications may be used by the (Davis, Chairman) Department of Food and Agriculture in determining the basis for fair managers' compensation. Effective January 1, 1975. -1- #367 AB 2733 - Joint Requires the Department of Food and Agriculture to Committee on Fairs exclude gifts made to fairs from any source as a Allocation and factor in considering a fair's need for financial Classification assistance pursuant to prescribed provisions of the (Davis, Chairman) Business and Professions Code. It provides that "gift" does not include any donation of money or property which is made to, and used by, any fair for its general operating expenses. The bill provides that the unanticipated revenues retained by a fair which are in excess of the approved budget for any fiscal year may be expended by any designated fair upon positive action by the fair board of directors. Effective January 1, 1975. AB 2916 - Wood Extends the beet leafhopper program on a permanent Chapter 368 basis. The bill changes the General Fund-industry cost ratio from a 50-50 basis to a 65-35 ratio with the industry being assessed the 65 percent portion. The bill also appropriates $213, 500 from the General Fund and $396,500 from the Department of Agriculture Fund to fund the program for the 1974-75 fiscal year. Effective immediately. AB 3041 - Duffy Revises various provisions of the Medical Practice Chapter 371 Act relating to professional education and training and the manner in which faculty members of California medical schools and graduates of foreign medical schools may qualify for a physician's and surgeon's license. AB 3211 - Knox Requires, when Improvement Act of 1911 bonds have been Chapter 373 declared delinquent, and because of such delinquency default and sale of the property has been commenced, that as a condition for reinstatement of the delin- quent bonds, the cost of obtaining evidence of title, if actually incurred, be paid to the county treasurer. AB 3321 - Mobley Will permit newly elected school board members to take Chapter 369 office on April 1st following March elections. In those cases where school district elections are consolidated with municipal elections under charter provisions the board members will take office 30 days after the election has been certified. The present law provides that newly elected school board members take office on the first of July following the March elections. Effective January 1, 1975. -2- McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROWALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-2-74 #368 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Thomas M. Petersen of Santa Ynez to the board of directors of the 37th District Agricultural Association (Santa Barbara County Fair). At the same time, the governor reappointed directors Albert M. Ferini and Isamu Minami, both of Santa Maria. The positions pay necessary expenses and will expire January 15, 1978. All three appointees are Republicans. Petersen, 39, is manager of Improvement District No. 1, Santa Ynez River Water Conservation District, with which he has been employed since the start of construction of the district's water system in 1960. He obtained a degree in industrial engineering from Stanford University in 1956, after having attended Santa Ynez Valley Schools. He replaces board member Robert J. Shelley of Solvang, whose term expired. Ferini, a 38-year-old rancher, has been a director since January 1970. He is active in the Elks and Santa Maria Club. Minami, 51, was appointed to the board last November after the death of Ray Koyama, He is a partner in Security Farms who graduated from elementary school in Guadalupe, high school in Santa Maria and attended Santa Maria Junior College. He is a member of the Guadalupe Rotary, Western Growers, Growers and Shippers, California-Arizona Growers Association, Santa Maria Valley Chamber and Santa Maria Valley Farmers Association. He also aids in a Japanese-American student exchange. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-2-74 #369 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Ralph E, Graham, San Diego's assistant city manager since 1971, and reappointed Ernest R. Nichols, a Ventura rancher, to the California Water Commission. Both appointments require Senate confirmation and pay $50 per day while on official duty. Expiration date of both terms is January 15, 1978. Both appointees are Republicans. Graham, 54, replaces William Jennings of La Mesa, whose term expired. He has been a registered civil engineer since 1947 after earning a bachelor's degree at the University of California at Berkeley. His master's in public administration was obtained at San Diego State University. He was director of utilities for the City of San Diego for 12 years and assistant to the city manager and director of facilities for one year before accepting his present position. Nichols, 65, has been a commissioner since March 1970. He was president and general manager of the Saticoy Water Company from 1956 until its sale to the City of Ventura in 1969, was one of the original directors of the Ventura County Taxpayers Association and its president for two terms. He graduated from elementary school in Saticoy, high school in Santa Paula and Pomona College. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-2-74 #370 Everett Stunz of La Jolla today was appointed by Governor Ronald Reagan to the California Advisory Board of Home Furnishings, Department of Consumer Affairs. Stunz, a 62-year-old Republican, will fill the unexpired term of William G. Connell of Arcadia, who resigned from the board. The term expires next June 30. Stunz has owned and operated a franchise for retail distribution of beds since 1963. Before that he was vice president and sales manager of the National Furniture Manufacturing Company in East Bernard, Texas, and division manager of an Allied Stores unit for Titche-Goettinger Company in Dallas. He was an organizing member of the Texas Bedding Manufacturing Association in 1939 and assisted in the writing and passage of Texas' first bedding law. Stunz is a past president of the La Jolla Rotary and has been a board member of both the Torrey Pines Christian Church and the Bureau of Home Appliances. He was valedictorian of his high school graduating class in Hinton, Oklahoma, and graduated from Hills Business College. He will receive per diem and expenses as a board member. ###### McKelvey OFFICE or GOVERNOR REAGAN RELEASE: immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-2-74 #371 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed three new members of the Commission for Economic Development. Included are Dr. Harold M. Williams, dean of the UCLA graduate school of management; Robert E. Morris, senior vice president of San Diego Gas and Electric Company; and Roy Utke, president of Sherman Oaks-based Sunkist Growers Inc. They replace Robert F. Six of Beverly Hills, Thomas L. Lowe of Piru and Ernest J. Loebbecke of Altadena. Williams, a 46-year-old Democrat, is a former board chairman of Norton Simon Inc. who became UCLA's dean of the graduate school of management and a professor of management four years ago. He attended Los Angeles public schools and entered the Westwood campus on a scholarship one month after his 16th birthday. He graduated, a Phi Beta Kappa, at 18. He then moved on to Harvard Law School, again on a scholarship, and earned his law degree at 21. Williams specialized in tax and corporation law for a Los Angeles legal firm, interrupted his practice to serve as a U.S. Army legal officer during the Korean Conflict, then went into a 15-year business career including the presidencies of Hunt-Wesson Foods, Inc. and Hunt Foods and Industries, Inc. before the consolidation of Hunt and other organizations into Norton Simon, Inc. Morris, 52, has been senior vice president of San Diego Gas and Electric since 1971 during a career with the utility dating to July 1965. Before that he was in engineering and sales for Monsanto Chemical Company and with Allis-Chalmers for 20 years and was a managing partner of Glengayle Associates, a management consulting firm. He received a bachelor's degree from Georgia Tech in 1944. Utke, 53, has been the chief executive officer of Sunkist since November 1971. He started his career with Sunkist's supply affiliate, Fruit Growers Supply Company, in 1947 and was named FGS general manager in 1967. He was educated at Moorhead State College in Minnesota and took additional studies at Columbia and Cornell universities. He completed a three-year correspondence course in law. Utke, like Morris, is a Republican. The commission terms of Williams and Morris will expire January 1, 1977. Utke's term extends one year longer. Six, Lowe and Loebbecke resigned from the commission, the latter two at the conclusion of their terms. Commissioners receive actual and necessary expenses. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROWALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-74 #372 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of McRobert (Mac) Stewart of Daly City and appointed William M. Battersby of Los Angeles to four-year terms as members of the State Board of Registration for Professional Engineers in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Stewart, 47, a Republican, has been a member of the board since March of 1973. A councilman and vice mayor of Daly City, elected in April, 1970, he is a member and chairman of the Daly City Planning Commission. He is also chairman of the Community Resources Commission. Battersby, 58, a political independent, replaces Vane E. Suter of South Pasadena. Suter's term has expired and he is ineligible to serve because of legislation (AB 1354) approved in 1973, calling for a representative of professional engineers rather than petroleum engineers. He is a graduate of Seattle University with a B.S. degree in engineering. He also holds a Ph.D. in Labor Economics earned at the University of Washington; a Masters Degree from California State University at Northridge, and an M.A. degree in Communications from Loyola University in Los Angeles. He is currently the director of Management Work Simplification Programs at Loyola Marymont University. Board members receive $25 a day per diem. # # # Walthall OFFICE or COVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-74 #373 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment of Harlan S. Geldermann of Danville and named Arthur Houston, Jr., of Los Angeles to four-year terms as members of the State Real Estate Commission. Geldermann, a 51-year old Republican, has been a member of the commission since 1967. He is the owner of Geldermann Realtors in Danville and former president of the Contra Costa Real Estate Board. A varsity boxer and football player, Geldermann is a 1947 graduate of Stanford University. Houston, 64, replaces William P. Beachem of Los Angeles. Beachem's term has expired and he asked not to be reappointed. A Republican, Houston operates his own real estate and insurance company in Los Angeles. He is a life member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and a member of the Los Angeles Urban League. He is also a member of the Citizens' Advisory Council to the state's Attorney General. Commission members receive their actual and necessary travel expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-74 #374 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed two persons to the Vocational Rehabilitation Appeals Board, reappointed one director and named an existing member as board chairman. (CQ) New appointees are Bertt Lependorf, a 53-year-old San Lorenzo printer and Harry R. Schmoll, Jr., the 38-year-old principal of Widney High School for the Physically Handicapped in Los Angeles. Reappointed was Linda Canon, a San Diego volunteer worker. Appointed chairman of the board is Gregory Sells, 27, manager of the rehabilitation counseling department of the Leon S. Peters Rehabilitation Center in Fresno. Lependorf, a 1945 graduate of Gallaudet College for the deaf in Washington, D.C., has in recent years taught math to problem youths of normal hearing. He is an active member of both the California Association of the Deaf, the National Fraternal Society of the Deaf and other Bay Area clubs devoted to the deaf. He is a Democrat and takes the board slot of Dr. Berthold Lowenfeld of Berkeley, who was acting chairman of the board when his term expired. Schmoll, also a Democrat, has been principal of the Los Angeles school for the physically handicapped since 1971. He was a teacher at the school for eight years, a school-community coordinator for four and vice- principal for three. He earned his bachelor's degree at Pepperdine University in 1958 and his master's from California State University, Los Angeles, in 1969. He was vice president of the California Association of the Physically Handicapped last year. After contracting polio in 1952, he was a wheelchair basketball player for 14 years and managed the L.A. Stars wheelchair team for six years. Miss Canon, a board member since May 1973, has done volunteer work for Sweitzer School for the physically handicapped, was a deputy voter registrar in San Diego County and has served on the board of the San Diego chapter of the National Rehabilitation Association. She is a past president and one of the founders of Los Conquistadores, an organization which identifies problems and finds solutions to the problems of the physically handicapped. She helped organize and participated in a 1½-day seminar on rehabilitation in 1972. She is a Republican. Sells, a registered Independent, was appointed to the board in June 1973. He is a graduate of Kansas State Teachers College in Emporia and holds a master's from the University of Arizona. He is treasurer of the California Association of the Physically Handicapped and is on the Fresno City College advisory board. The appointments of Lependorf, Schmoll and Miss Canon require Senate confirmation. Sells, as a designee of the governor, does not require confirmation. His term on the board expires December 24, 1975. Terms of Lependorf and Miss Canon will expire December 24, 1977. Schmoll's expires one year earlier. Members receive their actual and necessary traveling expenses. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN Release: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-3-74 #375 Lola M. McAlpin-Grant, assistant dean of the Loyola University Law School in Los Angeles, was appointed today by Governor Ronald Reagan and two others were reappointed to the advisory board of the Bureau of Automotive Repair, Department of Consumer Affairs. Mrs. Grant, who became Loyola's assistant dean in 1970, replaces O. W. (Dick) Richard of Corona del Mar, whose term expired. Her term, and those of reappointees L. Christian Hauck of Rosemead and Robert W. Weggenmann of Oakland, expires June 1, 1978. All require Senate confirmation. Mrs. Grant graduated from Mount St. Mary's College in 1963 with a major in political science and earned her law degree at Loyola in 1966. She served five years in the Attorney General's office, as a student legal assistant and as a deputy attorney general in the consumer fraud unit and tax section. In addition to her duties as assistant dean, she teaches a course at the law school on consumer protection legislation. She has been selected as one of the outstanding young women of America and is a Democrat. Hauck, 33-year-old assistant counsel for the Southern California Edison Company, graduated from Muir High School in Pasadena and California State University, Los Angeles, before earning a law degree at UCLA. He was employed by the Lockheed Corporation for three years as an attorney before joining the Edison company. He is a Republican and has served on the board since March 1972. Weggenmann, 42, is product manager in the foil and container division of Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation and was appointed to the board the same day as Hauck. He has been with Kaiser since 1960, the year he earned a bachelor's degree in production management at San Francisco State College. He has been active in fund-raising activities for the American Cancer Society, Children's Home Society and the American Heart Association and is a Republican. Advisory board members receive $25 per diem. