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Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy Carter; Series: Noel Sterrett Subject File; Folder: Group Classification and General Recommendations; Container 83 To See Complete Finding Aid: http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov/library/findingaids/Carter-Mondale%20Campaign_1976.pdf
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Page 1: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

Group Classification and General Recommendations

Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy Carter; Series: Noel Sterrett Subject File; Folder: Group Classification and General Recommendations; Container 83

To See Complete Finding Aid: http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.gov/library/findingaids/Carter-Mondale%20Campaign_1976.pdf

Page 2: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

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Page 3: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

JAM. R_f r nee D rector Each of the six JAMA Reference Directories is published at least once a month

according to the following schedule: First issue of the month-Meetings in the United States. Second issue-Meetings Outside the United States. Third issue­Organizations of Medical interest: Fourth issuE!-'--AMA Officials, State Medical Associations, and Examinations and Licensure. Listings marked by an asterisk(*) contain information added since the previous scheduled monthly appearance of that directory. Display of exhibits is indicated by [E]. An activity for members only is indicated by [M]. Languages are noted if English is not one of the official languages.

Readers in the United States and abroad. are urged to notify JAMA Reference Directories promptly of any omissions or inaccuracies.

ORGANIZATIONS OF MEDICAL INTEREST

Figures in parentheses indicate total voting membership as reported to THE

JOURNAL by the respecti'Ve organizations.

AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION (209, 213). PRES: Russell B. Roth, MD, Erie, Pa. EXEC VICE-PRES: Ernest B. Howard, MD, 535 N Dearborn St, Chicago 60610. MTGs: Annual, Chicago, June 22-27, 1974; Clinical, Portland, Ore, Nov 30-Dec 4, 1974.

Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine (1,200). PRES: M. J. Martin, MD, Rochester, Minn, PRES-ELECT: Thomas C. Kalkhof, MD, Erie, Pa. EXEC DIR: Karr Shannon, MD, 813 River Rd, Shreveport, LA 71106. MTG: Scottsdale, Ariz, Nov 17-21, 1974. ·

Aerospace Medical Association (4,900). PRES: Earl T; Carter, MD, Rochester, Minn. PRES-ELECT: Brig Gen George E. Schafer, MC, USAF, Brooks Air Force Base, Tex. EXEC VICE-PRES: Merrill H. Goodwin, MD, Washington National Airport, Washington, DC 20001.

Ambulatory Pediatric Association (520). PRES: Katherine Lobach, MD, Bronx, NY. PRES-ELECT: Evan Charney, MD, Rochester, NY. SEC-TREAS: E. s. Hillman, MD, 2300 Tupper St, Montreal 108,

American Academy of Allergy (2,260). PRES: Sheldon C. Siegel, MD, Los Angeles. PRES­ELECT: Philip S. Norman, MD, Baltimore. EXEC DIR: James 0. Kelley, 226 E Michigan St, Milwaukee, WI 63202. MTG: San Diego, Calif, Feb 16-19, 1975.

American Academy for Cerebral Palsy (700). PRES: D. Elliott O'Reilly, MD, St. Louis. PRES-ELECT: Hans Zellweger, MD, Iowa City. EXEC SEC: James E. Bryan, 1265 New Hamp­shire Ave NW, Washington, DC 20036. MTG: Denver, Nov 16-20, 1974.

American Academy of Child Psychiatry (1,240). PRES: Joseph Noshpitz, MD, Wash­ington, DC. PRES-ELECT: Irving Berlin, MD, Seattle. ADMN OFFICER: Virginia Bausch, 1800 R St NW, Washington, DC 20009. MTG: St. Louis, October 1974.

American Academy of Compensation Medi­cine (295). PRES: Mario E. Stella, MD, New York. VICE-PRES: William H. Foege, MD, New York. EXEC SEC: Herbert Kadison, Box 336, Murray Hill Station, New York, NY 10016. MTG: New York, November 1974. [Ml

American Academy of Dermatology (4,000). PRES: Frederick A. J. Kingery, MD, Port­land, Ore. VICE-PRES: Adolph Rostenberg, Jr., MD, Chicago. SEC-TREAS: John M. Shaw, MD, 1116 S Fifth, PO Box 6368, Ta­coma, WA 98405. MTG: Chicago, Dec 7-12, 1974. [Ml

•American Academy of Facial Plastic and Re· constructive Surgery (755). PRES: Trent W. Smith, MD, Columbus, Ohio. PRES-ELECT: Carl N. Patterson, MD, Durham, NC. SEC: M. Eugene Tardy, Jr., MD, 2800 N Lake Shore Dr, Suite 4008, Chicago, IL 60657. MTG: Chicago, June 8-13, 1975.

American Academy of Family Physicians (25,· 159). PRES: James G. Price, MD, Brush, Colo. PRES-ELECT: Herbert A. Holden, MD, San Leandro, Calif. EXEC DIR: Mr. Roger Tusken, American Academy of Family· Physicians, 1740 W 92nd St, Kansas City, MO 64114. MTG: Los Angeles, Oct 14-17, 1974. .

American Academy of Neurological Surgery (100). PRES: Benjamin B. Whitcomb, MD, Hartford, Conn. PRES-ELECT: John Green, MD, Phoenix, ~riz. SEc: Russel H. Patferson, Jr., MD, 626 E 68th St, New York 10021. MTG: Bermuda, Nov 6-10, 1974.

American Academy of Neurology (1.476). PRES: Gilbert H. Glaser, MD, New Haven, Conn. PRES-ELECT: Robert A. Fishman, MD, San Francisco. EXEC DIR: Mr. Stanley A. Nel­son, 4005 W 65th St, Minneapolis 65436.

American Academy of Occupational Medicine (554). PRES: Bertram D. Dinman, MD, Pitts­burgh. PRES-ELECT: Jermyn F. McCahan, MD, New York. EXEC DIR: Ward Bentley, 801 Old Lancaster Rd, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010. MTG: Houston, Fall 1975.

American Academy of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology (10,088). PRES: John J. Con­ley, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Frank W. Newell, MD, Chicago. EXEC SEC-TREAS: C. M. Kos, MD, 16 Second St SW, -Rochester, MN 55901. MTG: Dallas, Oct 6-10, 1974.

American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (5,885). PRES: John C. Wilson, Jr., MD, Los Angeles. PRES-ELECT: William F. Donaldson, MD, Pittsburgh. EXEC Drn: Charles V. Heck, MD, 430 N Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60611. MTG: San Francisco, March 1-6, 1976. [Ml

American Academy of Pediatrics (12.471). PRES: James B. Gillespie, MD, Albuquerque, NM. PRES-ELECT: John C. MacQueen, MD, Iowa City. EXEC DIR: Robert G. Frazier, MD, 1801 Hi.nman Ave, Evanston, IL 60204. MTG: San Francisco, Oct 19-24, 1974.

American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (850). PRES: Leonard F. Bender, MD, Ann Arbor, Mich. PRES-ELECT: Eugene Moskowitz, MD, Valhalla, NY. EXEC DIR: Mr. Creston C. Herold, 30 N Michigan Ave, Chicago 60602. MTG: San Francisco, Nov 17-22, 1974.

American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law (250). PRES: Robert L. Sadoff, MD, Jen­kintown, Pa. VICE-PRES: A. Louis McGarry, MD, Brookline, Mass. SEC: Seymour Pollack, MD, University of Southern California Medi­cal School, Los Angeles 90083.

American Academy of Psychoanalysis (750). PRES: Joseph H. Merin, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Norman D. Tabachnick, MD, New York. SEC: Joseph Barnett, MD, 40 Gramercy Park N, New York 10010.

American Academy of Stress Disorders (for· merly American Academy of Air Traffic Con· trol Medicine) (150). PRES: Richard R. Gray­son, MD, St. Charles, Ill. EXEC VICE-PRES: Jules H. Masserman, MD, 8 S Michigan Ave, Chicago.

•American Association of Anatomists (2,335). ·PRES: Russell T. Woodburne, PhD, Ann Ar­

bor, Mich. PRES-ELECT: Dr. John C. Finerty, New 'Orleans, La. SEC-TREAS: Dr. John E. Pauly, Department of Anatomy, University of Arkansas Medical Center, Little Rock, AR 72201. MTG: Los Angeles, March 23-27, 1975.

American . Association for Automotive Medi­cine (500). PRES: Julian A. Walker, MD, South Burlington, Vt. PRES-ELECT: Susan P. Baker, MPH, Baltimore. EXEC SEC: Mr. Al. bert Carriere, 801 Green Bay Rd, Lake Bluff, IL 60044. MTG: Toronto, Sept 12-14, 1974.

American Association of Blood Banks (1,800). PRES: Klaus Mayer, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT:. Herbert F. Polesky, MD; Minne­apolis. SEc: Harold A. Wurzel, MD, !S28 L St NW, Suite 608, Washington, DC 20036. MTG: Anaheim, Calif, Nov 9-14, 1974.

American Association for Cancer Education (345). PRES: Harold B. Haley, Jr., MD, Roanoke, Va. PRES-ELECT: Benjamin F. Rush, Jr., MD, Newark, NJ, SEC: Richard F. Bakemeier, MD, University of Rochester School of Medicine, 260 Crittenden Blvd, Rochester, NY 14620.

American Association for Clinical Immunol­ogy and Allergy (584). PRES: Robert J. Bren­nan, MD,' Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. PRES-ELECT: John L. Dewey, MD, Omaha. ADMN OFFICER: Boen Swinny, Jr., MD, 2-G Medical Profes­sional Bldg, San Antonio, TX 78212. MTG:

1528 JAMA, June 17, 1974 • Vol 228, No 12

s Ft. Lauderdale, Nov 21-24, 1974.

American Association of Clinical Urologlsts (398). PRES: Harold Kay, MD, Oakland, Calif. PRES-ELECT; Russell B. Carson, MD, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. SEC-TREAS: Robert H. Bradley, Jr., MD, 33 E Chestnut Hill Ave, Philadelphia 19118.

American Association of Councils of Medical Staffs of Private Hospitals (28,700). PRES: Jose L. Garcia Oller, MD, New Orleans. PRES-ELECT: Noble Correll, MD, Oakbrook, Ill. SEC: Edward S. Hyman, MD, 3402 Bien­ville St, New Orleans 70119.

American Association of Electromyography and Electrodiagnosis (350). PRES: William R. Kennedy, MD, Minneapolis. PRES-ELECT: Robert H. Jebsem, MD, Cincinnati. SEc­TREAS: W, C. Wiederholt, MD, 7010 Via Val­verde, La Jolla, CA 92037. MTG: San Fran­cisco, Nov 16-17, 1974.

American Association of Genitourinary Sur· geons (105). PRES: Wyland F. Leadbetter, MD, Boston. PRES-ELECT: Ormond S. Culp, MD, Rochester, Minn. SEC-TREAS: John D. Young, Jr., MD, University of Maryland Hos-

, pita!, 22 S Greene St, Baltimore 21201. American Association for the History of Med­

icine (900). PRES: John B. Blake, PhD, Be­thesda, Md. PRES-ELECT: Lester S. King, MD, Chicago, SEC-TREAS: Genevieve Miller, PhD, Howard Dittrick Museum of Historical Medi­cine, 11,000 Euclid Ave, Cleveland 44106.

American Association of Immunologists (1,600). PRES: Dan H. Campbell, PhD, Pasa­dena, Calif. PRES-ELECT: Baruj Benacerraf, MD, Boston. SEC-TREAS: Henry Metzger, MD, 9660 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20014.

American Association of Medical Clinics (335). PRES: Loman C. Trover, MD, Madison­ville, Ky. PRES-ELECT: Robert W. Jamplis, MD, Palo Alto, Calif. EXEC DIR: James B. Cobb, PO Box 949, 20 S Quaker Lane, Alex­andria, VA 22313. MTG: Washington, DC, Sept 4-8, 1974.

American Association on Mental Deficiency (9,000). PRES: Mr. David Rosen, Sterling Heights, Mich. PRES-ELECT: James D. Clem­ents, MD, Atlanta. EXEC DIR: George Solo­yanis, PhD, 6201 Connecticut Ave NW, Washington, DC 20016.

•American Association of Neurological Sur• geons (1,494). PRES: Richard C. Schneider, Ann Arbor, Mich. EXEC-SEC: Michael I. O'Connor, 428 E Preston St, Baltimore, MD 21202. MTG: Miami Beach, Fla, April 6-10, 1975.

American Association of Neuropathologlsts (500). PRES: E. P. Richardson, Jr., MD, Bos­ton. PRES-ELECT: John Moossy, MD, Pitts­burgh. SEC-TREAS: Richard L. Davis, MD, 1200 N State St, Los Angeles 90033.

American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. PRES: Edward C. Hughes, Syracuse, NY. PRES ELECT: Charles A. Hunter, Jr., Indianapolis. SEC: J. Donald Woodruff, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Balti­more 21206. MTG: Hot Springs, Va, Sept 4-7, 1974.

American Association of Ophthalmology (3,205). PRES: Charles E. Jaeckle, MD, De­fiance, Ohio. PRES-ELECT: Ralph W. Ryan, MD, Morgantown, WVa. EXEC SEC: Mr. Law­rence A. Zupan, 1110 17th St NW, Washing­ton, DC 20036. MTG: Dallas, Oct 5-8, 1974. [Ml

American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists (1,080). PRES: Kenneth M. Brinkhaus, MD, Chapel Hill, NC. VICE PRES: Donald W. King, Jr., MD, New York. SEc­TREAS: A. , James French, MD, Dept of Pathology, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, MI 48104.

American Association of Planned Parent­hood Physicians (843). PRES: Donald P. Swartz, MD, Delmar, NY. PRES-ELECT: Celso Remon Garcia, MD, Philadelphia. ADMIN ASST: Ms. Geraldine Covington, 810 Seventh Ave, New York 10019,

American Association of Plastic Surgeons (225). PRES: Milton T. Edgerton, Jr., Char­lottesville, Va. PRES-ELECT: Robert L. Hard­ing, MD, Harrisburg, Penn. SEC: Nicholas G. Georgiade, MD, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3098, Durham, NC 27710.

American Association of Public Health Physi­cians (506). PRES: Mack I. Shanholtz, MD, Richmond, Va. PRES-ELECT: Frank G. Pacino,

(Continued on page 1531.)

Organizations

Page 4: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

MINOCIN IV 100 mg/Vial

FORM

MINOCIN Capsules 100 mg •n !!:' .• MINOCIN Capsules 50mg C:"'""'"'7

MINOCIN Syrup 50 mg/5 cc

Dipfococcus pneumoniae.

0 Staphylococcus aureus. skin and soft tissue infec­tions. Tetracyclines are not the drug of choice in the treatment of any type of staphylococcal infection

When penicillin is contraindicated. tetracyclines are alternative drugs in the treatment of infections due to: ·

Neissena gonorrhoeae. Treponema pallidum and Treponema pertenue (syphilis and yaws). Listeria monocytogenes. Clostridium species. Bacillus anthracis, Fusobacterium fusiforme (Vincent·s infection). Actinomyces species. In acute intestinal amebiasis. the tetracyclines

may be a useful adjunct to amebicides. Ml NOCIN is indicaled in the treatment of tracho­

ma. although the infectious agent is not alwa·ys eliminated. as judged by immunofluorescence. ln­clusionconjunotivitis may be treated with oral tetra­cyclines or with a combination of oral and topical agents.

Oral only: In severe acne. the tetracyclines may be useful adjunctive therapy. Minocycline is indi­cated in the treatment of asymptomatic carriers of N. meningitidis to eliminate meningococci from the

, nasopharynx. · In order to preserve the usefulness of Ml NOCIN

minocycline HG/ in the treatment of asymptomatic meningococcal carriers. diagnostic laboratory pro­cedures. including serotyping and susceptibility tesling. should be performed to establish the carrier state and the correct treatment It is recommended that the drug be reserved for situations in which the risk of meningococcal meningitis is high.

Minocycfine is not indicated for the treatment of meningococcal infection.

CONTRAINDICATIONS. This drug is contraindi­cated in persons who have shown hypersensitivity to any of the tetracydines.

WARNINGS. In the presence of renal dysfunction. particularly in pregnancy, intravenous tetracycline lherapy in daily doses exceeding 2 grams has been associated with deaths through liver failure

When the need for intensive treatment outweighs its potential dangers (mostly during pregnancy or in individuals with known or suspected renal or liver impairment), it is advisable to perform renal and liver function tests before and during therapy. Also tetra­cycline serum concentrations should be followed

If renal impairment exists. even usual oral or par­enteral doses may lead to excessive systemic accu­mulation of the drug and possible liver toxicity Under such conditions. lower than usual total doses are indicated. and if therapy is prolonged. serum level determinations of the drug may be advisable. This hazard is of particular importance in the paren­teral administration of tetracyclines to pregnant or post-partum patients with pyelonephritis. When used under these circumstances. the blood level should not exceed 15 micrograms/ml. and liver function tests should be made at frequent intervals·. Other potentially hepatotoxic drugs should not be prescribed concomitantly.

The use of tetracyclines during tooth develop­ment (last half of pregnancy. infancy, and childhood to the age of 8 years) may cause permanent dis­coloration of the teelh (yellow-gray-brown). This ad­verse reaction is more common during long-term use of the drugs but has been observed following repeated short-term courses. Enamel hypoplasia has also been reported. Tetracyclines. therefore. should not be used in this age group unless other drugs are not likely to be effective or are contra­indicated.

Photosensitivity manifested by an exaggerated sunburn reaction has been observed in some indi­viduals taking tetracyclines. Patients apt to be ex­posed to direct sunlight or ullraviolet light should be advised that this reaction can occur with tetra­cycline drugs, and treatment should be discont.in­ued at the first evidence of skin erythema. Studies to date indicate that photosensitivity does not occur with MINOCIN minocycline HCI.

ADULT DOSAGE (GENERAL)

PEDIATRIC DOSAGE (GENERALI HOW SUPPLIED

200 mg initially, 100mgq.12h.

200 mg initially, 100 mg q. 12 h.

100 mg or 200 mg initially, 50 mg q.i.d.

2 teaspoonfuls (100 mg) initially. 1 teaspoonful (50mg)qid

4 mg/kg initially, 2 mg/kg q. 12 h.