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-9-74 #376 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Stockton attorney Norman D. Shumway to the Board of Supervisors in San Joaquin County. Shumway, 39, replaces Supervisor Gary Wiler who died in a traffic accident in Galt June 10. A Republican and a former deputy county counsel in San Joaquin, Shumway received heavy support from county residents when it was learned he was being considered to fill the vacancy. Said Governor Reagan: "the citizens of San Joaquin County, and especially those in the third supervisorial district, are very fortunate that a man of his (Shumway's) caliber is available. He stood head and shoulders above everyone else considered. I think what impressed me most were the non-partisan letters of recommendation I received in support of his candidacy. "I was able to appoint a gentleman of real leadership ability who is willing to stand for election on his own and not be merely a caretaker." Shumway will be on the ballot for voter approval in the November general election. A native of Phoenix, Arizona, Shumway has been a partner specializing in civil matters with the Stockton law firm of Cavalero, Bray, Shumway and Geiger since 1966. He was deputy county counsel from October 1965 until the partnership was formed at the end of the following year. He received an associate in arts degree from Stockton Junior College, a bachelor's from the University of Utah and his law degree from Hastings College of the Law. He worked part-time and during the summers while attending college and law school as a typist, cannery worker, railroad clerk and department store sales person. At the University of Utah, Shumway was a Josephine Mead Scholar in 1958-59, president of Delta Phi fraternity and a member of Pi Sigma Alpha, a national political science honor society. While at Hastings Law School, he interned with the San Francisco Lega Aid Society and with the county's public defender. Shumway has been a member of the Sierra Club since 1966, the Japanese American Citizens League since 1968, the Stockton Bonsai Club, the Yosemite Club, Commonwealth Club of California and is a contributor to the San Joaquin Pioneer and Historical Society. He is a director of both Goodwill Industries of the San Joaquin Valley and the Stockton Council PTA Foundation. He also is a director of the Greater Stockton Volunteer Bureau. He is bishop of Stockton's second ward, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. He was a missionary for the church to Japan from 1954 to 1958. Shumway's salary is determined by the county and his torm by law. ###### McKelvey or GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres Secretary 916-445-4571 7-8-74 #377 Two owners and operators of employment agencies, in Los Angeles and San Diego, today were appointed by Governor Ronald Reagan to the California Advisory Board to the Bureau of Employment Agencies, Department of Consumer Affairs. For James J. Bright, 49, of Roth Young Personnel Services in Los Angeles, it is a reappointment. He has served on the advisory board since last July. Glenn A. English, 41, of the San Diego agency bearing his name, (CO) replaces Lysbeth A. Brinker of Santa Clara, who resigned. Bright has been president and owner of Roth Young since 1967. The firm specializes in executive placement for the food, drug, hotel and retail industries. Before entering the employment industry, he was division manager in Boston for the Stop and Shop supermarket chain. His new term will expire June 1, 1978. English is a former president of Snelling and Snelling Agency of San Diego and vice president of Snelling and Snelling of El Cajon. He spent 12 years of active duty. in the U.S. Navy and several years thereafter in the reserves. He holds a degree in business administration from Long Beach State University. His term will end June 1, 1977. Both appointees are Republicans. ####### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEASE: Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-8-74 #378 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed three members of the Commission on the Status of Women to new terms expiring July 1, 1978. They are Bonnie L. Parks and Anita M. Miller, both of Sacramento, and Dorothy M. Ford of Whittier. The appointments require Senate confirmation and the appointees, all Republicans, will receive necessary expenses. Mrs. Parks has been a commissioner since last January 14. She is legislative analyst for the California Chamber of Commerce, and formerly worked for Bank of America in San Francisco and Quantum Science Corporation in Palo Alto. She holds master's and bachelor's degrees from the University of California at Berkeley and an associate in arts from College of San Mateo. She is married to a real estate investment counselor. Mrs. Miller, a commissioner since April 1972, is a housewife and full-time community volunteer. She is a past president of the California division of the American Association of University Women and has been on a national committee of AAUW since 1968. She was president of the Sacramento County Medical Auxiliary in 1967-68. She received a nursing degree from Baylor University, a bachelor's from San Francisco State and a master's from Stanford University. Her husband is an obstetrician- gynecologist. /former Mrs. Ford, a commissioner since June 1967, is a consultant for Los Angeles County Schools andwas field coordinator and chief instructor for the Administrative Leadership for Women program at the University of Southern California. She holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Kansas, a master's from California State University, Los Angeles, has done graduate work at USC and is an honorary doctor of humanities, as bestowed by Iowa Wesleyan College in Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. She is a past president of both the California and national federations of business and professional women's clubs. For the past two years she has been manager of personnel and employment development for Southern California Edison Co. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-9-74 #379 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed the following bills: AB 180 -MacDonald Extends the termination date of provisions relating to Chapter 411 specific county probation subsidy programs and pro- gram evaluation studies to June 30, 1975. The bill appropriates $2 million to the Department of the Youth Authority to augment the probation subsidy pro- gram and $174,000 to carry out probation subsidy studies. AB 222 -Antonovich Authorizes a resident of one community college Chapter 381 district to attend classes in another college district regardless of interdistrict attendance restrictions, provided that the student is willing to pay the required interdistrict tuition on behalf of his district of residence and the receiving community college board has approved his admission. AB 507 - Ralph Revises provisions relating to unemployment insurance Chapter 382 compensation for classified school employees. The bill also removes the 120 percent trigger required for state "on" or "off" indicator for purposes of obtaining federal share of benefits under the Federal- State Extended Unemployment Compensation Act of 1970 for period until August 1, 1974, rather than July 1, 1974. Effective immediately. AB 2598 - Wood Revises procedure with respect to unclaimed Public Chapter 390 Employees' Retirement System benefits to also include unidentifiable recipient situations and to delete requirement of drawing of warrants. AB 2753 - Craven Permits local ordinances to require the payment of a Chapter 391 fee as a condition of approval of a final subdivision map or as a condition of issuing a building permit for purposes of defraying the actual or estimated cost of constructing major thoroughfares, in addition to bridges. AB 2768 - Ingalls Appropriates $47,612 to the Department of Parks and Chapter 412 Recreation for the payment of a sewer assessment made by the City of Elsinore against lands within the Lake Elsinore State Recreation Area; provided, that no moneys shall be expended until there is a signed agreement with the concessionaire to reimburse the state for such payment. AB 2822 - Arnett Validates certain final apportionments of state Chapter 392 school building aid based on conditional apportion- ments made prior to January 1, 1975, rather than January 1, 1974, made for the growth program and the replacement of structurally inadequate school facili- ties. AB 2883 - Dunlap Provides that during the month preceding the begin- Chapter 393 ning of the fiscal year of the county, instead of during January, the superior court of each county shall designate the estimated number of grand jurors required for the ensuing fiscal year. The bill provides that in each county there shall be at least one grand jury drawn and impaneled in each fiscal year of the county, instead of in each year. The bill also makes other amendments to reflect the change to a fiscal year basis. The changes are ctive January 1, 1975. AB 2903 - Gonsalves Limits the expenditure of proceeds from unsold bonds Chapter 394 authorized by component school districts which are included in newly formed school districts to the purpose or purposes for which such bonds were authorized and to the territory of the school district which authorized said bonds, and limits the tax levy regarding such indebtedness to the territory of the district within which said bonds were authorized until the new school district assumes such indebted- #379 AB 2960 -L. Greene Makes available an additional $12 million from the Chapter 383 proceeds of the 1966 School Building Aid Law for supplemental loans to school district which lack sufficient matching funds to finance earthquake repair and construction under Field Act requirements. AB 30 63 - Powers Requires consideration, unpaid debt amount and Chapter 413 identification of grantee as beneficiary or mortgagee to be noted on a deed, instrument or writing taken from a mortgagor as a result of, or in lieu of, a foreclosure and exempted from taxation under the Documentary Transfer Tax Act, or to be stated in an affidavit or declaration under penalty of perjury. AB 3091 - Chappie Permits the Placer County Board of Supervisors to Chapter 395 make an assessment of a uniform amount on each parcel of land within County Service Area No. 1, Dollar Point, without regard to the assessed value of the parcel, for providing local park or recreation facilities and services within the area. The bill provides for specified procedures relating to notice, hearing and protests. AB 3175 - Chappie Provides for an independent board of directors of Chap ter 396 the Placer County Water Agency. AB 3326 - Powers Exempts the Del Paso Heights Elementary School Chapter 397 District, for a specified period, from the Education Code provision which prohibits use of certain State school funds if the district does not expend specified amounts for classroom teachers' salaries. AB 3371 - Knox Prohibits notices of appointment required to be Chapter 398 filed with Insurance Commissioner by insurers appointing persons, life agents, insurance agents, or travel insurance agents from being filed unless the filing is consented to by the person so appointed Changes are effective January 1, 1975. AB 3399 - Badham Provides that at any time after the board of directors Chapter 399 of a California water district has adopted a resolution to increase the number of directors, the directors may repeal that resolution, and thereby revert back to the original number of directors, by a unanimous vote. Effective immediately. AB 3408 - Gonsalves Includes in the powers of the New Motor Vehicle Chapter 384 Board the consideration of any matter regarding activities and practices of a manufacturer branch and distributor branch, and authorizes the board to perform specified acts in connection therewith. The bill makes other related changes. Effective immediately. AB 3409 - Cline Deletes the provision postponing the attachment of Chapter 414 penalties on unpaid property taxes due to an asses- sor's error without fault of the assessee and instead provides for the cancellation of such penalties where such property taxes increased more than $100 or 50 percent of the tax for the current fiscal year, whichever is greater, and payment is made within one year from the date that the correction was entered in the roll or abstract record. AB 3452 - Foran Requires every state agency and department to Chapter 400 categorize Filipinos as Filipinos for any statistical tabulation of minority groups. AB 3461 - Knox Requires a special election within a proposed Chapter 385 uninhabited improvement district of a municipal water district at which each landowner shall have one vote for each dollars worth of assessed value of land on the proposition of the formation of the uninhabited improvement district and the incurring indebtedness by the issuance of bonds of the district for the uninhabited improvement district. Effective immediately. #379 AB 3482 - Sieroty Specifies that provisions for sealing criminal Chapter 401 records of minors applies to persons under the age of 21 at time of commission of crimes occuring prior to March 7, 1973. The changes made by this bill become effective on Janury 1, 1975. AB 3598 - Craven Authorizes governing boards of all school districts, Chapter 402 rather than only those with an average daily attendance of more than 50,000, to delegate power regarding employee expenses in performing district services to the district superintendent. AB 3600 - Fenton Provides that the Board of Optometry may make Chapter 403 exceptions from continuing education requirements for reasons of health, military service or other good cause. Effective January 1, 1975. AB 3606 - Chappie Authorizes the Yuba County Water District to call a Chapter 404 special election within 90 days after the effective date of this act, which need not be held on any regular election date or consolidated with any other election, for the purpose of the formation of Improvement District No. 5 and the authorization of bonds for such improvement district. Effective immediately. AB 3944 - Antonovich Eliminates the requirement of $50,000 additional Chapter 405 statutory net worth for each branch maintained by a state-licensed savings and loan association. Effective immediately. SB 1496 - Marler Appropriates $60,000 for reimbursement to Shasta Chapter 406 County for the costs of legislation enacted in 1973 which added a judge to the superior court of that county. SB 1512 - Carpenter Deletes the provision terminating peace officer Chapter 379 status of airport security officers of Orange and San Francisco Airports. Delays dates for termina- tion of peace officer status of such personnel at the airport operated by San Joaquin County to April 30, 1975. The bill eliminates peace officer status for airport security officers of the Santa Maria Airport District. SB 1519 - Nejedly Revises the Public Resources Code provisions Chapter 386 declaring the purpose of state forest management. Effective January 1, 1975. SB 1655 - Berryhill Limits the county share of Medi-Cal costs for any Chapter 387 fiscal year to an amount not exceeding the amount produced by a property tax rate of 65 cents per $100 of modified assessed value. The bill provides that any relief to San Joaquin County under this provision shall first be used to reduce outstanding indebtedness to the state under the Medi-Cal program. SB 1689 - Grunsky Eliminates continuous attendance requirement for Chapter 388 military dependents to qualify for resident classification in public institutions of higher education under specific circumstances. The change made by the bill does not apply to the University of California unless the Regents adopt a resolution making it applicable. SB 1699 - Ayala Permits counties which have provided officers and Chapter 415 employees with both retirement benefits under the County Employees Retirement System of 1937 and federal social security benefits on a nonintegrated basis to provide survivorship benefits as an alternative to survivorship benefits under social security. -3- #379 SB 1748 - Petris Permits establishment of impound accounts for the Chapter 389 payment of taxes, insurance premiums, or other purposes relating to property by the mutual agreement of the parties to the loan or sale agreement provided the lender or seller has furnished purchaser or borrower with a statement which, rather than stating no interest will be paid on any funds held in such account, states whether or not interest will be paid. The bill provides that an impound, trust, or other type of account established in violation of the provisions of this act and specified existing provisions of this act and specified existing provisions shall be voidable at the option of the purchaser or borrower, at any time. Effective January 1, 1975. Community SB 1769 - Alquist Requires the Cabrillo/College District to base units Chapter 409 of average daily attendance on regular census dates during two 16-week terms and prohibits the district from counting attendance during a one-month inter- session period for apportionment purposes. SB 1782 - Short Requires governing boards of school districts and Chapter 407 county superintendents of schools to establish and maintain development centers for nandicapped pupils, or to contract with other school districts or county superintendents of schools for such service, by September 1, 1978. Effective immediately. SB 1803 - Stevens Extends the period of time before which fire depart- Chapter 410 ment members with peace officer powers must satis- factorily complete a course of training in exercise of the powers to arrest from July 1, 1974, to January 1, 1975. SB 1949 - Nejedly Specifies that unsold bonds issued in the name of Chapter 408 various school districts that are reorganized and included entirely in a new school district shall be considered a liability of the new district for purposes of computing the bonding capacity of the new district pursuant to the State School Building Aid Law of 1952. SB 2141 - Ayala Authorizes a county service area in San Bernardino Chapter 380 County to provide flood or inundation protection services. The bill declares construction of work to provide flood protection in the event of the failure of a dam to be one of the powers of the San Bernardino County Flood Control District. -4- McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-9-74 #380 Janet L. Goeske of Riverside today was reappointed by Governor Ronald Reagan to the Pacific State Hospital Advisory Board for a term expiring December 16, 1976. Until her appointment to the board in 1970, Mrs. Goeske had put in 18 years of volunteer work at the hospital. In that capacity she took children into her home to live and cared for several of Riverside's elderly in seeing that they shopped and ate regularly and located low- cost housing for them. The native of Fergus Falls, Minnesota, was recipient of a "Volunteer of the Year" award in 1970. Mrs. Goeske has lived in Riverside since 1940. A Republican, she will receive necessary expenses as an advisory board member. ####### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-9-74 #381 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed two women