4 mg/kg. initially, 2 mg/kg q 12 h ..

4 mg/kg initially. 2 mg/kg q 12 h.

4 mg/kg initially, 2 mg/kg q. 12 h

The antianabolic action of the tetracyclines may cause an increase in BUN. While this is not a prob­lem in those with normal renal function. in patients with significantly impaired function. higher serum levels of tetracycline may lead to azotemia. hyper­phosphatemia, and acidosis.

CNS side effects including light headedness. diz­ziness or vertigo have been reported. Patients who experience these symptoms should be cautioned about driving vehicles or using hazardous machin­ery while on minocycline therapy. These symptoms may disappear during therapy and always dis­appear rapidly when the drug is discontinued.

Usage in Pregnancy. (See above "Warnings· about use during tooth development)

Results of animal studies indicate that tetracy­clines cross the placenta. are found in fetal tissues and can have toxic effects on the developing fetus (often related to retardation of skeletal develop­ment). Evidence of embryotoxicily has also been noted In an·1mals treated early in pregnancy.

Usage in newborns. infants. and children. (See above "Warnings· aboul use during loolh develop­ment.)

All tetracyclines form a stable calcium complex in any bone forming tissue. A decrease in the fibula growth rate has been observed in prematures given oral tetracycline in doses of 25 mg./kg. every 6 hours. This reaction was shown to be reversible when the drug Was discontinued

Telracyclines are present in the milk of lactating women who are taking a drug in this class

PRECAUTIONS. As with other antibiotics prepara­tions. use of this drug may result in overgrowth of nonsusceptible organisms. including fungi. If super­infection occurs. the antibiotic should be discon­tinued and appropriate therapy should be instituted.

In venereardiSeases when coexistent syphilis is suspected. darkfield examination should be done before treatment is started and the blood serology repeated monthly for at least 4 months.

Because telracyclines have been shown to de­press plasma prothrombin activity. patients who are on anticoagulant therapy may require downward adjustment of their anticoagulant dosage. ·

In long-term therapy, periodic laboratory eval ua­tion of organ systems. including hematopoielic. renal and hepatic studies should be performed

All infections due to Group A beta-hemolytic streptococci should be lreated for at least 10 days·.

Since bacteriostatic drugs may interfere with the bactericidal action of penicillin. it 1s advisable to avoid giving tetracycline in conjunction with reni­cillin.

ADVERSE REACTIONS. Gastrointestinal: Ano­rexia. nausea. vomiting. diarrhea. glossitis. dys­phagia. enterocolitis. and inflammatory lesions (with monilial overgrowth) in the anogenital.region.

These reactions have. been caused by both the oral and parenteral administration of tetracyclines. Skin: Maculopapular and erythematous rashes Exfoliative dermatitis has been reported but is un­common. Photosensitivity is discussed above. (See "Warnings ) Renal toxicity: Rise in BUN has been reported and is apparenlly dose related. (See "Warnings.") Hypersensitivity reactions: Urticaria. angioneurotic edema, anaphylaxis, anaphylactoid purpura. pericarditis and exacerbation of systemic lupus erythematosus. Bulging fontanels have been reported in young infants following full therapeutic dosage. This sign disappeared rapidly when the drug was discontinued. Blood: Hemolytic anemia. thrombocytopenia. neutropenia and eosinophilia have been reported. CNS: (See "Warnings ) When given over prolonged periods. tetracyclines have been reported lo produce brown-black microscopic discoloralion of lhyroid glands. No abnormalities of thyroid function studies are known to occur ,, DOSAGE AND ADM! NI STRATION:ORAL. Therapy should be continued for al leasl 24-48 hours after

· 1 Vial 100 mg Box of 100 Vials

Bottles of 50's and 1oo·s: Unit dose 10x.10's.

Bottles of 1oo·s

2-fluidounce Bottles

symptoms and fever have subsided. Concomitcint therapy: Antacids containing

aluminum. calcium. or magnesium impair absorp· ti on and should not be given to patients taking oral tetracycline

Studies to date have indicated that the absorption of MINOCIN is nol notably influenced by foocfs and dairy products

In patients with renal impairment: (See "Warn­ings:·) Total dosage should be decreased by reduc­tion of recommended 1nchvidual doses anc1/or by extending time intervals between doses.

In the treatment of srreptococcal infections. a therapeutic dose of tetracycline should be adminis­lered for al leas! 10 days

ADULTS The usual dosage of MINOCIN minocy· cline HCI is 200 mg. inilially followed by 100 mg. every 12 hours. Alternatively. if mare frequent doses are preferred. two or four 50 mg. capsules may be given initially followed by one 50 mg. capsule four times daily.

CHILDREN: The usual dosage of MI NOCI N mino­cyctine HCI is 4 mg.I.Kg initially followed by 2 mg/ Kg. every 12 hours

Fort re at men I of syph ii is.the usual closage of MINOCIN should be administered over a period of 10-15 days. Close followup including laboratory tests. is recommended

Gonorrhea patients sensitive to penicillin may be trealed with MINOCIN. adminislered as 200 mg initiallyfo_llowed by 100 mg every twelve hours for a minimum of 4 days. with post-therapy cultures within 2-3 days

In the treatment of meningococcal carrier state recommended dose is 100 mg. every 12 hours for five days '

DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION: INTRAVE­NOUS. Note: Rapid administration is to be avoided. Parenteral therapy is indicated only when oral lherapy 1s not adequale or lolerated. Oral therapy should be instituted as soon as possible If intrave­nous therapy is given over prolonged periods of time. thrombophlebilis may resull

ADULTS: Usual adult dose. 200 mg. followed by 100 mg. every 12 hours and should not exceed 400 mg in 24 hours. The drug should be initially dis­solved and then further diluted to 500-1,000cc.with either Sodium Chloride Injection USP. Dextrose Injection USP. Dextrose and Sodium Chloride In­jection USP, Ringers Injection USP. or ·Lactated Ringers Injection USP but not in other solution containing calcium (a precipitate may form).

The reconstituted solutions are stable at room temperature for 24 hours without significant loss of potency. Any unused portions must be discarded after that period.The final dilution for administration should be administered immediately

CHILDREN Usual pediatric close: 4 mg./kg. fol­lowed by 2 mg,/kg. every 12 hours.

In patients with renal impairment: (See ·warn­ings:·)

Tolal dosage should be decreased by reduction of recommended individual doses and/or by extend­ing time intervals between dos~s

HOW SUPPLIED. Capsules~Minocycline Hydro­chloride equivalent lo 100 mg. Minocycline Hard­shell purple and orange. Bottles of 50 and 100: Unit Dose 10 x 1o·s 'Product No. 5301.

Minocycline Hydrochloride equivalent to 50 mg Minocycline Hardshell orange. Bottles of 100 and Unit Dose 10 x 10's. Product No. 5300.

Syrup-Minocycline Hydrochloride equivalent lo 50 mg Minocycline per leaspoonful (5 cc.) Pre­served with propylparaben 0.10%and butylparaben 0 06% with Alcohol USP 5% v/v. Cuslard-flavored in bottles of 2 fl. oz Product No 5313

lntraverious-100 mg. vials of sterile cryodes1c­cated powder Product No. 5305 (Combined 5173)

MILITARY FSN 6505-149·0574 100 mg l.V.

~~L:~~R:5~~-~i-~~j~~J-5l 1 2} 100 mg capsules (50s) 790-3

Page 5: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

(Continued from page 1528.) MD,· San Pedro, Calif. SEC-TREAS: Ben M. Primer, MD, 2401 Bluffview Dr, Austin, TX 78704. MTG: New Orleans, November 1974.

American Association of Railway Surgeons (1,500). PRES: Carl Y. Werelius, MD, Chi­cago. ·PRES-ELECT: Joseph E. O'Donnell, MD, Clinton, Iowa_ SEC: William D. Fish, MD, Illinois Central Hospital, 6800 Stony Island Ave, Chicago ·60637.

American Association for the Study of Head­ache (275). PRES: Seymour Diamon.d, MD, Chicago. VICE PRES: William Grater, MD, Dallas. ExEc SEC: Seymour Diamond, MD, 6262 N Western Ave, Ch.icago 60626. MTG: Chicago, June 22-23, 1974.

American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (421). PRES: Johri Senior, MD, Philadelphia. PRES-ELECT: W. H. J. Summer­skill: MD, Rochester, Minn. SEC: Steven Schenker, MD, Veterans Administration Hospital, 1310 24th Ave S, Nashville, TN 37203. MTG: 'Chicago, Oct 29-30, 1974.

American Association for the Study of Neo· plastic Diseases (247). PRES; David P. Boyd, Mii, Boston. VICE-PRES: Clifton F. Mountain, MD, Houston. ExEc-SEc: Robert H. Jackson, MD, 10607 Miles Ave, Cleveland 44106. MTG: Chicago, June 22-27, 1974. ·

American Association for the Surgery of Trauma (550). PRES: John A. Moncrief, MD, Charleston, SC. PRES-ELECT: John H. Davis, MD, Burlington, Vt. SEC: John A. Boswick, Jr., MD, 4200 E Ninth Ave, Box 2414, Denver 80220. MTG·: Hot Springs, Va, Oct 17-19, 1974.

•American Association for Thoracic Surgery (802). PRES: Wilfred G. Bigelow; MD, To­ronto. PRES-ELECT:'. David J. Dugan, MD, Oakland, Calif. EXEC-SEC: Mr. William T: Maloney, 6 Beacon St, Suite 620, Boston, MA 02108. MTG: New York, April 14-16, 1976·.

American Broncho-Esophagol<igical . Associa· tion (200). PRES: Gabriel F; Tucker, Jr., MD, Philadelphia. PRES-ELECT: Howard An­derson, MD, Rochester, Minri. SEC: Walter H. Maloney, MD, 2065 Adelbert Rd, Cleveland 4ilOL . .

American Cancer Society (190). PRES: Justin J. Stein, MD, New York, PRES­ELECT: George P. Rosemond, MD, New York. EXEC VICE-PRES: Mr. Lane w: Adams, 219 E 42nd St, New York 10017. ·

•American Chinese Medical Society (300). PRES: Wei-Ping Loli, MD, PhD., Ga,.Y, Ind. VicE-PRES: Kuo-Chen Wang, MD, Roslyn, L.I., NY. SEC: Eddy C. K. Tong, MD, 85 Gail Dr, New Rochelle, NY 10805. MTG: New York, Dec 9, 1974.

*American Cleft Palate Association (1,150). PRES: Verner V. Lindgren, MD, Portland, Ore. PRES-ELECT: Howard Aduss, DDS, Chi­cago. SEC: Herbert A.· Leeper; jr., PhD, Speech and ·Hearing Clinic, Hanner Hall, Oklahoma ·state University, Stillwater, OK 74073. MTG: New Orleans, Feb 26-March 1, 1976.

American Clinical and Climatological Asso· ciation (300). PRES: H. Saint George Tucker, MD, Richmond, Va. SEC TREAS: J. Edwin Wood, Pennsylvania Hospit.;l, 8th and Spruce St, Philadelphia 19107. ·

*American Coll~ge of Allergists (900). PRES: Bernard A .. Berman, MD, Brookline, Mass. PRES-ELECT: Ben C. Eisenberg, MD, Palm Springs, Calif. EXEC VICE-PRES: Eloi Bauers, 2100 Dain Tower, Minneapolis, MN 56402. MTG: Bal Harbour, Fla, March 13-19, 1976.

American College of Angiology (1,650). PRES: Paul s. Lowenstein, .. MD, New .York. ExEc­SEc: Alfred Halpern,· MD, 381 Park Ave S, New York 10016.

American College of Cardiology (5,800). PRES: .Hencyi D. Mcintosh, MD, Houston. PRES-ELECT: .Charles Fisch, MD, Indianapolis. EXEC DIR: William· D. Nelligan, 9660 Rock­ville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20014. MTG: Houston, Feb 10-13, 1975. .

*American College of Chemosurgery (45). PRES: Theodore A. Tromovitch, MD, San Francisco. VICE-PRES: G. Thomas Jansen, MD, L.ittle Rock, Ark. SEC-TREAS: Richard S. Moraites, MD, 7721 ·Montgomery' Rd, Cin­cinnati, OH 46236. MTG·: Chicago, Dec 6-7, 1974. .

American College of Chest Physicians (9,000). PRES: Howards: Van Ordstrand, MD, Cleve­land. PRES-ELECT: Arthur ·c. Beall, Jr., MD, Houston. EXEC DIR: Alfred Soffer, MD, 112 E ChestriutcSt, Chicago 60611. MTG: New Or-leans, Nov 3-7, 1974. ·

American College of Clinical Pharm!lcology

JAMA, June 17, 1974 • Vol 228, No 12

(285). PRES: Duncan E. Hutcheori, MD, New­ark,· NJ. SEc: William D. Sharpe, MD, 2 E 103rd St, New York 10029.

"American College of Emergency Physicians. PRES: R. R. Hannas, Jr., MD, Evan'ston, Ill. PRES-ELECT: William T. Haeck, MD, Jackson­ville, Fla. EXEC DIR: Arthur E. Auer, 241 E Saginaw, East Lansing, MI 48823.

American College of Gastroenterology (970). PRES: Angelo E. Dagradi, MD, Long Beach, Calif.' PRES-ELECT: John T. Galambos, MD, Atlan.ta. EXEC Drn: Mr. Daniel Weiss, 299 Broadway, New York 10007. MTG: Bal Har­bour, Fla, Oct 21-26, 1974.

•American College Health Association (1,700). PRES: W. J. Coggins, ·MD, College Park, Md. PRES-ELECT: John .M. Miller, MD, Blooming­ton, Ind. EXEC DIR: James. W.' Dilley, 2807 Central St, Evanston, 1L 60201. 'MTG: New York, April 1-4, 1975. ·

American College of Legal Medicine (251). PRES: Monroe E. Trout, MD, New York. VICE PRES: Don Harper Mills, MD, Los An­geles. EXEC SEC: Ms. Betty Hanna, Suite 1201, 1340 N Astor St, Chicago 60610.

American College·of Obstetricians and Gyne· cologlsts (10,842). PRES: Keith P. Russeli. MD, Los Angeles. PRES-ELECT: Frederick ·J. Hofmeister, MD, Wauw~tosa, Wis. DIR: Michael Newton, MD, 1 E Wacker Dr, Chi-cago 60601. · ·

•American College of Physicians (26,000). PRES: Truman· G. Schnabel, Jr., MD, Phila­

-delphia. PRES'ELECT: Robert G. Petersdorf, MD, Seattle. EXEC VICE PRES: Edward C. Rosenow, Jr., MD, 4200 Pine St, Philadelphia, PA 19104. MTG: San Francisco, April 7-11, 1975.

American College of Preventive Medicine (1,400). PRES: Kurt W. Deuschle, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Mary C. McLaughlin, MD, Hauppage~ L. I., New York. EXEC DIR: Ward Bentley, 801 Old Lancaster Rd, ·Bryn Mawr, PA 19010. MTG: New Orleans, bet 20-22, 1974. . ..

American College of Psychiatrists (407). PRES:' Melvin Sabshin, MD, Chicago. PRES, ELECT: Hamilton Ford, MD, Galveston, Tex. SEC-GEN: John. C. Nemiah, Mii, Beth Israel

Conf identia I ity: A hindrance or a necessity?

Would patient care be im­proved if confidentiality was not absolu~ely invio­late? Yes,.contends Lawrence L. Weed:M.D. in his article, ''THE PUBLIC'S NEEDS MUST BE MET," in the June issue of PRISM. But ih "THE PATiENT'S TRUST MUST BE PROTECTED," Jahn M. Rumsey warns what will happen if that trust is violated ·and suggests what the profession can do to prevent violations of privacy.

Don't miss the June issue

Hospital, 330 Brookline Ave, Boston 02215. •American College of Radiology (8',600). PRES:

Paul A. Riemenschneider, MD, Santa Bar­bara, Calif. EXEC DIR: William S. Stronach, American College of Radiology, 20 N Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60606. MTG: Portland, Ore, March 30-April 4, 1975.

American College of Sports Medicine (2,300). PRES: Howard G. Knuttgen, PhD, Boston. PRES-ELECT: Charles M. Tipton, PhD, Iowa City. EXEC SEC: Mr. Donald E. Herrmann, 1440 Monroe St, Madison, WI 63706.

American College of Surgeons (33,000). PRES: Claude E. Welch, MD, Boston. PRES-ELECT: Charles W. McLaughlin, Jr., MD, Omaha. DIR: C. Rollins Hanlon, MD, 55 E Erie St, Chicago 60611. MTG: Miami Beach, Fla, Oct 21-26, 1974.

American Congress of Rehabilitation Medi· cine (1,970). PRES: Rene Cailliet, MD; Los Angeles. PRES-ELECT: John W. Goldschmidt, MD, Philadelphia. EXEC DIR: Mr. Creston C. Herold, 30 N Michigan Ave, Chicago 60602. MTG: San Francisco, Nov 17-22, 1974.

American Dermatological Association (217). PRES: Edwar<I P. Cawley, ·MD, Charlottes­ville, Va. VICE PRES: J. Lowry Miller, MD, New York. SEC: Thomas W. Murrell, Jr., MD, 17 E Grace St, Richmond, VA 23219.

American Diabetes Association (2,900). PRES: Addison B. "Seo.ville, Jr., MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Max .Ellenberg, MD, New York. EXEC DIR: J. Richard. Conneily, American Diabetes Association, 18 E 48th St, New York 10017.

American Electroencephalographic Society (687). PRES: Janice R.' Stevens, MD, Port­land, Ore. PRES-ELECT; Ernst A. Rodin, De­troit. EXEC-SEC: Mrs. Margaret H. Henry, 36391 Maple Grove Rd, Willoughby Hills, OH 44094. MTG: Seattle, July 25-27, 1974.

American f'ederation for Clinical Research (7,500'.J. PRES: Kenneth L. Melmon, MD, ·san Francisco. 'PRES-ELECT: Robert A. Kreesberg, MD, Mobile, Ala. EXEC-SEC: Mr. Charles B. Slack, 69.00 Grove Rd, Thorofare, Nj 08086.