and a man to the California Board of Nursing Education and Nurse Registration, Department of Consumer Affairs. Elizabeth S. Getty, staff nurse in the allergy clinic at Permanente Medical Group, Sacramento, was selected by the governor to fill the unexpired term ending next June 1 of Rachel Ayers of Pasadena, who resigned. Mrs. Getty's own term on the board had expired June 1. For Mrs. Getty's vacant slot, Governor Reagan appointed Laura M. Douglass, chairman of the division of nursing at Point Loma College in San Diego. That term will end June 1, 1978. The third appointee is Gordon L. Ogden, a department of nursing lecturer at California State College, Bakersfield. The 46-year-old Ogden replaces Ira D. Trail of Bakersfield, who resigned from the board. Ogden's term will expire June 1, 1977. Mrs. Getty has been with Permanente since 1967. She was a staff nurse previously for Mercy Children's Hospital and Sutter General Hospital, both in Sacramento. She is active in the California Nurses Association. Mrs. Douglass, as nursing chairman at Point Loma, developed a new program which resulted in the graduation last month of 32 students. She had been a consultant to Pasadena College, Georgia State Hospital at Middlefield, Bethel College in St. Paul, Minnesota, and Azusa Pacific College in Azusa (California). Ogden joined Cal State-Bakersfield this year after six months as consulting chairman in the department of allied health at Selkirk College in British Columbia. He was part-time associate director of nursing at John Muir Memorial Hospital in Walnut Creek and chairman of Contra Costa College's department of nursing in the late 1960s. The appointees, all Republicans, will receive $25 per day while serving on the board. ####### McKelvey July 9, 1974 GOVERNOR'S REACTION TO ASSEMBLYMAN DOUG CARTER'S RESIGNATION: "It is the function of a governor to appoint people; it is not the function of a legislator. Naturally, input from a legislator is important and always welcome. However, the ultimate decision and responsibility rests with the governor. The 'resignation' of Assemblyman Carter was his decision and his privilege." July 9, 1974 GOVERNOR'S STATEMENT ON DEATH OF EARL WARREN "I'm sure I speak for all Californians in saying that while the nation will mourn his passing, he will especially be mourned here in view of his distinguished service to our state. "His long record as Attorney General, three-term Governor and Supreme Court Justice will long be remembered by all of us. " OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-10-74 #382 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed the following bills: SB 1495 - Marks Expands coverage of the Marks-Foran Residential Rehabil- Chapter 419 itation Act of 1973 to authorize all cities, counties, cities and counties, redevelopment agencies, and housing authorities, rather than only cities and cities and counties with populations of over 600,000 and redevelop- ment agencies and housing authorities within such cities and cities and counties, to conduct residential rehabil- itation programs thereunder. The bill also requires the local agency to make efforts to prevent displacement of residents as a result of the operation of the residen- tial rehabilitation program which include, but need not be limited to, utilization of available federal, state, or local funding programs for rent subsidies. SB 1606 - Collier Requires, until July 1, 1979, every person operating Chapter 416 under a fish packaging and processing license to pay an additional privilege tax of 0185 for each pound, or fraction thereof, of crab purchased or received by him. These revenues would be expended for crab research and management activities. The Department of Fish and Game is to conduct an investigation into the factors responsible for the decline of the market crab in state waters. The bill appropriates $50,000 from the Fish and Game Preservation Fund and $10,000 from the General Fund for the proposed study. Effective January 1, 1975. SB 1679 -Grunsky Grants agents of the law enforcement liaison unit of the Chapter 420 Department of Corrections peace officer powers and authorizes such agents to possess and carry tear gas weapons in specified circumstances. The bill also ex- pands the class of Department of the Youth Authority personnel who may possess and carry tear gas weapons to include employees not with a departmental institution who are peace officers and are assigned to the depart- ment's missing ward unit. SB 1722 - Marks Permits redevelopment agencies making rehabilitation Chapter 421 loans under the Marks-Foran Residential Rehabilitation Act to extend the maximum repayment period to 30 years. Permits maximum loan amount of $30,000. SB 1859 -Walsh Requires the Department of the California Highway Patrol Chapter 417 to conduct a study to ascertain the feasibility of employing women as members of the California Highway Patrol. The California Highway Patrol, with the assistance of the State Personnel Board, is to hire an appropriate number of women to perform traffic law enforcement work. Effective immediately. SB 2047 -Zenovich Permits the board of directors of the Madera Irriga- Chapter 422 tion District to reduce the rate of assessment for district purposes on land in the district which is served by a municipal water supply and the board finds, after petition and hearing, that such lands are not and will not be benefited by district operations to the same extent as other lands in the district. SB 2108 - Stevens Authorizes the governing board of any school district Chapter 418 maintaining a community college to provide direct or indirect medical and hospitalization services, and to include those services within the purposes for which there may be required of students in attendance in grades 13 and 14 an annual health supervision and services fee of not to exceed $10. McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-10-74 #383 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that a special election to fill the unexpired term of John Burton in the 20th Assembly District in San Francisco will be held November 5, 1974 in conjunction with the regular general election. The primary election will be held October 8, 1974. If no candidate receives more than 50 percent of the total vote, the seat would be decided November 5. Burton resigned his Assembly seat June 25, 1974, after winning election to the U.S. House of Representatives. Although Burton's two-year Assembly term expires at midnight December 1, 1974, the governor was compelled to call the special election under provisions of law (Elections Code, Section 2601 and Government Code, Section 1773) and Article 4, Section 2 of the California Constitution. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Califorr 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #384 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have been signed: AB 23 - Brown Expands the College Opportunity Grant, Graduate Fellow- Chapter 451 ship, and Occupational Education and Training Grant Programs. The bill changes present law to permit consideration of federal awards in determining award amounts for state scholarship recipients. It also appropriates $1,061,636 to the Scholarship and Loan Commission for the additional grants. AB 341 - Bagley Provides that hospitals owned by a nonprofit organization Chapter 452 and leased to and used by a hospital district would be included within the welfare property tax exemption. AB 409 - Crown Makes it the duty of the coroner to inquire into and Chapter 453 determine the circumstances, manner, and cause of death where the suspected cause of death is sudden infant death syndrome. Requires the state Department of Health to keep each county health officer advised of the most current knowledge relating to the nature and causes of sudden infant death syndrome. The bill also appropriates $17,550 to the state controller for allocation and disbursement to local agencies for costs incurred by them pursuant to this act during the 1974-75 and 1975-76 fiscal years. AB 914 - Gonzales Provides for filing of petitions signed by specified Chapter 454 number of registered voters of the area to be represen- ted in lieu of filing fee for candidates for elective public office. The bill provides for reimbursement of local agencies for costs incurred by them pursuant to the act under a continuously appropriated local government subvention. AB 1560 - Burton Makes violation of the Bay Area Pollution Control Law or Chapter 455 any violation of a rule or regulation of the Bay Area Pollution Control District a misdemeanor. Each day a violation occurs is a separate offense. The bill also repeals the prohibition against the district specifying the design of equipment, type of construction, or particular method to be used in reducing air contaminants except in the case of railroad locomotives. AB 1567 - Briggs Provides that the cash value of business records for Chapter 456 purpose of property taxation shall be only the value of the tangible material on which such records are recorded. The bill is operative with respect to assessment for the 1974-75 fiscal year to the 1978-79 fiscal year. AB 1579 - Gonsalves Deletes a Revenue and Taxation Code provision re- Chapter 457 lating to the taxation of certain documented vessels which was previously invalidated by the California Supreme Court. The bill defines meaning of "executive regulations" as used in provisions establishing maximum property tax rates for local agencies. It also includes costs due to environmental conditions as basis for the controller to authorize an additional property tax rate for local agencies due to an emergency or general disaster. AB 2206 - Z'berg Requires the Department of Aeronautics in making its Chapter 458 investigation concerning the proposed acquisition for a school site of property within prescribed distance from an airport, to give notice to the owner and operator of such airport who shall be afforded an opportunity to comment upon the proposal. The bill provides that if the Department of Aeronautics recommends against the acquisition of such site for a school, that such recom- mendation shall not be overruled without express approval of the Department of Education and state Allocation Board Effective immediately. - 1 - #384 AB 2607 - Greene, B. Authorizes a county board of supervisors to allocate Chapter 459 and appropriate funds received under the State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act of 1972 for purposes of establishing, maintaining, and purchasing property for the county free library. Effective immediately. AB 2624 - Fenton Increases Cal-Vet educational benefits from $50 per Chapter 460 month to $100 per month and increases the maximum amount to be paid from $1,000 to 200. It also appropriates $2,500,000 for the program. This measure is intended to provide financial assistance to Vietnam veterans after expiration of federal educational benefits. AB 2693 - Beverly Permits certain eligible members of retirement systems Chapte4 491 established pursuant to the County Employees Retirement Law of 1937 to elect to become safety members upon payment of contributions. The provision is not operative until authorized by the board of supervisors of the affected county. AB 2703 - Z'berg Authorizes the governor to appoint one additional chief Chapter 461 deputy for the Director of Parks and Recreation, upon recommendation of the director. Appropriates $40,000 to the Department of Parks and Recreation to carry out the purposes of the act. AB 2816 - Berman Permits local authorities to place and maintain dual Chapter 462 speed limit, speed advisory and mileage traffic signs in both English and metric units. Effective 1-1-75. AB 2820 - Lancaster Expands application of provisions authorizing local Chapter 463 agencies to levy or have levied a property tax rate in addition to the maximum property tax rate, for costs mandated by courts to include judgments rendered earlier than July 1, 1972, if the costs of such orders are not incurred until after June 30, 1973. AB 2827 - Knox Makes permanent the authorization for a maximum annual Chapter 464 compensation of $3,600 for board members and $5,000 for the board president of the Golden Gate Bridge and Highway District. AB 2862 - Thurman Revises the pest abatement district law to increase Chapter 465 powers of such districts. Specifies procedures to be used in nuisance abatement and provides for civil penalties. Requires that nuisance abatement cost be paid by the landowner, including state and local agencies AB 2886 - Bannai Permits the director of the Youth Authority to invest Chapter 466 funds of certain Youth Authority wards in an interest- bearing bank account. It also provides that these funds, with interest, may be paid over to the ward at his request while in an institution or on parole. The balance would be paid the ward upon his discharge from the Youth Authority. AB 2890 - Chappie Authorizes public utility districts supplying elec- Chapter 467 tricity to charge and collect standby or immediate availability charges on all lands within the district. Effective immediately. AB 2952 - Chappie Provides that formation of a county service area Chapter 468 completed on January 15, 1974, shall be effective for assessment and taxation purposes for the 1974-75 fiscal year if the required statement and map or plat is filed on or before February 28, 1974. The bill also changes requirements for the detachment of uninhabited territory from a city, for purposes of assessment and taxation for the 1974-75 fiscal year and fiscal years thereafter. AB 2965 - Cory Increases maximum tax rate for specified capital outlay Chapter 494 expenses when territory is annexed to an existing community college district from $0.15 to $0.20 per $100 of assessed valuation. The bill also authorizes a tax of $0.20 per $100 of assessed valuation in the territory of Garden Grove Unified School District if such territory is annexed to the Coast Community College District, for specified community college purposes. #384 AB 3042 - Keysor Requires each section of a municipal referendum petition Chapter 469 to have attached an affidavit made by a voter of the city stating specified information. Requires the clerk to disregard duplicate signatures. The bill also delete. certain local elections from the requirement regarding the establishment of election dates. AB 3093 - Papan Extends the period of time in which persons who were Chapter 470 assigned to identification and communication duties on August 4, 1972, can elect to be local safety members of the Public Employees' Retirement System if their employing agency permits election. The bill also permit retired persons to be elected to the board of adminis- tration of the Public Employees' Retirement System for terms beginning on or before January 16, 1975, and to hold office until end of term if they retire after commencement of the term. AB 3134 - MacGillivray Amends the County Employees Retirement Law of Chapter 471 1937 to provide where provisions are made applicable by the board of supervisors, that retirement allowance warrants be forwarded for bank deposit. The bill also provides for issuance of a duplicate warrant i; cases of lost or destroyed retirement allowance warrant and that any losses incurred by reason of duplicate warrant shall be a charge against the account from which the payment is derived. AB 3160 - Papan Provides that the County of San Mateo need not demolish Chapter 472 the temporary housing project called "Midway Village" until January 1, 1976. AB 3164 - Powers Requires that acceptances by the governor or retro- Chapter 473 cession of legislative jurisdiction offered by the United States over real property upon which an easement or other interest for highway purposes has been granted by the federal government to the state, be recorded, rather than filed for record, in the office of the county recorder of the county in which the real property is located and in the offine of the State Lands Commission. Effective 1-1-75. AB 3193 - Burke Revises provisions regarding notice and election require- Chapter 474 ments for any school district that determines to operate a mandatory continuous school program. AB 3236 - McAlister Enacts the state School Building Aid and Earthquake Chapter 475 Reconstruction and Replacement Bond Law of 1974. It provides for the authorization of $150,000,000 in state General Obligation Bonds. Upon approval of the electorate at the November general election, the $150,000,000 would be available for reconstruction or replacement of unsafe school buildings. Effective immediately. AB 3240 - Briggs Authorizes the governing board of any school district Chapter 476 with an average daily attendance of not less than 6,000 nor more than 8,000 which has not established a security patrol, to contract with licensed private patrol operators, but prohibits such employees from carrying firearms in any school building or on any school grounds. Effective immediately. AB 3248 - MacGillivray Requires lobster traps to be emptied not less than Chapter 477 every 96 hours, rather than every 48 hours. AB 3266 - Knox Makes changes in the Government Code provisions relating Chapter 478 to hearings and protests in city incorporation and annexation proceedings. AB 3286 - MacGillivray Allows all combinations of vehicles to extend up Chapter 479 to 65 feet in length, except certain specified combinations. - 3 - #384 AB 3312 - Carter Provides that a member of the Public Employees' Retire- Chapter 480 ment System who has been offered enrollment in a rehabilitation program shall not be retired for disability until certain conditions are met. AB 3360 - Wilson Permits the board of retirement of retirement systems Chapter 481 established under the County Employees' Retirement Law