*American Fertility Society (4,003). PRES: Coy L. Lay, MD, Lakeland, Fla. PRES,ELECT: Herbert H. ·Thomas, ·MD, Birmingham, Ala. MED DIR: Robert· B. Wilson, MD, 1608 13th Ave S, ·Birmingham, Ai. 35205. MTG: Los Angeles, April 2-5, 1976.

American Fracture Association (546). PRES: Nathan E. Bear, MD, Monroe, Wis. PRES­ELECT: Joseph J. Toland, III, MD, Philadel­phia.SEC-GEN: Herman·w. Wellmerling, MD, 600 Livingston Bldg, Bloomington, IL 61701. MTG: Atlanta, Oct 20-24, 1974. .

American Gastroenterologica1· Association (1,198). PREs:"Albert I. Mendeloff, MD, Balti­more. PRES-ELECT: Kurt J. Isselbacher, MD, Boston. ExEc-SEc: Mr. Charles B. Slack, 6900 Grove Rd, Thorofare, NJ 08086. ,

•American Geriatrics Society (8,000). 'PRES: Robert B. Greenblatt, MD, Augusta, Ga. PRES,ELECT: Ewald W. Busse, MD, Durham, NC. EXEC DIR: Kathryn S. Henderson, Ameri­can Geriatrics Society, 10 Columbus Circle, Room 1470, New . York, NY 10019 .. MTG: Miami Beach, Fla, April 16-17, 1976. .

American Group Psychotherapy Association (2,100) .. PRES: John J. O'Hearne, MD, New ·York. PRES-ELECT: Henriette T. Glatzer, PhD, New York. EXEC SEC: Ms. Margaret Keefe, 1865 Broadway, 12th Floor, New York, NY 10023. MTG: San Antonio, Tex, Feb 4-8, 1975.

American Gynec<ilogi.cal Society (140). PRES: Duncan E. Reid, MD, Tucson, Ariz. PRES­ELECT: Louis 'M. Hellman, MD, Washington, DC. SEc: Tommy N. Evans, MD, 275 E Han­cock, Detroit 48201.

American Heart As.sociation (81,000). PRES: Richard S. Ross, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Elliot Rapaport, MD, New York. ADMN OFFICER: William Moore, 44 E 23rd St, New York 10010. MTG: Dallas, Nov 18-22, 1974'.

American Hospital Association (7,055). CHAIR­MAN: Mr. Horace M. Cardwell, Lufkin, Tex. CHAIR-ELECT: .Mr. Wade Mountz, Louisville. PRES: John Alexander McMahon, 840 N Lake Shore Dr, Chicago 60611. MTG: Chicago, Aug 12-16, 1974. .

Ame~ican Industrial Hygiene Association (l,750). PRES.: Mr. Jerome T. Siedlicki, Chi­cago. PRES-ELECT: Mr. John A. Pendergrass, St. Paul. MNG D1ii: Mr. W. E. McCormi~k. 66 S Miller Rd, Akron, OH 44313.

American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine ., (375). PRES: Gilbert Baum, MD, Scarsdale,

NY. PRES-ELECT: William McKinney; MD, Winston-Salem, NC •. SEc: J;taymond Gramlak,

Organizations 1531

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MD, University of Rochester Medical Division, 260 Crittenden Blvd, Rochester, NY 14620.

•American Laryngological Association (93). PRES: Daniel C. Baker, Jr., MD, New York. SEC: John F. Daly, MD, Faculty Practice Offices, 566 First Ave, New York, NY 10016. MTG: Atlanta, April 13-14, 1975.

•American Laryngological, Rhinologlcal and Otological Society (618). PRES: David D. DeWeese, MD, Portland, Ore. PRES-ELECT: James A. Harrill, MD, Winston-Salem, NC. ADMN AssT: Ms. Ann R. Holm, 2954 Dor­man Rd, Broomall, PA 19008. MTG: Atlanta, April 8-10, 1975.

American Lung Association (formerly Na· tional Tuberculosis and Respiratory Disease Association). PRES: Wendell L. \Tan Loan," EdD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Joseph B. Stocklen, MD, New York. MNG-DIR: Robert J. Anderson, MD, 1740 Broadway, New York 10019. MTG: Montreal, May 18-21, 1975.

American Medical Authors (827). PRES: Joseph Franklin Montague, ·MD, New York. SEC: Thomas Case, MD, 520 Park Ave, New York 10021.

American Medical Electroencephalograhic Association (300). PRES: William H. Everts, MD, Tequesta, Fla. PRES-ELECT: Ro~ert· P. Jeub, MD, Minneapolis. SEC-TREAS: Wayland A. Stephe-nson, MD, Sansum Medical Clinic, PO Drawer LL, Santa Barbara, CA 93102.

American Medical Society on Alcoholism (650). PRES: Maxwell N. Weisman, MD, Baltimore. VICE-PRES: LeClair Bissell, MD, New York. SEC: Sidney S. Greenberg, MD, 6 E 96th St, New York, NY 10028. MTG: San Francisco, Dec 10-11, 1974. ·

American Medical Tennis Association (2,500). PRES: Ernest Reiner, MD, Tampa, Fla. PRES-ELECT: Samuel Montello, MD, Kan­sas ·City, Mo. EXEC DIR: Mr. Bill Drake; PO Box 183, Alton, IL 62002.

American Medical Women's Association. PRES: Margaret P. Sullivan, MD, ·Houston. PRES-ELECT: Carolyn S. Pincock, MD, Silver Spring, Md. EXEC DIR: Gertrude F. Conroy, 1740 Broadway, New York. MTG: Houston, Dec 1-4, 1974. ·

American Medical Writers Association (1,-500). PRES: E. Clinton Texter, Jr., MD, Little Rock, Ark. PRES-ELECT: Arnold Melnick,.DO, Cheltenham, Pa. CoR SEC: L. A. Sablack, 9650 Rockville Pike; Bethesda, MD 20014. MTG: Beverly Hills, Calif, Oct 2-5, 1974.

American , Neurological Association (350).

AMA-MRP Unit Value The unit value of the AMA­

MRP for the week ending May 23, 1974 was: $115.98. --

A more current unit value may be obtained from American Medical News. A complete Pro­spectus is available from the American Medical Association. Physicians in the following states should write to Scudder Fund Distributors, Inc., PO Box 7092, Chicago 60680: Arizona, Arkansas, Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, and West Virginia.

The AMA-MRP is a retire­ment plan, organized pursuant to the "Self-Employed Individuals Tax Retirement Act of 1962 (Keogh Law)," for self-em­ployed members of the AMA and their common-law employees.

PRES: Clark H. Millikan, MD, Rochester, Minn. ·PRES-ELECT: Joseph M. Foley, MD, Cleveland. SEC-TREAS: Samuel A. Trufant, MD, Cincinnaii General Hospital, Cincinnati 45229.

•American Occupa.tional Medical Association (formerly Industrial Medical Association) (3,296). PRES: C. Craig Wright, MD, Rci­chester, NY. PRES-ELECT: George E. Spencer, MD, Boston, Mass. EXEC DIR: Howard N. Schulz, 150 N Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 60606. MTG: San Francisco, April 13~17, 1975.

American Ophthalinological Society · (205) PRES: William P. McGuire, MD, Winchester, Va. VICE~PRES: M. Elliott Randolph, MD, Baltimore. SEC-TREAS: Robert W. Hollen­horst, MD, 200 First St SW, Rochester, ·MN 55901. . . .

American Orthopaedic Association (225). PRES: Alvin Ingram, Memphis. PRES-ELECT: Paul Lipscomb, Davis,. Calif. SEC: ·Richard King, 340 Boulevard NE, Atlanta 30312.

American Orthopaedic Foat Society (176). PRES: Moore Moore, Jr., MD, Memphis. PRES: ELECT: James E. Bateman, MD, Toronto. SEC: Henry R. Cowell, MD, VA Center, 1601 Kirkwood Hwy, Wilmington, DE 19805. MTG: San Francisco, March 1, 1975. [M] .

•American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine. PRES: Ja.ck C. Hughston, MD, Co­lumbus, Ga. PRES-ELECT: Joe W. King, MD, Houston. SEC: Leslie M. Bodnar, MD, 328 N Michigan Ave, South Bend, IN 46601. M':'G: San Francisco; March 1-6, 1975.

*American Orthopsychiatrlc Association (4.-000). PRES: Orville G. Brim, Jr., PhD, New York. PRF.S-ELECT: Shirley Cooper; San Francisco. ·EXEC DIR: Marion F. Langer, PhD, 1775 Broadway, New York, NY. 10019. MTG: Washington, DC, March 21-25, 1975. '

*American otological Society (117). PRES: Lester A. Brown, MD, Atlanta. PRES-ELECT: Victor Goodhill, MD, Beverly Hiils, Calif. SEC-TREAS: G. Dekle Taylor, MD, 221 Mar­shall Taylor, Doctors Bldg, Jacl;sonville, FL 32207. MTG: Atlanta, April 11-12, 1975. .

American Pediatric Society (507); PRES: Frederick ·c. Robbins, MD, Cle.veland. SEc­TREAS: Charles D. Cook, MD, Yale Univer­sity School of Medicine, 383 Cedar St, New Haven, CT 06510.

American Physicians ,t.rt Association (650). PRES:' A.' H. Macgregor, MD, White Pigeon, Ml. PRES-ELECT: Victor Laughlin, MD, .Cleve­land. EXEC-SEC: Alfred A. Richman, MD, 307 Second Ave, New York 10003.

American Physicians Fellowship Inc. (for the Israel Medical Association) (7,800). PRES: Isadore Rosenfeld, MD, New York. PRES­ELECT: Robert B. Greenblatt, MD, Augusta, Ga. SEC: Manuel M. Glazier, MD, 1622 Bea­con St, Brookline, MA 02146. MTG: Chicago, June 24, 1974.

*American Physlologlcal Society (3,727). PRES: Arthur C. Guyton, MD, Jackson, Miss. PRES-ELECT: Bodil M. Schmidt-Nielsen, DOdont, PhD, Salisbury Cove, Me. EXEC SEC-TREAS:· Orr E. Reynolds, PhD, American Physiological· Society, 9650 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20014. MTG: Albany, NY; Aug 11-16, 1974. . . .

American Proctologlc Society. PRES: John E. Ray, MD, New Orleans.' PRES-ELECT: John H. Remington, MD, Rochester, NY. ADMIN SEC: Ms. Harriette Gibson, 320 W Lafayette, De­troit 4S226.

American Psychiatric Association (17 ,770). PRES: Alfred M. Freedman, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: John P. Spiegel, MD, Waltham, Mass. MED DIR: Walter E. Barton, MD, 1700 18th. St. NW, Washington, DC 20009.

American Psychoanalytic Association . (1,. 380). PRES: Burness E. <Mo.ore, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: George. H. Pollock, MD; Chicago. EXEC SEC: Ms. Helen Fischer; 1 East 57th St, New York 10022. MTG: New York, Dec 11-16, 1974. ·

American Psychosomatic Society (600). PRES: Alvin P. Shapiro, MD, Roosevelt, NY. PRES-ELECT: Sidney Cobb, MD, Roosevelt, NY. SEC-TREAS: Donald Oken, MD, 265 Nassau Rd, Roosevelt, NY 11575. MTG: New Orleans, March 21-23, 1975.

American Public Health Association (26.-000). PRES: Lorin E. l(err, MD, MPH, Wash­ington, DC. PRES-ELECT: C. Arden Miller, MD, Chapel Hill, NC. EXEC DIR: William H. McBeath, MD, MPH, 1015 18th St NW, Wash­ington, DC 20036. MTG: New Orleans, Oct 20-24, 1974.

(Continued on page 1534.)

1532 JAMA,. June 17, 1974 • Vol 228, No 12

Before prescribing, please consult complete product information, a summary of which follows:

Indications: Relief of anxiety and tension occurring alone or accompanying various disease states.

Contraindications: Patients with known hypersensitivity to the drug.

Warnings: Caution patients about pos­sible combined effects· with alcohol and othefr CNS depressants. As with all CNS­acting drugs, caution patients against haz­ardous occupations requiring complete mental alertness (e.g., operating machin­ery, driving). Though physical and psycho­logical dependence·have rarely' been reported on recommended doses, use caution 'in administering to addiction­prone individuals or those who might increase dosage; withdrawal symptoms (including convulsions), following discon­tinuation of the drug and similar to those seen with barbiturates, have been.reported. Use of any drug in pregnancy, lactation or in wo.men of childbearing age requires that· its potential benefits be weighed against its possible hazards. .

Precautions: In the elderly and debili­tated, and in chiidren over six, limitto

'smallest effective dosage (initially 10 mg I or less per day) to preclude ataxia or over­. sedation, incre·asing gradually as needed and tolerated. Not recommended in chil­dren under six. Though generally not rec-

1 ommended, if combination therapy with other psychotropics seems indicated, care­fully consider individual pharmacologic effects, particularly in use of potentiating drugs such as MAO inhibitors and pheno-

' thiazines.' Observe usual precautions in presence of impaired renal or hepatic function. Paradoxical reactions (e.g., ex­citement, stimulation and acute. rage)

·have been reported in psychiatric patients and hyperactive aggressive children. Em­ploy usual precautions in treatment of anxiety states with evidence of impending depression; suicidal tendencies may be present and proteCtive measures neces­sary. Variable effects on blood coagulation have been reported very rarely in patients receiving the drug and oral anticoagulants; causal relationship has not been estab­lished clinically.

Adverse Reactions: Drowsiness, ataxia and confusion may occur, especially in the elderly and debilitated. These are reversible in most instances by proper dosage adjustment, but are also occasion­ally observed at the lower dosage ranges. In a few instances syncope has been reported. Also encountered are isolated instances of skin eruptions, edema, minor menstrual irregularities, nausea and con­stipation, extrapyramidal symptoms, increased and decreased libido-all infre­quent and generally controlled with dosage reduction; changes in EEG patterns (low­voltage fast activity) may appear during and after treatment; blood dyscrasias (including agranulocytos!s), jaundice and hepatic dysfunction have been reported occasionally, making periodic blood counts and liver function tests advisable during

. protracted therapy. . Supplied: Librium® Capsules contain­

ing 5 mg, 10 mg or 25 mg chlord!a~epox­ide HCI. Libritabs® Tablets containing 5 mg, 10 mg or 25 mg chlordiazepoxide.

® Roche Laboratories Div. ision of Hoffmann-La Roche Inc. Nutley. N.J. 07110

Organizations

Page 7: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

(Continued from page 1592.) American Radium Society (500). PRES:

Jerome M. Vaeth, MD, San Francisco. PRES­ELECT: Victor A. Marcial, MD, San Juan PR. SEC: Felix N. Rutledge, MD, The Uni­versity of Texas, M. D. Anderson Hospital & Tumor Institute, Texas Medical Center, Houston 77026. MTG: Maui, Hawaii, May 20-26, 1974.

American Rheumatism Association (2,300). PRES: John L. Decker, MD, Bethesda, Md. PRES-ELECT: Thomas E. Weiss, MD, New Orleans. EXEC SEC: Miss Lynn Bonfiglio, 1212 Avenue of the Americas, New York 10086.

American Roentgen Ray Society (1,000). PRES: William B. Seaman, MD, New York._· PRES-ELECT: Colin B. Holman, MD, Rochester, Minn. SEC: Ted F. Leigh, MD, Emory Uni­versity Clinic, Atlanta 80322. MTG: San Fran­cisco, Sept 24-27, 1974.

American School Health Association (12,000). PRES: Michael S. Haro, MS, Cortland, NY. PREs,ELECT: Vivian K. Harlin, MD, Seattle. EXEC Drn:' Stephen J. Jerrick, PO Box 708, Kent, OH 44240. MTG: New York, Oct 10-13, 1974.

American Social Health Association (163). PRES: Mrs. Robert P. McCulloch, New York. EXEC DIR: Earle G. Lippincott, 1740 Broad­way, New York 10019. MTG: New York, Nov 7-9, 1974.

American Society of Abdominal Surgeons (9,300). PRES: Leo H. Kuker, MD, Carroll, Iowa. PRES-ELECT: George Wiltrakis, MD, St. Charles, Ill. EXEC SEC: Blaise F. Al­fano, MD, 676 Main St, Melrose, MA 02176.

American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry, (1,500). PRES: Max Sugar, MD, New Orleans. PRES-ELECT: Frank S. Williams, MD, Los Angeles. AoMN SEC: Mrs. Mary Staples, 24 Green Valley Rd, Wallingford, PA 19086.

American Society of Anesthesiologists (8,· 809). PRES: David M. Little, Jr., MD, Hart­ford, Conn. PRES-ELECT: Frank Moya, MD, Miami, Fla. EXEC SEC: John W. Andes, 616 Busse Hwy, Park Ridge, IL 60068. MTG: Washi'llgt-On, DC, Oct 12-16, 1974.

American Society for Artificial Internal Or­gans (1,058). PRES: Edward F. Leonard, PhD, Boca Raton,. Fla. PRES-ELECT: Perry L. Blackshear, Jr., PhD, Boca Raton, Fla. EXEC SEC: Mrs. Karen Kurtz Burke, ASAIO Na­tional Office, Box 777, Boca Raton, FL 83432.

American Society of Bariatric Physicians (102). PRES: J. Tom Cooper, MD, Marietta, Ga. PRES-ELECT: T. C. McDaniel, DO; Cincin­nati. EXEC DIR: W. L. Asher, MD, 333 W_ Hampden Ave, Suite -807, Englewood, CO 80110. MTG: Las Vegas, Nev, Nov 1-4, 1974.

American Society of Clinical Hypnosis (2,· 350). PRES: William E. Edmonston, Jr., PhD, Hamilton, NY. PRES-ELECT: Franz Baumann, MD, San Francisco. EXEC SEC: F. D. Nowlln, 800 Washington Ave SE, Minneapolis 66414. MTG: New Orlea'llB, Nov 6-9, 1974.

American Society for Clinical Investigation (475). PRES: Edward C. Franklin, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Eugene Braunwald, MD, Boston. SEC-TREAS: Paul Calabresi, MD, Roger Williams General Hospital, 826 Chalk­stone Ave, Providence, RI 02908.