of 1937, to pay increased retirement allowances, optional death allowances and annual death allowances when cost of living exceeds 2 or 3 percent from excess earnings of the system. AB 3384 - Greene, L. Makes technical amendments to public postsecondary Chapter 482 uniform student residency law. Effective immediatel AB 3424 - Craven Deletes the requirement that the state purchase vehicles Chapter 483 meeting low-emission standards provided their cost does not exceed by 10 percent the cost of vehicles which would otherwise be purchased. The bill also revises under a related but different program the definition of low-emission motor vehicle to specify smaller quantities of specified emissions. AB 3426 - Chappie Deletes the 10 cents per mile limitation upon the Chapter 484 travel allowance a school district governing board is authorized to pay to its members regarding necessary travel in order to attend district meetings. AB 3448 - Lockyer Amends the Civil Code, to specify that the proof Chapter 485 required in an action freeing an adult child from responsibility for the support of his parent will be that such parent abandoned the adult child while he was a minor under 18 years of age. AB 3475 - Lanterman Requires state residency rather than a one-year Chapter 486 residency period for purposes of admission of mentally retarded persons to state hospitals. Restores right of the attorney for a person subject to the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act to receive such person's records inder certain circumstances. It prohibits the Directo of Health from excluding the employment of certain health professional persons in administrative positions in mental health services. AB 3597 - Craven Allows any local agency, without voter approval, to Chapter 496 raise its maximum property tax rate, in 1974-75 only, to obtain that portion of the costs of purchasing electrical power in 1974-75 to energize street and highway lights in operation in 1973-74. Effective immediately. AB 3637 - Keene Reduces for an experimental period the minimum size limit Chapter 487 on imported silver salmon to correspond with recent changes in the minimum size limit on silver salmon landed within the state. AB 3685 - Knox Specifies that a payment shall not be considered the Chapter 488 payment of a franchise fee for purposes of the Franchise Investment Law if no obligation is imposed upon the purchaser to purchase or pay for a quantity of such goods in excess of that which a reasonable businessman normally would purchase by way of a starting inventory or supply or to maintain a going inventory or supply. AB 4024 - Keene Codifies various provisions relating to the Public Chapter 489 Utilities Commission now found in the California Constitution which are to be omitted if the voters approve Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 36. AB 4058 - Beverly Extends time limits for completion and adoption of Chapter 490 mandatory general plan elements for newly incorporated cities. # # # # # - 4 - OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #385 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed the following bills: SB 913 - Coombs Amends the Contractors License Law to provide that the Chapter 423 reexamination fee required when a person has failed the examination applies not only to applicants for an original license, as under present law, but also to applicants for an additional classification or a change of responsible managing officer or employee. It permits the retention of fees paid by home improve- ment applicants under the same conditions as fees paid by other applicants. The bill authorizes the board to adjust fees so that they will not produce total estimated revenue in excess of the board's administra- tive costs. The bill also corrects the definition of "contractor" in the Subletting and Subcontracting Fair Practices Act. Effective January 1, 1975. SB 929 - Zenovich Requires the State Department of Health to establish Chapter 424 and administer a program which will make loans avail- able to private nonprofit children's institutions for installation of automatic sprinkler or detectors responding to invisible products of combustion other than heat systems. It requires any such loan to bear interest at a rate of 5 percent per annum and limits maximum term of such a loan to 30 years. The bill also transfers $2,200,000 from the unexpended balance of funds appropriated by the Budget Act of 1973 to the State Department of Health for expenditure, without regard to fiscal years, for such loans. SB 1533 - Stevens Deletes the statutory provisions which provide that a Chapter 425 nonresident alien cannot inherit real or personal property in this state unless the country in which he resides affords United States citizens the same inheritance rights as are given to its own citizens. SB 1535 - Stevens Amends various improvement acts to conform to general Chapter 426 provisions relating to condemnation law and procedure. The bill repeals special condemnation procedures found in such acts. SB 1575 - Grunsky Lowers the minimum age when a trainable mentally Chapter 495 retarded child could be enrolled in a special education class from the present age 5 to age 3. Enrollment of such pupils would not be required, only allowed. The bill also increases the maximum basic amount to be transferred from the General Fund to Section A of the State School Fund per applicable average daily atten- dance for special education and equalization aid. This increase would be effective July 1, 1975. SB 1613 -Cusanovich Requires the bond owner, in order to be issued a Chapter 427 certificate of sale following a sale for delinquency at which no bids were made, and the redeemer of real property foreclosed by a bondholder pursuant to the Improvement Act of 1911 to pay the city or county treasurer the cost if incurred of an abstract of title or title search of the real property if no deposit of the estimated amount thereof was made by the bond- holder. SB 1643 - Marler Authorizes the Department of Motor Vehicles to accept Chapter 428 a driver's license renewal application more than six months prior to the expiration date, requires a fee to be paid to the Department of Motor Vehicles upon application for a license to operate a higher class of vehicle and requires an annual report to the legisla- ture concerning license extensions. Effective 1-1-75. -1- #385 SB 1682 - Biddle Requires that all parties to an action that have Chapter 429 appeared, rather than only parties affected by a cross-complaint, be served with a copy of a cross- complaint. SB 1704 - Holmdahl Specifies that the time allowed the defendant in an Chapter 430 unlawful detainer action to answer an amended com- plaint shall not exceed five days. SB 1773 - Stull Deletes the requirement that the Republican State Chapter 431 Convention meet in Sacramento. SB 1789 - Rodda Requires, if 50 percent or more of the enrollment in Chapter 432 a fire training course, as well as a police training course, at a community college consist of students who are residents of a community college district other than the district offering the course, that all such students be deemed residents of such district for purposes of computation of average daily attendance. SB 1790 - Song Reduces the contribution rate of safety members of Chapter 493 retirement systems established pursuant to the County Employees' Retirement Law of 1937 in counties in which the provision is adopted by the board of supervisors. SB 1817 -Cusanovich Includes as causes for disciplinary action against Chapter 433 a licensed contractor any willful or deliberate dis- regard and violation of specified provisions relating to home solicitation contracts and contracts for construction of swimming pools. The bill also revises the provision which authorizes the remaining partner of a contractor partnership to continue in business upon the dissolution or disassociation of a partnershi SB 1818 -Cusanovich Makes technical amendments to the Contractors Chapter 434 License Law. SB 1819 -Cusanovich Revises provisions of the Contractors License Law Chapter 435 relating to the financial statements required of applicants and licensees. SB 1837 - Zenovich Makes technical changes in the law governing the Chapter 436 title insurance business. SB 1875 - Holmdahl Eliminates the requirement of filing of a confidential Chapter 437 questionnaire in dissolution of marriage proceedings. SB 1916 - Nejedly Authorizes the district board of a district organized Chapter 438 under the Fire Protection District Law of 1961 to create, or annex or detach territory from, a special fire protection zone in the district for the purpose of paying for water and related costs or specific charges to the district which are of sole benefit to the territory in the zone. SB 1944 - Way Revises the brand registration and inspection fee Chapter 439 schedule. In addition, the bill removes the power of the Director of Food and Agriculture to change the fees within specified guidelines. SB 1950 - Alquist Deletes the Education Code authorization for the 1974- Chapter 492 1975 maximum tax rate of Yuba Community College District to be increased for purposes of funding certain previously committed residence hall expenditures SB 1952 -Richardson Clarifies the expiration date of the provision Chapter 440 exempting proceedings regarding certain water improvements in the City of Glendora from the Special Assessment Investigation, Limitation and Majority Protest Act of 1931. SB 1956 - Stiern Extends the permissible number of television transla- Chapter 441 tor facilities placed in a county service area from three to six. -2- #385 SB 1957 -Cusanovich Allows licensees engaged in business of check Chapter 442 selling or receiving money for the purpose of paying bills of an obligor to deposit with the Commissioner of Corporations $10,000 cash or its equivalent in lieu of maintaining a surety bond of the same amount. SB 1991 - Bradley Provides that suits for modification of state gift Chapter 443 tax payment must be brought within three years after a gift tax determination is made. The bill also revises the length of time permitted for filing suits seeking refunds of state gift tax. SB 1992 - Bradley Permits filing a petition for modification of court Chapter 444 orders correcting certain errors in inheritance taxes within six months after the order, decree, or judgment is made or prior to distribution of the estate being probated, whichever is later, but not later than three years after the order, decree, or judgment was made or entered. The bill also provides that no such modification which results in an increase in inheri- tance tax shall be enforceable as a lien against a purchaser or encumbrancer for value without knowledge of facts resulting in the increase. SB 2004 - Bradley Makes a technical change in the gift tax provision Chapter 445 relating to a penalty for failure to properly file a gift tax return. SB 2039 - Marler Permits elementary school districtswith an average Chapter 446 daily attendance of under 2,500 to purchase standard school supplies rather than requiring such districts to buy supplies from the county office of education. SB 2068 - Bradley Increases the test for insolvency of a life insurer Chapter 447 to the impairment of the capital required for admis- sion to do business in California rather than the present test which provides that a life insurer is insolvent when its assets are not sufficient to cover liabilities. SB 2113 - Rodda Gives the Director of General Services the authority Chapter 448 to contract for repair work in emergencies without following normally required contracting procedures. SB 2137 - Stiern Permits the board of direct rs of an airport district Chapter 449 to lease property which in the board's opinion is not needed for district purposes. SB 2178 - Stull Prohibits school districts from treating time served Chapter 450 by a certificated employee on a commission on profes- sional competence in that or any other district, as time off for salary reduction purposes and from deducting for the salary of such employee the amount paid to a substitute employed or the amount payable to a substitute if one had been employed. Governor Ronald Reagan also signed SB 457 with the following deletion: SB 457 - Alquist Exempts from payment of license and permit fees those Chapter 497 residential facilities and day care centers which are family homes serving six or fewer adults or children. It also modifies the basis for the reduction or waiver of application fees for community care facilities to include the effect of the imposition of fees on avail- ability of sufficient facilities for placement purposes. The bill permit up to 25 percent, rather than 100 percent, of the fees to be payable upon application with no refund if license or permit is not granted. The bill also appropriates $1,400,000 to the Department of Health for costs incurred and not recovered through fees to be reduced or waived. REASON FOR DELETION: "I am deleting the $1,400,000 appropriation con- tained in Section 5 of Senate Bill No. 457. "Sufficient funds are already included in the Budget Act of 1974 to fund licensing operations currently budgeted as fee supported. "With this deletion, I approve SB 457." # McKelvey OFFFICE OF GOVERNOR ONALD REAGAN MEMO TO "HE PRESS Sacramento, Californ. 1 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 Governor Ronald Reagan today designated State Controller Houston I. Flournoy to represent him at the Washington, D. C., funeral services for former Governor Earl Warren. The governor also directed that flags be flown at half staff Friday in honor of the state's only three-term governor. ****** McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #386 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the following bills have been vetoed. AB 1128 - Dixon Modifies provisions of the Elections Code and Penal Code relating to the right to vote of persons convicted of crimes. REASON FOR VETO: "This bill would modify provisions of the Elections Code and Penal Code relating to the right to vote of persons convicted of crimes. It will become operative if Assembly Constitutional Amendment No. 38 is approved by the voters. Among other things, it would amend Sections 310 and 321 of the Elections Code. Approval of this bill would chapter out the substantive changes made to those sections by AB 765 (Statutes of 1974, Chapter 74). Furthermore, Section 15 of this bill expresses legislative intent that both AB 1128 and ACA 38 conform to the decision of the California Supreme Court in Ramirez V. Brown. That decision was reversed and remanded by the United States Supreme Court in Richardson V. Ramirez. "Because of these two major defects, I am returning the bill unsigned. AB 2860 Antonovich Permits state and local miscellaneous members of the Public Employees Retirement System to retire for service at age 50 with 5 years service. It also prescribes the computation of the allowance between ages 50 and 54-3/4. REASON FOR VETO: "As stated in Section 20001 of the Government Code, the purpose of the Public Employees' Retirement System is to effect economy and efficiency in the public service by providing a means whereby employees who become super- annuated or otherwise incapacitated may, without hardship or prejudice, be replaced by more capable employees Assembly Bill 2860 would arbitrarily change this purpose by establishing age 50 as a permissive retirement age. The effect of this change would be to deprive both state and local agencies of many highly trained, capable and productive employees who, at near mid-career, could leave service. The loss of such valuable employees could indeed affect both the efficiency and the economy of government operations---but in a negative way. I believe the current provisions of law are sound public policy. To tamper with the present law and to alter the basic purpose of our retirement system in order to satisfy one relatively small group of employees can in no way be justified. "Accordingly, I am returning this bill unsigned." AB 3167 Keysor Permits a single school district with average daily attendance greater than 50,000 located in Orange County to establish a regional occupational center or program. Currently, Los Angeles, Long Beach, and San Diego are permitted to run single-district regional occupational centers or programs. REASON FOR VETO: "I believe the long-term impact of lowering the require- ment below the 100, ADA level will dilute the effectiveness of this type of vocational program. The educational and financial efficiency of regional occupational programs is dependent upon judicious use of the business and industrial resources in any given area and the careful administration of instructional programs designed to avoid duplication. This cannot be achieved if the multi-district basis of operation is discarded. In addition, I have received letters from the Superintendents of Schools of Glenn, Los Angeles, Orange, Plumas, Sacramento, San Diego, and Sonoma Counties urging my veto of this legislation. = "Accordingly, I am returning this bill unsigned. ##### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR PONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Califor a 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #387 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Municipal Court Judge Roy E. Chapman of San Bernardino County to the Superior Court bench in that county for the interim period until he officially assumes the post. Judge Chapman was elected to the Superior Court bench June 4 in a contest to replace retired Judge John P. Knauf. A 56-year-old Democrat, Judge Chapman was appointed to the Municipal bench in 1970 by Governor Reagan. Prior to that appointment he was in law practice as a partner of