American Society for Clinical - Nutrition (350). PRES: David B. Coursin, MD, Lan­caster, Pa. PRES-ELECT: C. E. Butterworth, Jr., MD, Birmingham, Ala. EXEC AssT: Ms. Gilda Knight, 9660 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD, 20014.

American Society of Clinical Oncology (770). PRES: Bayard Clarkson, MD, New York.· PRES-ELECT: Rose Ruth Ellison, MD, Buffalo, NY. SEC-TREAS: Audrey Evans, MD, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, 1740 Bainbridge St, Philadelphia 19146.

American Society of Clinical Pathologists (5,894). PRES: Robert J. Frost, MD, Michi­gan City, Ind. PRES-ELECT: James J. Humes, · MD, Detroit. Drn: Patrick E. Raleigh, MD, 2100 'W Harrison St, Chicago 60612. MTG: Washington, DC, Oct 4-11, 1974. [Ml

"American_ Society for Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. PRES: Edward A. Carr, MD; Ann Arbor, Mich. PRES-ELECT: Willi&m B. Abrams, MD, New York. EXEC SEC: Mrs. Elaine Galasso, 1718 Gallagher Rd, Norris­town, PA 19401.

American Society of Cytology (1,214). PRES: Frank Vellios, MD, Dallas. PRES-ELECT: Richard A. Malmgren, MD, Annapolis, .Md. SEC-TREAS: Warren R. Lang, MD, Health Scien~es Center, Suite 1006, 130 S 9th St,

Philadelphia 19106. MTG: New York, Nov 6-9, 1974.

"American Society for Experimental Pathol­ogy .(1,309). PRES: Robert A. Good, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT: Earl P. Benditt, MD, Seattle. AoMN OFFICER: G. Burroughs Mider, MD, 9650 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20014. MTG: Atlantic City, NJ, April 13-18, 1976.

American Society for Gastrointestlnal Endos­copy (650). PRES: COL H. Worth Boyce, Jr .. MD, Washington, DC. VICE-PRES: Joseph A. Rinaldo, Jr., MD, Southfield, Mich. SEC: Bernard M. Schuman, MD, 2799 W Grand Blvd, Detroit 48202.

American Society-of Hematology (2,150). PRES: Helen Ranney, MD, San Diego, Calif. PRES­ELECT: Oscar Ratnoff, MD, Cleveland. EXEC SEC: Thomas B. Bradley, Jr., MD, VA Hos­pital, 42nd Ave and Clement St, San Fran­cisco 94121. MTG: Atlanta, Dec 7-10, 1974.

American Society of Internal Medicine (11,-800). PRES: William C. Felch, MD, Rye, NY. PRES-ELECT: Glenn Molyneaux, MD, San Francisco. EXEC DIR:· Mr. William R. Ram­sey, 626 Hearst Bldg, Third at Market, San Francisco 94103.

American Society of Maxlllofaclal Surgeons (135). PR&s: Robin Rankow, MD, DDS, New York. PRES-ELECT: Melvin Spira, MD, DDS, Houston. SEC: Samuel Shatkin, MD, DDS, 60 High St, Buffalo 14203. MTG: Houston, Oct 27-Nov 1, 1974.

American Society for Microbiology (17,000). PREs: L. L. Campbell, PhD, Newark, Del. PRES-ELECT: Phillipp Gerhardt, PhD, East Lansing, Mich. EXEC SEC: R. W. Sarber, 1913 "Eye" St, Washington, DC 20006.

•American Society of Ne\Jroradlology (250). PR&s: Hillier L. Baker, MD, Rochester, Minn. PR&s-ELECT: Irvin I. Kricheff, MD, New' York .. SEC: Arthur Rosenbaum, MD, Department of Radiology, Peter Bent Brig­ham Hospital, 721 Huntington, Boston, MA 02116. MTG: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, June 3-7, 1976.

American Society of Ophthalmologlc and Otolaryngologic Allergy (381). PRES: Ber­nard M. Barrett, MD, Pensacola, Fla. PRES­ELECT: W. Leonard Draper, MD, Houston. SEC-TREAS: Hamish M. Mann, MD, 1600 Uni­versity Ave, Grand Forks, ND 68201. MTG: Dallas, Oct 4-6, 1974.

American Society for Pharmacology and Ex­perimental Therapeutics (1,870). PRES: H. George Mandel, PhD, Washington. DC. PRES-ELECT: Dr. Theodore M. Brody, PhD, East Lansing, Mich. EXEC OFFICER: Ells­worth B. Cook, PhD, 9650 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, Md 20014.

American Society.of Plastic and Reconstruc­tive Surgeons (1,500). PRES: James H. Hen­drix, MD, Memphis. PRES-ELECT: Ross H. Musgrave, MD; Pittsburgh. EXEC VICE PRES: Dallas F. Whaley, CAE, 29 E Madison, Chi­cago 60602. MTG: Houston, Oct 27-Nov 1, 1974. .

American Society for Surgery of the Hand (195). PRES: Lee Milford, MD,_ Memphis. PRES-ELECT: Adrian E. Flatt, MD, Iowa City. SEC-TREAS: John A. Roswick, Jr., MD, 4200 E Ninth Ave, Box 2414, Denver, CO 80220. MTG: San Francisco, Feb 27-March 1, 1976.

American Society of Therapeutic Radiologists (650). PRES: William T. Moss, MD, Chicago. PRES-ELECT: Juan A. de! Regato, MD, Colo­rado Springs, Colo. EXEC SEC: Shelia A. McGing, 20 N Wacker Dr, Rm 2920, Chicago 60606. MTG: Key Biscayne, Fla, Oct 30-Nov 4, 1974.

American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (1,574). PRES: Dr. Lloyd E. Roze­boom, Baltimore. PRES-ELECT: Dr. Geoffrey M. Jeffery, APO New York. SEC-TREAS: George R. Healy, PhD, PO Box 15208, Emory University PO, Atlanta 30333. MTG: Honolulu, Nov 3-6, ·1974.

American Surglcal Association (500). PRES: H. William Scott,. MD, Nashville, Tenn. FIRST VICE PRES: Allen M. Boyden, MD, Portland, Ore. AoMIN OFFICER: G. Tom Shires, MD, 6323 Harry Hines Blvd, Dallas 76236.

American Thermographic Society (184). PRES: J. W. Birsner, MD, Bakersfield, Calif. PRES-ELECT: Marc S. Lapayowker, MD, Phil­adelphia. EXEC SEC: Elizabeth A. Winsor, 4041 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles 90010. MTG: Chicago, June 22-23, 1974.

American Thoracic Society (!!,200). PRES: Jay A. Nadel, MD, New York. PRES-ELECT:

1534 JAMA, June 17, 1974 • Vol 228, No 12

Gareth M. Green, MD, New York.' EXEC-DIR: Robert G. Weymueller, American Thoracic Society, 1740 Broadway, New York 10019.

American Thyroid Association (300). PRES: David H. Solomon, MD, Los Angeles. PRES­ELECT: Jacob Robbins, MD, Bethesda, Md. SEC: Alvin B. Hayles, MD, Mayo Clinic, Roch­ester, MN. 56901. MTG: St. Louis, Sept 18-21, 1974.

American Urological Association (3;200). PRES: Wyland F. Leadbetter, MD, Boston. PRES-ELECT: Dr. Charles J. Robson, Toronto. EXEC SEC: Mr. Richard Hannigan, 1120 N Charles St, Baltimore 21201.

American . Veterinary Medical Association (21,964). PRES: John F. ,Quinn, DVM, Lan­sing, Mich. PRES-ELECT: John B. Carrica­buru, DVM, Santa Ynez, Calif. EXEC VICE PRES: D. A. Price, DVM, 600 S Michigan Ave, Chicago 60606. MTG: Denver, July 22-26, 1974.

Association of Academic Physiatrists (175). PRES: John Ditunno, Philadelphia. PRES­ELECT: Ernest W. Johnson, MD, Columbus, Ohio. SEC: George H. Kraft, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Wash­ington, Seattle 98196. MTG: San Francisco, Nov 18, 1974.

Association for Academic Surgery (1,000). PRES: Thomas L. Marchioro, MD, Seattle. PRES-ELECT: Hiram Polk, MD, Louisville, Ky, SEC-TREAS: Robert M. Zollinger, Jr., MD, 2066 Adelbert Rd, Cleveland 44106. MTG: Los Angeles, November 1974.

•Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (3,000). PRES: Harold Laufman, MD, PhD, Bronx, Ny. EXEC Drn: Michael J. Miller, LLB, 1500 Wilson Blvd,

·Suite 417, Arlington, VA 22209. MTG: Boston, March 16-19, 1975.

•Association for the Advancement of Psycho­analysis (59). PRES: Arnaldo Apolito, MD, New York. SEC: Andrew Tershakovec, MD, 329 E 62nd St, New York, NY 10021. MTG: New York, April 16, 1976.

Association for the Advancement of Psycho· therapy (700). PRES: Stanley Lease, MD, New York. SEC: William Wolf, MD, 40 W 69th St, New York 10019.

Association of American Medical Colleges (239). CHMN: Daniel C. Tosteson, MD, Dur­ham, NC. CHMN-ELECT: Sherman M. Mellin­koff, MD, Los Angeles. PRES: John A. D. Cooper, MD, AAMC 1 DuPont Circle NW, Washington, DC 20036. MTG: Chicago, Nov 12-16, 1974.