Chapman and Peccorini for three years and was in a similar capacity with Chapman and Sprague between 1950 and 1967. He was admitted to the California Bar in 1946 after attaining his law degree at Montana State University in Missoula five years earlier. He received his bachelor's degree from the same school. Judge Chapman was on active duty with the U. S. Coast Guard during World War II and was a lieutenant upon release. In 1965 he received a special award from the County Council of Community Services for outstanding leadership in furthering mental health services. In 1968 he received the San Bernardino Teachers Association's "Monte" award for outstanding service as a citizen and the following year was named "Lay Citizen of the Year" in San Bernardino County by the Redlands field chapter of Phi Kappa Delta, professional education fraternity. Superior Court judges receive $37,615 annually. #### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR PANALD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, Califor a 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #388 Arnold S. Wasserman of Santa Barbara today was appointed by Governor Ronald Reagan to the California Council of Product Design and Marketing, a position requiring Senate confirmation. Wasserman, 40, replaces Merle Banta of San Marino, who resigned. He will serve at the governor's pleasure. The graduate of Carnegie Mellon University of Pittsburgh and the University of Chicago obtained a grant from the Ford Foundation in 1968 for four years of research into citizen participation in public planning and community development which he titled "Grassroots." Wasserman has been involved in consulting since 1968, most recently for Berkey Photo of New York City, the world's largest independent film processor; and for Les Papeteries de Gastuche of Belgium, concerned with research and planning for that country's first major paper recycling operation. He also was involved in programs to formulate a bicycle and mini-bus commuting system and a comprehensive bikeway system for Santa Barbara. He designed traveling informational exhibits while in the U. S. Army from 1959 to 1961. A Republican, Wasserman will receive his necessary expenses. ****** McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Califo: a 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #389 Three members of the Camarillo State Hospital Advisory Board for the Mentally Retarded were reappointed today by Governor Ronald Reagan. (cq) Included are Ablyne B. Winge of Los Angeles, Marion E, Van Winkle of Santa Maria and Douglas R. McAvoy of Camarillo. McAvoy and Mrs. Winge, both Democrats, have been on the advisory board since December 1970, while Van Winkle, a Republican, has served since September 1972. Members receive their necessary expenses. Mrs. Winge, a former Lcs Angeles County branch librarian, has been involved in numerous programs in the Watts-Willowbrook area, including Mothers of Watts, Parents' Community Action Group, Negro Women's Awareness Action Organization and South Central Area Welfare Planning Council, where she received awards first as a volunteer and later as three-time president. Her new term expires December 16, 1975. McAvoy, a 48-year-old American citizen born in Canada, has been president of the McAvoy-Ventura Corporation for the past 24 years. He attended elementary and high schools in the San Fernando Valley and completed a business management course at the University of Denver. He is a past director of the Crippled Children's Society and a past member of the Ventura County Mental Health Board. He was the 1968 outstanding citizen award winner of the Ventura County Association for Retarded Children, and served on the Ventura County Grand Jury in 1962. Van Winkle, 54, is a fuel propellant engineer for Lockheed Aircraft Corporation at Vandenberg Air Force Base. He was a charter member and director of the Santa Maria Council for Retarded Children, which is the parent group and governing board of the North Santa Barbara County Rehabilitation Center. Terms of McAvoy and Van Winkle expire December 16, 1976. ***** McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #390 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed three members of the state Board of Funeral Directors and Embalmers, in the Department of Consumer Affairs, to terms expiring June 1, 1978. They are Harry Sands of Auburn, Leonard L. Thompson of Los Angeles and Robert G. Webster of Piedmont. All are Republicans and each will receive $25 per diem while serving. Sands, 48, has owned West and Hite Chapel of the Hills in Auburn since 1955 and, in 1962, opened a branch mortuary in Loomis. He started his career at West and Hite four years before he purchased the business. He holds a bachelor's degree from the University of California at Berkele and was graduated from the San Francisco College of Mortuary Science. He was a member of the state board from June 1967 to January 1971 and received a subsequent appointment in April 1972. Thompson, 50, has been on the board since last January and is executive director of the Masonry Institute of America, a trust fund established as part of a collective bargaining agreement in Los Angeles County between the Mason Contractors Association and the Bricklayers Unions. He majored in business administration at Washburn University in Kansas and has been in the construction field for 28 years, 17 as a journeyman bricklayer and masonry contractor. He was on the West Valley YMCA board for 14 years. Webster, 68, has been a board member since October 1971. He retired earlier that year as chief deputy director of the state Department of Public Health, a position he had held for four years. Before that he was chief of Public Health's division of administration for nearly 20 years. He holds a bachelor's (1927) degree from the University of Southern California and a master's (1947) from the University of California at Berkeley. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #391 Jane H. MacNeur and Marilyn O. La Rocque, both of Piedmont, today were reappointed by Governor Ronald Reagan as directors of the 1st District Agricultural Association Board, which operates the California Spring Garden and Home Show. The two republican women will receive their necessary expenses. during terms which expire January 15, 1978. They have been directors since February 1971. Mrs. MacNeur and her husband once were owners of Grant Miller Mortuaries in Oakland and Lafayette and she was the firm's secretary and treasurer. She has been involved with numerous civic groups on both sides of the bay. Mrs. La Rocque has been a public relations consultant since 1963 and is in Who's Who of American Women. She was selected as one of the outstanding young women of America in 1968 and among the foremost women communicators in 1969-70. Her clients have included the Kidney Foundation of Northern California and the Cerebral Palsy Association of Alameda County. She is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution and other organizations. ***** McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #392 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed three long-time directors of the 26th District Agricultural Association board (Amador County Fair). They are John A. Huberty, a Democrat, of Jackson, and two Republicans Leslie G. Pantle of Ione and Frederick G. Geis of Jackson. Terms of the three will expire January 15, 1978. Directors receive their necessary expenses. Huberty, 69, has been Jackson's city treasurer since 1935. He is a retired assistant vice president of Wells Fargo Bank in that community and has been on the fair board since March 1960. Pantle, 51, has owned and operated a service station in Ione for nearly 28 years and has been on the board for more than 19 years. He was an Ione city councilman for six years and is a past president of the community's merchants association. Geis, 75, is a retired former hydro superintendent of the Stockton power division of Pacific Gas and Electric Company, the firm that employed him for 43 years. He is a former Jackson councilman and city planning commissioner and Amador County supervisor. He has been on the fair board since February 1954. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacrament a, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #393 Rodney Baumbach, Jr., of Weed was reappointed today by Governor Ronald Reagan to the 10th District Agricultural Association board which operates the Siskiyou County Fair. The 44-year-old Baumbach is affiliated with Shastina Properties, Inc. after having been a salesman for Siskiyou Tractor and Equipment Company in Yreka. He will receive necessary expenses during a term expiring January 15, 1978. He has served on the board since February 1970. Baumbach is a Republican. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-11-74 #394 Three Shasta District Fair Board directors (27th Agricultural Association) were reappointed today by Governor Ronald Reagan to terms expiring January 15, 1978. Included are G. Phillip Schoefer of Cottonwood, Byron T. Hollenbeak of Fall River Mills and R. D. "Dan" Gover of Anderson. All are Democrats They will receive necessary expenses. Schoefer, 35, was first appointed to the board in June 1970. He is a dairyman who received a bachelor's degree from Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo, with a major in crop science. He has been a director since June 1970. Hollenbeak, 65, is a rancher and has been on the board since March 1966. Gover, 41, was appointed to the board last July. He is a cattle rancher who holds a degree in animal husbandry from the University of California at Davis. He is a trustee of Anderson Union High School and of Cottonwood Elementary School. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-74 #395 Robert F. Brooks of Alturas and David I. Grove of Eagleville today were reappointed by Governor Ronald Reagan to the 34th District Agricultural Association board which runs the Modoc District Fair. Both are Republicans originally appointed in August 1970. They receive necessary expenses for their service. Brooks, 48, has lived in Alturas for 28 years and has his own insurance agency there. He entered that field in 1947 after graduation from UCLA. He served eight years on the Alturas Elementary School Board and was a member of the Modoc County committee for school district reorganization. He also was chairman of the county planning commission for eight years. Grove, 54, is a rancher who has been active in several civic and agricultural organizations and has served as a director of the Surprise Valley Soil Conservation District. Their new terms will expire January 15, 1978. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres. Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-74 #396 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed three San Benito County Fair directors (33rd District Agricultural Association) to new terms expiring January 15, 1978. Two of them, Thomas F. Barry of Hollister and Jef H. Schmidt of Paicines, have served on the association board since June 1970 while the third, Enos N. Silva of San Juan Bautista, has been a director since July 1968. All three are Republicans and will receive their necessary expenses. Barry, 50, is vice president of Bank of California and manager of its Hollister branch office. He started his career in 1942 after graduation from Bryant High School in Long Island City, New York. He served three years with the U.S. Navy during World War II. Schmidt, 53, operates the family's cattle and grain ranch. He is a past president and director of the San Benito County Farm Bureau and held similar positions with the San Benito County Farm Bureau and held similar positions with the San Benito County Cattleman's Association. Silva, 51, is a farmer and has been secretary of the San Juan Bautista Soil Conservation District and a trustee of the San Juan Union Elementary School District. He is a director of the Fiesta Rodeo in San Juan Bautista and a director of the San Juan Cemetery District. ####### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-74 #397 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed three men who have served on the 44th District Agricultural Association board since March 1970. Their new terms will carry through January 15, 1978. They are Robert J. Alvernaz of Williams, Arthur Hodgson of Colusa and Adolph F. Ramos, Jr., of Arbuckle. All are Republicans. Directors receive necessary expenses. Alvernaz is a 43-year-old farmer of rice and grain, cattle and sheep. He served in Korea for the U.S. Army in 1953 and 1954, is a past president of the Glenn-Colusa Cattlemen's Association and has been active in 4-H work. Hodgson, 60, is a native of Lincoln (CA.) who moved to Colusa in 1919. He is a graduate of Yuba College and served as a field artillery officer in the Asiatic-Pacific Theater during World War II. In banking since 1936, he is vice president and manager of the Colusa branch of Crocker-Citizens National Bank. He is a member of Rotary, VFW, Masons and has served as chairman of the Colusa County Parole Commission. Ramos, 38, is an orchardist who was born in Spain, was naturalized and was educated in California. A member of Masons and Odd Fellows, he has served in the past as president of the Colusa County Farm Bureau, Pierce School PTA in Arbuckle, and the Arbuckle Farmers Organization. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEAS: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-74 #398 Governor Ronald Reagan today named Beverly J. Magoon of Lower Lake and reappointed two others to new terms on the Lake County Fair Board (49th District Agricultural Association). Mrs. Magoon replaces O'Day A. Robertson of Middletown, who resigned at the conclusion of his term. Terms of Mrs. Magoon and reappointees Richard L. Miller and William D. Sterbenk, both of Lakeport, will expire January 15, 1978. Miller and Sterbenk have been on the fair board since August 1968. Mrs. Magoon lived in the Bay Area for 11 years before moving to Lake County in 1971. She owns with her husband a general store where she weaves custom-ordered rugs, hangings, tapestries and garments in the manner that brought her awards in several California art shows when she was partner in Berkeley's Custom Shop. Miller, 39, is assistant manager of Lake County Farm Supply and Sterbenk, 43, is employed by Pacific Gas and Electric Company. The three appointees are Republicans. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Pres Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-74 #399 Three directors of the California Mid-Winter Fair in Imperial County (45th District Agricultural Association) were reappointed today by Governor Ronald Reagan. The three, all Republicans, are Bob L. Ellison and Anthony Beltran, both of El Centro, and John R. Kershaw of Brawley. Ellison and Kershaw have been directors since March 1970, while Beltran was appointed in April 1971. Association board members receive necessary expenses. Ellison, 47, is an El Centro businessman who has served several years on the Imperial City Council and as that city's mayor. He is a past president of the Imperial Valley chapter of the League of California Cities and served on the state Planning Advisory Committee in 1967. Beltran, 45, is vice president of Valley Music Company in El Centro and has served on the housing authorities of that city and Imperial County. Born in Oceanside, he has lived in Imperial County since 1944 and has belonged to both the Elks and Eagles lodges for more than 20 years. Kershaw, 49, owns a cattle feeder company in Brawley where he graduated from high school and junior college. He belongs to several civic and professional organizations. New terms for the three extend to January 15, 1978. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-74 #400 Governor Ronald Reagan today vetoed Senate Bill 71 (Gregorio, D-San Mateo) Following is the text of the governor's veto message to the legislature: "SB 71 would allow local schools to establish special areas or rooms where students would be permitted to smoke. The bill was intended to correct the present situation in which students smoke in school restrooms, creating a problem for nonsmoking students wishing to make use of those facilities. "With only an occasional exception, high school students as an age group are prohibited by law from purchasing tobacco. It therefore seems that a far more sensible answer to solving the problem would be for school administrators to enforce a 'no smoking' rule on school property--period. "The intent of the law against purchase of tobacco by anyone under age 18 is obvious. The responsibility of school officials to prevent smoking in school buildings is equally obvious. Their failure to act accordingly should not result in local property taxpayers subsidizing smoking rooms as an educational expense. "I have discussed this bill with a large number of high school students. Although most of them were nonsmokers, they supported the measure for a variety of reasons. "I am sympathetic to their reasoning and had to wrestle with my conscience before reaching the decision to veto the bill. "However, I feel it would be a disservice to our young people to have allowed this measure to become law. Had I done so, some youngsters would have interpreted my action as giving some degree of approval to their smoking. "There is no question that young people who want to smoke will smoke. But there is also no question that smoking is a dangerous habit that can produce tragic results. I cannot in good conscience lend my hand to any circumstance that might endanger their health. "Therefore, I am returning the bill without my signature." # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 yde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-12-74 #401 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced that he has signed the following bill: AB 3101 - Fenton Allows franchised petroleum dealers, notwithstanding Chapter 498 the provisions of the franchise, to purchase petroleum products from any available source if the franchisor is unable to refuses to supply the dealer. The bill also provides that no franchisor shall coerce the franchisee to deal only in tires, batteries, and accessories supplied by the franchisor. Governor Reagan also vetoed the following bills: AB 1691 - Duffy Enacts Duffy-Song-Moscone Acupuncture Act which authorizes the practice of acupuncture, alone or in conjunction with other forms of traditional Chinese medicine, by unlicensed persons for the primary purpose of scientific investigation if such procedures are performed on the basis of the diagnosis and written referral of licensed dentist or physician and surgeon and other specific conditions are satisfied. The bill prchibits any licensed dentist or physician and surgeon from sharing in any fee charged by a person for performing acupuncture. Such authorization shall be operative only until December 31, 1977. REASON FOR VETO: "This bill would permit unlicensed and unregulated persons, regardless of training, to perform acupuncture upon the written referral of a doctor or dentist. It does not contain any controls or qualifications to insure the quality of the acupuncture practitioner, therefore creating an unnecessary risk to the members of the public who might receive such treatment. "Present law now permits safe and orderly research in the field of acupuncture in approved medical schools. If it is the desire to expand existing programs beyond medical schools, then standards to insure quality of acupuncturists must be developed. In addition, research procedures should be outlined in any such legislation so that valid data can be compiled and made available to the medical community. "Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned." AB 2911 - Burton Requires that rates of state payments for services purchased by regional centers for devel opmentally disabled persons established by the Director of Health be sufficient to reimburse providers of such services for the actual cost, as approved by the Department of Health, of such services. Additionally, it requires the department, after consulting with appropriate provider groups, to adopt regulations defining actual cost and the method of accounting to be used to determine actual costs. The bill also requires regional centers to supplement, from funds allocated for the purchase of services, Medi-Cal or public assistance payments when the person receiving services is eligible for such and the payments are insufficient to reimburse providers of services at the established rates of payment. REASON FOR VETO: "AB 2911's requirement for reimbursement for actual costs encourage inefficient operation. Verification of actual costs is difficult and expensive. Also, the department would have no control over the number and types of personnel providing services to its clientele. "Reimbursement to facilities providing care to other types of state clients is on a reasonable cost basis. This legislation also could contribute toward the inflationary spiral of health costs since other facilities would demand that they be reimbursed on the same basis. (cont.) -1- #401 Reason for veto "The Department of Health is currently conducting on of AB 2911 cont. a pilot basis a treatment effectiveness and cost study of five California facilities servicing the develop- mentally disabled. "During this study the facilities involved are receiving additional payments in order to cover the cost of individualized programs. This study will be completed shortly. If the study demonstrates that a reasonable increase in rates produces better individualized programs for the developmentally disabled, the department will then administratively revise the rates for the facilities affected by this bill. Therefore, this bill is not necessary. "Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned." SB 220 -Zenovich Provides for allocation of state funds to county volunteer search and rescue units to defray the cost of search and rescue operations. The bill appropriates $200,000 to the Office of Emergency Services for the provisions of the bill. REASON FOR VETO: "Search and rescue operations are properly a function of local government. Present law provides a measure of relief to counties conducting search and rescue operations when the cost is over $100. "Furthermore, the state and federal governments participate in many search and rescue operations. The state, through the Ecology Corps program, maintains a fully-trained and well-equipped mountain rescue team that is available to all local authorities in California. "I fully appreciate the humanitarian efforts made by the many volunteer organizations that participate in search and rescue operations. However, I still feel that it is not appropriate for state taxpayers to provide subventions for such volunteer activities. "Accordingly, I am returning the bill unsigned." SB 1315 - Petris Appropriates $1, 957, 508 to Regents of the University of California for purpose of funding increases to salaries and fringe benefits of certain employees and retirees. Effective immediately. REASON FOR VETO: "SB 1315 attempts to reinstate proposals that were rejected during the 1974-75 budget process. The budget is the proper vehicle for this type of measure. "Accordingly, I am returning this bill unsigned." Governor Ronald Reagan today made the following statement pertaining to AB 774 by Mike D. Antonovich (R-Los Angeles). The bill allows constitutional amendments adopted by the legislature since no earlier than June 9, 1974, and no later than June 28, 1974, to be placed on the ballot for the November 5, 1974 general election: "I am permitting this measure to become law without my signature because the people of California should have the opportunity to vote on the several constitutional amendments covered by the bill. However, my signature on the bill might be interpreted as support of the ballot propositions. That would be inaccurate." The constitutional amendments covered by AB 774 are: SCA 26 - Petris Requires the legislature to provide increased benefits to qualified renters comparable to any increase in the homeowners' exemption provided for by the legislature. (cont.) -2- AB 774 cont. SCA 45 - Rodda Rt ises ex officio membership Jf the U. C. Regents by eliminating the President of the State Board of Agriculture and the President of the Mechanics Institute of San Francisco and adds the vice president of the University alumni association. It also increases appointive membership from 16 to 18 and reduces the term of office of appointive members from 16 years to 12 years for members to be appointed on and after March 1, 1976. ACA 36 - Keene Modifies constitutional provisions relating to the Public Utilities Commission. ACA 38 - Dixon Deletes provisions requiring forfeiture of right to vote for conviction of certain crimes. It also deletes the provision excluding severely mentally deficient an insane persons from right to vote, and adds provision requiring disqualification of electors while mentally incompetent or while imprisoned or on parole for conviction of a felony. ACA 40 - Brown Repeals constitutional requirement that development, construction, or acquisition of low-rent public housing by a local government be approved by a vote of the people. ACA 60 - Meade Provides for various constitutional rights of persons. ACA 76 - Vasconcellos Exempts from civil service the chief administra- tive officer and five deputies of California Postsecondary Education Commission. ACA 81 - Miller Provides that city or county charters may be adopted, changed, or repealed without approval by legislature. ACA 86-Vasconcellos Exempts from civil service the chief administra- tive officer and three deputies of Postsecondary Education Commission. ACA 99 - Sieroty Changes certain masculine gender terms to the neuter. ACA 103 - Berman Provides that city or county employees do not have to be residents of the local government agency for which they work. ACA 104 - Deddeh Permits any city in San Diego County to be divided into more than one municipal or justice court because of geographic conditions, if the legislature so determines. ACA 85 - Vasconcellos Requires legislature to determine whether certain U.C. students are to be charged instruction fees. Governor Reagan has also vetoed the following bill: SB 2450 - Gregorio Requires attendance at community colleges in specified in-service training criminal justice system occupa- tion programs to be included in community college district average daily attendance computation. Also validates specified past apportionments for such in-service training programs. REASON FOR VETO: "This bill attempts to clarify and validate possible illegal financial support to community colleges for providing in-service training to local peace officers. An audit earlier this year by the Department of Finance revealed that a community college received over $200,000 for conducting one 40-hour class. The audit questioned the legality of such a practice. Almost all community colleges have conducted in-service peace officer training classes, along with similar classes, and may have violated sections of the Education Code relating to eligibility for funding. This administration is in complete agreement with upgrading peace officer standards and training through education. Shortly before the bill's approval in the legislature, the administration, the author and the measure's supporters reached agreement on amendments that would initiate a proper method for calculating funding for peace officer training classes. However, because of a lack of time the bill was approved before the amendments could be included. When the legislature reconvenes in August, this administration will support legislation to permit community colleges to continue in-service peace officer training while not absolving any blatant irregularities in conducting such a program. Therefore, I am returning the bill unsigned." OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( \LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #402 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments of Frank LaBella, Jr., and Raymond E. Lua, DDS, both of Sacramento, and John A. Lewis of Elk Grove to four-year terms as members of the 52nd District Agricultural Association. All three appointees are Republicans and have been members of the association's board of directors since March of 1970. Board members receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #403 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Joseph E. Jessop, Jr., of San Diego to a three-year term as a member of the Patton State Hospital Advisory Board for the Mentally Retarded. Jessop, 43, succeeds John C. Leppert of San Diego. Leppert's term has expired and he asked not to be reappointed. A Republican, Jessop is a 1953 graduate of Pomona College. He is president of the San Diego County Epilepsy Society and a member of the board of directors of the San Diego Better Business Bureau. Board members receive their necessary expenses when on official business. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELFASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #404 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Antonio Arroyo of Pico Rivera to a four-year term as a member of the state's Correctional Industries Commission. Arroyo, a 53-year old Democrat, is the business representative of the Furniture Workers Union, Local 3161, in Maywood. He succeeds the late Thomas W. Mathew of Laguna Beach. A member of the Youth Authority for 12 years, Arroyo is chairman of the Trade Advisory Committee in Chino. He has also been cochairman of the City of Hope for a number of years. Commission members receive $25 a day when on official business. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RO LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #405 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments to four- year terms of William R. Sutton, Jr., of Sacramento, and Kenneth K. Kammeyer of Corona as members of the state Board of Landscape Architects in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Sutton, a 42-year-old Republican, is a real estate developer and an officer in several corporations. He is a 1956 graduate of Stanford University and has served on the board since July 5, 1973. Kammeyer, a 39-year-old Republican, was first appointed to the board February 2, 1972. He is a graduate of the California State Polytechnic College, Kellogg-Voorhis Campus, in Pomona with a B.S. degree in Ornamental Horticulture. He has also done graduate study in recreational education at California State College in Los Angeles. He operates his own landscape architectural firm in Corona. Kammeyer is a former Corona Park Commissioner, a past president of the California Association of Landscape Architects, and a Fellow of the American Institute of Park Executives. Board members receive $25 per diem when on official business. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #406 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Ray Saucedo of Santa Barbara as a member of the state's Advisory Health Council. Saucedo, a 30-year-old Republican, fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Stephen P. Cushman of San Diego. His term will expire July 1, 1975. A graduate of Northern Arizona University with a B.S. degree in Education, he is a teacher of social studies and fine arts at Santa Barbara Junior High School. Saucedo is a member of the board of directors of the Santa Barbara Boys Club and the city's Meals on Wheels program. Council members receive their actual and necessary expenses. ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEASE: mmediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #407 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments to four year terms of Irving Porush of Los Angeles and Stuart P. Eriksen of Santa Ana as members of the Advisory Committee on Drug Manufacturing. Porush, a 57 year old Republican, is director of quality control and analytical chemistry for Riker Laboratories in Northridge. A member of the committee since 1969, he is a 1941 graduate of the University of California at Los Angeles with a B.A. Degree in chemistry. He is a member of the American Pharmaceutical Association, American Chemical Society and the American Society for Quality Control. Eriksen, a 42 year old Republican, is director of medical research for Allergan Pharmaceuticals in Santa Ana. A member of the committee since 1969, he is a graduate of the University of California School of Pharmacy in San Francisco. He also holds Masters and Doctorate Degrees from the University. He is a Fellow of the American Pharmaceutical Association, a member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the American Chemical Society. Committee members are paid their necessary expenses when on official business. # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californa 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #408 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments to four year terms of William E. Blurock of Newport Beach, Norman P. Adler of Albany, and Dean F. Unger of Sacramento as members of the State Board of Architectural Examiners in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Blurock, 52, a Democrat, operates his own architectural firm in Corona del Mar. He is a member of the California Council of the American Institute of Architects and the Orange County chapter of the AIA. Adler, a 45 year old Republican, was first appointed to the board January 18, 1971. An attorney, he is a graduate of the University of San Francisco. He is general counsel of the DiGiorgic Corporation. Unger, 45, and a Republican, has served the board since September 21, 1967. He operates an architectural firm in Sacramento. He holds a Masters Degree in architecture from the University of California at Berkeley. Board members receive $25 per diem when on official business. ***** Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #409 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the interim appointment of Guy Martin Young of Alturas as Superior Court judge of Modoc County. Young, who was elected to serve a regular term beginning in January, will fill the vacancy created by the upcoming retirement of Judge Charles Lederer. Lederer's retirement is effective July 24. The 41-year old Young is a native of Alturas and has been in private practice there since May of 1971. Prior to his returning to Alturas he practiced for 11 years in Thousand Oaks. Young is a 1955 graduate of the University of California at Berkeley and took his Degree of Juris Doctor in 1956 at the University of California at Los Angeles. He has also attended Stanford University and the University of Nevada. An arbiter of the American Arbitration Society, he has sat as Judge Pro Tem of the Ventura County Municipal Court. He is a member of various law associations and is a past chairman of the board of the Legal Aid Association. While a member of the Ventura County Bar Association he served on the Ethics Committee. Young will receive an annual salary of $37,615. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #410 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Daniel A. McCorquodale, Jr., of San Jose, and Mrs. Marian K. Love of Lafayette, and reappointed James D. Boitano of Napa as members of the Napa State Hospital Advisory Board for the Mentally Disordered. McCorquodale, a 39-year old Democrat, is a supervisor of Santa Clara County. He succeeds Allan R. Moltzen of Palo Alto. Moltzen resigned and his term has expired. Mrs. Love, a Republican, succeeds John B. Griffin, M.D., of Walnut Creek. Dr. Griffin resigned and his term has expired. Boitano, a 44-year old Republican, has been the district attorney of Napa County since 1963. He was first appointed to the board in 1970. Board members serve three year terms and receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #411 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Donald L. Gregory of Lewiston, Marion P. Dirden of Susanville, and Ruth E. Glaser of Burney as members of the Areawide Mental Retardation Program Board for Area II which covers Siskiyou, Modoc, Trinity, Lassen, Shasta, Tehama, Plumas, Glenn and Butte Counties. All three appointees are Democrats. Gregory, 38, a teacher and Trinity County Superintendent of Schools, fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Robert J. Jeffries of Chico. Mrs. Dirden, a nurse at the Lassen Memorial Hospital in Susanville, replaces Jay Beams, M.D., of Susanville. Dr. Beams resigned and his three-year term has expired. Mrs. Glaser fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Dean M. Dennett of Redding. Board members serve three-year terms. They receive their necessary expenses. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #412 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Ruth W. Kokjer of Atherton and Mrs. Delbert (Barbara) Reeder of Hayward, and reappointed Mrs. E. L. (Martha) Hood of Albany as members of the Agnews State Hospital Advisory Board for the Mentally Retarded. Mrs. Kokjer, a Republican, succeeds Barbara C. Anderson of Hollister whose term has expired. Mrs. Reeder, a Democrat, succeeds Jane V. Hunt of Berkeley who has resigned and whose term has expired. Mrs. Hood was first appointed to the advisory board December 16, 1970. Advisory Board members serve three-year terms. They receive their necessary expenses when on official business. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #413 Governor Ronald Reagan today named Thomas L. Schlothauer of of Gardena Manhattan Beach and reappointed Robert A. Odell, DVM, to four year terms as members of the Board of Examiners in Veterinary Medicine in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Schlothauer, a 30 year old Republican, succeeds Maxwell Pellish of Santa Barbara. Pellish's term has expired. An attorney, Schlothauer is a 1966 graduate of Colorado State University at Fort Collins, and earned his Law Degree in 1972 at the University of Santa Clara. He also holds a B.S. Degree in Civil Engineering earned at Fort Collins. Dr. Odell, a 40 year old Republican, was first appointed to the board in 1971. He is a graduate of Colorado A&M and took his degree in veterinary medicine at Colorado State University. He is the past president of the South Bay Chapter of the Southern California Veterinary Medical Association and is a member of the council of the Southern California Veterinary Medical Association. Board members receive $25 per diem when on official business. ****** Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: mediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Clyde Wa hall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #414 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Mrs. Frank (Virginia) Thompson of Santa Barbara and Manuel DeMaria of Monterey as members of the Central Coastal Region of the California Regional Water Quality Control Board. (cq) Mrs. Thompson, a Republican, succeeds Sheridah Gerard of Santa Barbara. His term has expired. She was named to a four year term. DeMaria, who is also a Republican, fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Bruce Woolpert of Carmel Valley. His term will end September 30, 1976. Board members receive their necessary expenses. ****** Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEASE: mmediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #415 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointment to a three year term of Mrs. Eleanor T. Rogers of San Rafael as a member of the Napa State Hospital Advisory Board for the Mentally Retarded. Mrs. Rogers, a 1929 graduate of Trinity College in Washington, D.C., was first appointed to the advisory board in 1970. She is a member of the Comprehensive Health Planning Council of Marin County and the Marin County Physical Therapy Society. Advisory Board members receive their necessary expenses. #### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ. 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #416 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Mrs. Thomas (Betty) Cox of Bakersfield and Steve M. Jeong of San Francisco as members of the state's Employment Services Board. The appointments are subject to Senate confirmation. Both are Republicans and will serve at the governor's pleasure. Mrs. Cox, manager of the Kern Employment Agency in Bakersfield, will represent private employment agencies on the board. Her position on the board was created by the legislature in 1973. Jeong, 55, fills the vacancy created by the resignation of Mrs. Cleatter (cq) H. Saul of El Cerrito. He is a native of Canton, China and is a graduate of Kong Tai College in Hong Kong and Golden Gate University in San Francisco. He will represent the public's interest on the board. Board members receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-15-74 #417 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Glendale physician David M. Bee, M.D., as a member of the Board of Vocational Nurse and Psychiatric Technician Examiners in the Department of Consumer Affairs, Dr. Bee, 37, a political independent, succeeds Clarence T. Halburg, M.D., of Redlands. Dr. Halburg's term has expired. Dr. Bee is a 1961 graduate of Andrews University in Berrien Springs, Michigan and received his Medical Degree in 1967 from the University of Southern California. He is the director of House Staff Education for coronary care at Glendale Adventist Medical Center, and has applications pending for associate professor of medicine at the USC-LA County Medical Center in Los Angeles and the Loma Linda University Medical Center. Board members serve four year terms and receive $25 per diem when on official business. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #418 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Charles I. Pearson of Beverly Hills and the reappointment of King Karpen of San Marino to four-year terms as members of the California Advisory Board of Home Furnishings in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Pearson, a 57-year old Republican, is director of merchandising research for Sears, Roebuck & Company in Alhambra. He will represent retailers' interests on the board. He is a member of the American Marketing Association and a guest lecturer in marketing at the University of Southern California and California State Polytechnic College at San Luis Obispo. He replaces Leonard Barban of Los Angeles. Barban's term expired. A Republican, Karpen is president and general manager of Aireloom Bedding Company in Alhambra. He represents upholstered furniture manufacturers on the board and has been a member since July 28, 1970. He is a Republican. Board members receive $25 per diem when on official business. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR F ALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #419 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Albert Iten of Long Beach and the reappointments of Gary E. Graham of Hacienda Heights and Albert C. Taucher of Long Beach to four-year terms as members of the board of directors of the 48th District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Great Western Exhibit Center in Los Angeles. Iten, a Republican, replaces Jack P. Gonsalves of Hawaiian Gardens. Gonsalves' term expired. Graham and Taucher, both Republicans, have served the board since March 3, 1971. Board members receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #420 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the reappointments to four-year terms of Robert D. Heisch of Yuba City, Don S. Shinkle of Browns Valley and James J. Sohrakoff of Wheatland as members of the board of directors of the 13th District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Yuba, Sutter Fair. All three are Republicans. Board members receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #421 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Donald S. McMillan of Klamath and the reappointments of Jack L. Callison, D.V.M., and Lewis O. Ulrich, both of Smith River, as members of the board of directors of the 41st District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Del Norte County Fair. McMillan, a Republican, succeeds Laurence Crivelli of Klamath. Crivelli's term expired. Callison, a Democrat, has been a member of the board since December 9, 1966, Ulrich, a Republican, was first appointed to the board May 20, 1969. Board members serve four-year terms and receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, Californies 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #422 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Mrs. Ernest (Dorothy) Bizzini of Atwater and the reappointments of Jack R. Petitt and A. J. Bernardi, both of Merced, as members of the board of directors of the 35th District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Merced County Fair. Mrs. Bizzini, a Republican, replaces Reno Ferrero of Merced. Ferrero's term expired. She is the business manager of the Atwater Veterinary Clinic. Petitt, a Republican, has been a member of the board since April 17, 1969. Bernardi, a Democrat, was first appointed to the board December 22, 1966. Board members serve four-year terms and receive their necessary expenses. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #423 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Warren T. Finley of Santa Ana and Arthur R. McKenzie of Costa Mesa as members of the board of directors of the 32nd District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Orange County Fair. Finley, a Republican, succeeds Kathleen W. Huff of Yorba Linda. Her term has expired. McKenzie, who is also a Republican, replaces Frederick M. Swenson of Newport Beach. Swenson resigned. Board members serve four-year terms and receive their necessary expenses. ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, Californ 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #424 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment to a four-year term of Donald P. Desrys of Antioch and the reappointments of Verne L. Roberts of Antioch and John M. Jawad of Clayton as members of the board of directors of the 23rd District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Contra Costa County Fair. Desrys, production manager of the Crown Zellerbach Corporation in Antioch, succeeds Robert V. McKeen of Orinda. McKeen's term has expired. Roberts and Jawad were first appointed to the board February 2, 1970. All three are Republicans. Board members receive their necessary expenses. ####### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEAS! Immediate Sacramento, Californi 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-16-74 #425 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Mrs. Bryce (Allene) Anderson of San Rafael as a member of the Napa State Hospital Advisory Board for the Mentally Retarded. Mrs. Anderson, a political independent, will complete the three- year term of Mrs. Nell C. Tegeler of San Rafael. Mrs. Tegeler has resigned. Secretary of the Marin County Juvenile Court Auxiliary, Mrs. Anderson is a past president of the San Rafael High School PTA. Advisory board members receive their necessary expenses. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELF E: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-17-74 #426 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Calvin L. Pebley of Anaheim as a member of the California Regional Water Quality Control Board for the Santa Ana Region. Pebley, a 49-year old Republican, will replace E. Ray Quigley, Jr., of Irvine. Ouigley has resigned and Pebley will complete the remainder of his four-year term ending September 30, 1975. A 10-year member of the Anaheim City Council and former mayor, Pebley is the owner and operator of industrial and commercial buildings. He has been a member of Anaheim's Capital Improvements Committee since 1959, and is a member of the City Planning Commission. He also served 61/2 years on the Savanna Board of Education in Anaheim as well as the city's Park and Recreation Commission. Regional Water Quality Control Board members receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN Sacramento, Californi 95814 MEMO THE PRESS Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-17-74 CORRECTION RELEASE #391 dated 7-11-74: The third paragraph should read---Mrs. MacNeur and her husband are owners of Grant Miller Mortuaries in Oakland and Lafayette. ##### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN KELEA, Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-19-74 #427 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Henry T. Wilfong, Jr., of Pasadena as a member of the California Council on Criminal Justice. An active member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and a well-known Pasadena businessman who operates his own accounting firm, Wilfong succeeds Superior Court Judge Billy G. Mills of Los Angeles. Mills has resigned. Wilfong, a 41-year-old Republican, is a native of Ingals, Arkansas. He is a 1958 honor graduate of the University of California at Los Angeles and received his Masters degree from UCLA in 1960. A member of numerous organizations, including chairmansip of the Afro-American Leadership Council, Wilfong also belongs to the Pasadena Chamber of Commerce, Concerned Citizens of Pasadena and the Pasadena Black Culture Center. CCCJ members receive their necessary expenses. ###### Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN MEMO TO THE PRESS Sacramento, Californi 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-19-74 Governor Ronald Reagan will deliver the keynote address to the Young Americans for Freedom annual conference, Saturday, July 20, 1974, at the Sheraton Palace Hotel in San Francisco. The governor will have a press availability at 6:30 p.m. in the hotel's Regency Room. The dinner begins at 7:30 p.m., and the governor is expected to begin his speech at approximately 8:45. # # # (MEMO TO CAPITOL PRESS CORPS: I have a new home telephone number: 383-7109 Clyde Walthall) Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-23-74 #428 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed McHenry Cooke of Hinkley to the board of the 28th District Agricultural Association, which runs the San Bernardino County Fair. At the same time the governor reappointed to the same board Edward A. Rodeman of Victorville and Lewis W. Aukeman of Ontario. The three men are Republicans who will receive their necessary expenses during terms expiring January 15, 1978. Cooke, 40, is a pork producer and disposal refuse contractor who was Farmers and World Affairs Incorporated's overseas representative to Pakistan in 1967, where he was involved in an exchange of ideas and information on agricultural development of mutual interest to Pakistan and the United States. He has lived on farms most of his life, cultivating cotton and raising chickens, hogs and alfalfa. He was graduated from Barstow High School and Chaffey College. Cooke replaces H. James Gilliam of Barstow, whose term expired. Rodeman, 67, has served on the fair board since November 1967. He has retired as president of Rodeman's Inc., a retail clothing business in the Victor Valley Shopping Center. He has served as an organizer, committee member and volunteer worker since the fair's inception in 1948. Aukeman, 47, a director since May 1971, is a dairyman in the Chino area. He has been active in the Farm Bureau, having been a president and director of the dairy section. He has been on the executive committee of the League of California Milk Production Association and is a member of Central Milk Producers Co-op. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROLALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-23-74 #429 Governor Ronald Reagan today sent the following letter to the members of the U.S. Senate and informed President Nixon of his opposition to Senate Bill 707, which would establish a new bureaucracy that would overlap and duplicate existing consumer protection agencies. The governor also commended Senators Sam Ervin, Carl Curtis, James L. Buckley, William E. Brock and James Allen for their nonpartisan efforts to defeat the bill: Text of the letter follows: "If passed, Senate Bill 707, the Consumer Protection Agency Act, now before the Senate, would spawn a huge new bureaucracy whose sole duty would be to intrude itself into matters already assigned by law to existing departments and agencies. "Proponents of the bill are no doubt motivated by high ideals. Yet, in the process of attempting to protect the consumer, their bill would give unprecedented and potentially dangerous power to the new agency's director and staff to take action against government bodies, industry, and business. Such concentration of police powers would be open to future abuse. "In recent years, American consumers have demonstrated increased sophistication in the marketplace. Expanded consumer education continues to be essential for this process. Private consumer groups and several state and local consumer agencies are proving that they can aggressively and effectively clamp down on those who would fleece and deceive consumers. "Congress has the authority to change policies governing the practices of federal departments and agencies which have jurisdiction over consumer-related matters. Where defects exist, they should be corrected by statute. It would be irresponsible, however, for Congress to fail to make such corrections and to create instead a competing, overlapping new agency and bureaucracy. An analogy: if a man operating a retail store found the performance of one of its departments unsatisfactory, he would consider changing management policies, personnel, merchandising techniques, or inventory. He certainly wouldn't try to solve the problem by opening a competing store across the street. Yet, that is what the proponents of S. 707 are doing by asking Congress to create the Consumer Protection Agency! "Consumers--and each of us in America is one--need to regain control of their own lives. At the same time, they need less, not more, government paternalism and dictation. S. 707 is bad law, bad public policy, and bad for consumers. I urge you to vote to defeat it." # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEAS Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-26-74 #430 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Harold Homer Aschmann, a University of California at Riverside geography professor, to the Commission for Teacher Preparation and Licensing. The position, paying actual and necessary travel expenses, requires Senate confirmation. Aschmann, 54, replaces Dr. Robert L. Kelley of Santa Barbara, who resigned. Kelley's unexpired term ends November 23, 1976. Aschmann joined the UC Riverside faculty in 1954 and became a full professor 10 years later. He is in the department of earth sciences Prior to Riverside, he had been an instructor at San Diego State College, the University of Nebraska and Los Angeles State College. The San Francisco native was graduated from Roosevelt High School in Los Angeles and Los Angeles City College, received his bachelor's and master's degrees at UCLA and earned his doctorate at the University of California, Berkeley. Two years ago, Aschmann received the Association of American Geographers' award for meritorious achievement in geography. He has been active on the UCR campus, including chairmanship of the Riverside Division of the Academic Senate and memberships in the Academic Council, subcommittee on master plan revisions and the Academic Assembly. He was involved in the formation of a Phi Beta Kappa chapter on the campus and has been its president. Aschmann is a Republican. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-27-74 Governor Ronald Reagan today issued the following statement upon learning of the perjury conviction of Lieutenant Governor Ed Reinecke: "This is a tragic event for Ed Reinecke, I personally have always had confidence in his integrity and feel that he did not intentionally do wrong. I an sorry for Ed and his family." The governor indicated he will have no further comment on the lieutenant governor's tenure in office until he has had an opportunity to talk with Reinecke and his attorneys. # # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-29-74 #431 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced he will ask Attorney General Evelle Younger to agree with the lawsuit filed in Superior Court nullifying a special election in the 20th Assembly District in San Francisco. The governor took the action because of requests by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and the city's state legislators. Governor Reagan was mandated by state law and the California Constitution to call a special election to fill the unexpired term of former Assemblyman John Burton. Burton resigned June 25 after winning election to the U.S. House of Representatives. The governor called the election for November 5 with the primary set for October 8. The 20th Assembly District will cease to exist on December 1 of this year because of reapportionment. "I am happy to agree with the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and the city's legislators that the special election is unnecessary," the governor said. "It would have been a waste of time, effort and taxpayer funds. "In addition, I look forward to working with the legislature in August to correct this problem in existing law so that a similar situation cannot occur in the future." The winner of the election would have served only three weeks during a period when the legislature was not in session. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC LD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-74 #432 Governor Ronald Reagan said today a breakthrough in crime control and prevention has been reached by virtue of the state receiving a patent for an invisible wall of energy called a "laser fence. = The fence transmits and receives pulsed beams of light to prevent introders. According to Douglas E. Roudabush, executive director of the California Crime Technological Research Foundation (CCTRF), which built the first unit in a Sacramento laboratory, the device has application both to state government for security in its prisons, resource areas, fish and game and forestry preserves and to private industry for protection of property. As holder of a U.S. patent, the governor said, the state can issue licenses to prospective manufacturers and reimburse California's treasury for money expended in the acquisition of the patent. Roudabush stresses that any patents received by the foundation will not be intended as direct sources of revenue to the state, but are intended for use in controlling crime and fulfilling the premise under which CCTRF was established as a temporary research agency in 1967 by the Deukmejian-Moretti Act. Public and private funds were donated for CCTRF to perform research and development in areas of science and technology not already being explored by other agencies or private industry. Another purpose of the foundation was to stimulate development by educational institutions and other organizations in the private sector. CCTRF's life was extended for four years by the legislature in 1970. A current bill, SB 1829 (Deukmejian), would make the crime research foundation permanent. California is the only state with a research agency to control crime. The laser fence was tested and became a successful tool of security for Campbell Construction Company's "Operation Breakthrough" several months ago. The prototype detected and prevented break-ins in more than 100 separate incidents on a construction site at the old fairgrounds in Sacramento. Experimental research and development continues in the state corrections system. - 1 - #432 Roudabush says the wall of energy's nerve system is a solid-state unit involving little commercial power. Boasting a range of one-half mile in any direction from a unit, two laser beams at varying heights can penetrate fog for hundreds of feet and, in the event of someone passing through, has a logic built-in to discriminate between humans, objects such as blowing newspapers or creatures such as birds or dogs. "Even if a person crawls through a beam, " Roudabush says, "the frequency will be different from that of a four-legged animal.' " The equipment is designed to determine which direction the perpetrator is going. The time of a penetration can be automatically clocked and the system can activate floodlights, sirens or simply a silent signal that is picked up by a security guard's hand-held radio. A fail-safe mechanism protects the system from below or above-ground assault and an independent power supply continues in the event of an outage. The beams can be focused wide or narrow, depending on individual requirements, and can extend to 50 feet in diameter. Other states have indicated interest in the laser fence, Roudabush said, adding that applications for licensing will be taken soon. Potential manufacturers should contact the CCTRF at (916) 322-2700. ##### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-74 #433 Max Ferber, who at 73 earned a master's degree this year in a specialized program at the University of Southern California, today was named by Governor Ronald Reagan to the Collection Agency Advisory Board in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Ferber, an honors graduate of the University of Chicago 52 years ago, is consultant and manager of National Accounts Systems in Los Angeles. A Democrat, he will receive per diem during a term on the board expiring June 30, 1978. The program under which Ferber received his M.A. was devoted to cultural enrichment rather than vocational advancement. He is the oldest graduate in the program's four-year history. As an advisory board member, he replaces Donald E. Blauert of Merced, whose term expired at the end of June. For 39 years, Ferber was associated with Hugh McCarthy in Stores Collection Bureau of Los Angeles. McCarthy died in 1966 and Ferber sold the business to National Accounts Systems two years later. A native of London, England, he became a naturalized citizen in 1923. ####### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RONALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-74 #434 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Dr. Richard H. Jahns, dean of Stanford University's school of mineral sciences, and J. Wilmar Jensen, a Modesto attorney, to the state Mining and Geology Board. The two men, upon Senate confirmation, will receive terms expiring January 15, 1978. They will receive their necessary expenses. Dr. Jahns, 59, was first appointed to the board in February 1966. He received his bachelor's and PhD. from Caltech and his master's from Northwestern University. He began his career in geology with the U.S. Geological Survey in 1937 and entered education at Caltech in 1946. He was a professor at Penn State and the College of Mineral Industries before coming to Stanford in 1965. He has been a geologist for the New Mexico Bureau of Mines and Mineral Resources on a part-time basis since 1950. He is the author and co-author of scores of scientific papers and economic reports and is a contributor and editor of bulletins for the California Division of Mines. Jensen, 46, has been a partner in the Modesto law firm of Jensen and Pendergrass for more than 22 years. He was educated at Gustine and Merced high schools, the University of Chicago and Stanford. He has been active in civic and fraternal organizations in Newman, Modesto and San Jose and in Stanislaus County. He has served on the board since May 1971. Both appointees are Republicans. ####### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR Rt ALD REAGAN RELEASE. Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-74 #435 Governor Ronald Reagan today appointed Randall G. Smith, an executive assistant for the Southern California Edison Company, to the Fairview State Hospital Advisory Board. At the same time, the governor reappointed to the board two retired persons, Dr. Donald J. Kincaid of Laguna Hills and Dean H. McCoy of San Diego. Smith, 27, joined the Edison Company in 1972 after more than five years as a field representative for Republican State Senator and U.S. Congressman John G. Schmitz. A native of Santa Ana, the city where he is presently assigned, he was educated at Santa Ana Valley High School, Santa Ana College and California State University at Fullerton. He is a commissioner of the Orange County Housing Authority and is a member of Town Hall and the Orange County Chamber of Commerce. He replaces Margaret O. Pollack of Fullerton, whose term on the advisory board expired. Dr. Kincaid, 63, retired as director of elementary school guidance and counseling for the Los Angeles Unified School District last August. He had been in that position since 1952 and had been with the school district since 1946. He was first appointed to the board in December 1970 and his new term will expire December 16, 1975. McCoy, 64, retired last April from the Convair Division of General Dynamics after 17 years with the firm. He had served on the board of the San Diego Mental Health Association and United Community Services and was on the Fairview Hospital Board of Trustees. He was first appointed to the advisory board in December 1970. McCoy and Dr. Kincaid are Democrats. McCoy and Smith received terms that will expire December 16, 1976. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R ALD REAGAN RELEA A: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-74 #436 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointment of Hemet dentist Clinton C. Emerson and the reappointments of James W. Dilworth of Riverside and Philip Van Norman of Hemet to four-year terms as members of the board of directors of the 46th District Agricultural Association, sponsor of the Farmers Fair of Riverside County. Emerson, 54, who is not affiliated with a political party, replaces Robert A. Thacker of Hemet. Thacker's term has expired. A former professor and chairman of the Department of Pedodontics at the University of Southern California, Emerson is a 1944 graduate of the University of the Pacific, School of Dentistry in San Francisco. He has been in private practice in Hemet since 1955 and raises registered Arabian horses. Dilworth, a 44-year old Republican and an attorney, has been a member of the board since 1967. He is a graduate of Redlands University and received his law degree at the University of California at Berkeley. He is the son of the late State Senator James W. Dilworth. Van Norman, 59, has been a member of the board since 1956. A former heating and air conditioning contractor and a Republican, Van Norman is now semi-retired. He was a member of the San Jacinto School Board for 10 years and is chairman of the board of trustees of the Union Church. Association members receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR ROALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-30-74 #437 Governor Ronald Reagan today announced the appointments of Glendon A. Wardhaugh of Lafayette and Mrs. S. R. (Marjorie) C. Boynton of Ukiah as members of the Sonoma State Hospital Advisory Board. Wardhaugh, a 60-year old Republican and vice president and trust officer of the Wells Fargo Bank, succeeds Mrs. Barbara Reeder of Hayward. Mrs. Reeder resigned and her three-year term has expired. A native of Vancouver, British Columbia, Wardhaugh attended the University of British Columbia and is a 1960 graduate of the Pacific Coast School of Banking in Seattle. He is a past president and member of the board of directors of the United Cerebral Palsy Association of California. Mrs. Boynton will fill the unexpired term of the late Loretta G. Fogarty of San Francisco. Her term will expire December 16, 1976. A Republican, Mrs. Boynton is a native of Grand Forks, North Dakota. She is a honors graduate of the University of North Dakota with a doctorate in psychology and social work. Advisory board members receive their necessary expenses. # # # Walthall OFFICE OF GOVERNOR RC. ALD REAGAN RELEASE: Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-31-74 #438 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed Roscoe C. Carroll of Los Angeles and Charles V. Cummins of Ontario to new terms on the state Board of Pharmacy in the Department of Consumer Affairs. Carroll, 63, is legal counsel for Golden State Mutual Life Insurance Company and has been a practicing attorney in Los Angeles since 1951. He was honored by the Los Angeles County Bar Association in 1965 for outstanding achievement in law, particularly for his direction of the Citizens' Legal Information Assistance Center in Watts and his provision of legal aid after the riots. The following year he was cited by the Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) General Alumni Association for its alumni award of the year. Carroll was graduated from Lincoln in 1933 and Southwestern School of Law in 1950 and has served on the pharmacy board since October 1971. Cummins, 56, is president of Gemmel Drug Company in Ontario and several other retail drug corporations. He joined the pharmacy board in January 1967 and was at the time an executive board member of the Southern California Pharmaceutical Association. He is a registered pharmacist in California, Illinois, Indiana and Texas. He received his bachelor's degree in pharmacy from Butler University in Indiana, served five years with the U.S. Navy during World War II and was active in the reserves. Both appointees are Republicans. They will receive $25 per diem during terms which expire June 1, 1978. ###### McKelvey OFFICE OF GOVERNOR R( LD REAGAN RELEASE Immediate Sacramento, California 95814 Clyde Walthall, Press Secretary 916-445-4571 7-31-74 #439 Governor Ronald Reagan today reappointed three members of the state Workmen's Compensation Appeals Board, subject to Senate confirmation. They are Jack W. Bradley, 64, of San Francisco; Arthur J. Costamagna, 41, of San Rafael; and Albert G. Boardman, 61, of San Mateo. Bradley and Costamagna have served on the board since February 1970 while Boardman was appointed originally by the previous governor in July 1965. Their new terms will expire four years from the date of confirmation, Salaries for the position are $37,615 annually. Bradley was a senior partner in the Bakersfield law firm of Bradley, Wagy, Bunker, Hislop and Leddy and had been a special counsel for the state Compensation Insurance Fund in Kern County for 13 years prior to joining the San Francisco-based appeals board. Costamagna, before becoming a board member, was chief deputy director of the state Department of Professional and Vocational Standards and deputy director of the state Department of Commerce. Boardman is a civil engineer, a past member of the San Mateo Planning Commission and was an executive with Local 3 of the Operating Engineers. He also served on the San Mateo Building Construction Trades Council and the Mid-Peninsula Council for Civic Unity. Bradley and Costamagna are Republicans while Boardman is a Democrat. ##### McKelvey