Association of American Physicians. PRES: Lawrence .E. Young, MD, Rochester, NY. VICE PRES: Louis G. Welt, MD, New Haven, Conn. SEC: John A. Oates, Vanderbilt Uni­versity School of Medicine, Department of Pharmacology, Room AA-6232A, Nashville, TN 37232.

Association of Clinlcal Scientists (616). PRES: Donald T. Forman, PhD, Evanston, Ill. PRES­ELECT: M. Michael Lubran, MD, Torrance, Calif. SEC-TREAS: F. William Sunderman, Jr., MD, University of Connecticut School of Medi­cine, PO Box G, Farmington, CT 06032. MTG: Philadelphia, Nov 7-10, 1974. ·

Association for Hospital Medical Education (650). PRES: Woodbury Perkins, MD, San Diego, Calif. VICE-PRES: Clement R. Brown, Jr., MD, Chicago. EXEC SEC: Mrs. Bonnie Wolf, 1911 Jefferson Davis Hwy, Suite _1003, Arlington, VA 22202. MTG: Chicago, Febru­ary 1976.

Association of Life Insurance Medical Direc­tors of America (600). PRES: Samuel R. Moore, Jr., MD, Philadelphia. PRES-ELECT: Chester E. Cook, MD, Dallas. SEC: Harold S. Kost, MD, John Hancock Mutual Life Insur­ance Co, 200 Berkeley St, Boston 02117. MTG: Philadelphia, Oct 28-30, 1974.

Association of Medical Illustrators (316). PRES: Herbert R. Smith, Chicago. EXEC DIR: Marvin Lurie, 6660 Northwest Hwy, Chicago 60631. MTG: New Orleans, Oct 19-23, 1974.

Association of Miiitary Surgeons (7,986)._ PRES: V ADM· Donald L. Custis, MC, USN, Washington, DC. PRES-ELECT: Marc· J. Musser, MC, Washington, DC. EXEC-DIR: RADM Walter Welham, MC, USN Ret, 8502 Connecticut Ave, Chevy Chase, MD 20016.

Association of Phllippine Practicing Physi­cians in America (1,050). PRES: Lucito G. Gamboa, MD, Evergreen Park, Ill. EXEC DrR: Manuel P. A. Claudio, MD, is2 Emerson Dr, Schaumburg, IL 60172. MTG: Cleveland, Aug 16-18, 1974. '

Association for Research In Vision and Oph-

Organizations

Page 8: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

The Somatic Protest . in the Postcoronary Patient. • •

Physiologic reaction to excessive anxiety Although he has

M#ff#lfflffffftff ~:~~. ~~~si;r~~rncon-~~.,..,.....,,,...,-rm-r-r-r.-..,.,,· co nva I esc 1 n g from

IHIH f IE 11~IfHIfH11 :n°~~~~:~i~:~~~-is wmtmm ~~~~~sn~:~h~~f~~~ which can hinder

smooth recovery and rehabilitation. Undue anxiety and emotional tension may, in some patients-because of marked increase in , catecholamine excretion during stay in, and on day of transfer from, the CCU-cause increased heart rate, increased car-

. diac output and intensified oxygen consumption by heart muscle. In addition, excessive anxiety can (1) increase feelings of frustra­tion at forced inactivity, (2) foster undue preoccupation with heart function, (3) di­minish capacity to tolerate prospect of work stress and

. (4) retard rehabilitation. A calm outlook and reduction of excessive emotional stress are thus desirable .

Antianxiety action with wide margin of safety Adjunctive antianxiety medication, when needed to complement counseling and reassurance, should be both effective and comparatively free from undesirable side effects. Extensive clinical experience has demonstrated that Librium (chlordiazepox­ide HCI) fulfills these requirements with a . high degree of consistency. In the elderly and debilitated, the initial dose is 5 mg b.i.d. or less to preclude ataxia or overse­dation, increasing gradually as needed

and tolerated. · ·· ·. Librium is used concomitantly with .;. ".f. .. , .,r · . . certain specific

_111111!11.. #/. · mE?dications of other classes of drugs, e.g., cardiac glyco­sides, diuretics and

sr----. antihypertensive agents, whenever anxiety is a clinically significant factor. When anxiety has been reduced to tolerable levels, Librium therapy should be dis-continued.

. adjunctive . @ . · . Librium·to mg

( chlQrdiazepoxide HCI) 1or2 capsules t.i.d./q.i.d.

Please see opposite page for summary of product information.

'.•

1533, .,, ,~

Page 9: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

Pan 'American Medical Association (15,000). ·PRES: Emiliano Crespo T., MD, Guayaqui1, Ecuador. DIR GEN:· Joseph J. Eller, MD, 745 Fifth Ave, New York 10022. MTG: Guayaquil, Ecuad~r, November 19_74. ·

Pan-Pacific Surgical Association (2,264). PRES: Sir Douglas Robb, Auckland, NZ. SEC­GEN: Robert A. Rose, MD, 236 Alexander Young Bldg, Honolulu 96813. MTG: Honolulu, Feb 15-21, 1975.

Prolotherapy Association (100). PRES: Gale Borden, MD, Port Washington, NY. VICE­PRES: George A. Reich, MD, Schenectady, NY. SEC-TREAS: Abraham Myers, MD, 275 S 19th St, Philadelphia 19103. .

Radiological Society of North America (6,-300). PRES: Robert E. Wise, MD, Boston. PRES-ELECT: John W. Beeler, MD, Indianap­olis. EXEC' DIR: Ms. Adele Swenson, 713 E Genesee St, Syracuse, NY. MTG: Chicago, Dec 1-6, 197_4 [MJ. ·

Society of Biological Psychiatry (527). PRES: Williamina A.' Himwich, PhD, Omaha. PRES­ELECT: Charles Shagass, MD, Philadelphia. SEC-TREAS: Iver F. Small, MD, Larue D. Carter Memorial Hospital, 1315 W Tenth St, Indianapolis 46202.

Society for Clinical and Experimental Hypno­sis (300). ·PRES: Donald W. Schafer, MD, Orange, Calif. ADMN SEC: Mrs. Marion Kenn, 205 W End Ave, New York 10023. MTG: Montreal, Oct 8-13, 1974.

Society for Computer Medicine (198). PRES: Roger H. Shannon, MD, Spokane, Wash. PRES-EL.ECT: Jerome A. Hilger, MD, St. Paul. EXEC DIR: Michael A. Jenkin, MD, 20560 Linden Rd, Excelsior, MN 55331. MTG: New Orleans, Nov 7-10, 1974.

Socie_ty for Investigative Dermatology (1,300). PRES: Richard B. Stoughton, MD, La Jolla, Calif. PRES-ELECT: ·Clayton E. Wheeler, Jr., MD, Chapel Hill, NC. SEC­TREAS: John S. Strauss, MD, Boston Univer­sity Medical Center, 80 E Concord St, Boston 02118. MTG: Chicago, June 21-23, 1974. · ·

Society of Nuclear Medicine (6,000). PRES: Wil B. Nelp, MD, Seattle. PRES-ELECT: Alexander Gottschalk, MD, Chicago. ExEc­DIR: Margaret Glos, Society of Nuclear Medi­cine, 305 E 45th St, New York 10017.

Society for Pediatric Radiology (206). PRES: Hooshang Taybi, MD, Oakland, Calif. PRES­ELECT: John L. Gwinn, MD, Los Angeles. SEC-TREAS: John P. Dorst, MD, Johns Hop­kins Hospital, Baltimore. MTG: San Fran­cisco, Sept 22-23, 1974.

Society for Pediatric Research (520). PRES: Charles Alford, MD, Birmingham, Ala. PRES­ELECT: Robert E. Greenberg, MD, Los An­geles. SEC-TREAS: Jo Anne Brasel, MD, Co­lumbia University School of Medicine, Dept of Human Nutrition, New York.

Society for Surgery of the Alimentary Tract (670). PRES: William A. Altemeier, MD, Cin­cinnati. PRES-ELECT: Lloyd M. Nyhus, MD, Chicago. SEC: Robert Zeppa, MD, PO Box 875, Biscayne Annex, Miami, FL 33152.

Society of Teachers of Family Medicine. PRES: G. Gayle Stephens, MD, Huntsville, Ala. ADM SEC: Robert Grahan\, MD, 1740 .W 92nd St, Kansas City, MO 64114. MTG: Chi­cago, November 1974.

Society of Thoracic Surgeons (1,274). PRES: Herbert Sloan, MD, Ann Arbor, .Mich. PRES­ELECT: Ralph D. Alley, MD, Albany, NY. Bus MGR: Walter G. Purcell, 111 E Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601. MTG: Montreal, Jan 20-22, 1975.

Society of Toxicology (760). PRES: Sheldon D. Murphy, PhD, Boston. PRES-ELECT: Seymour L. Friess, PhD, Bethesda, Md. SEC: Robert A. Scala, PhD, Esso Research and Engineer­ing Co, PO Box 45, Linden, NJ 07036. MTG: Williamsburg, Va, March 9-13, 1975.

Society of University Surgeons '(707). PRES: Samuel Kountz, MD, Brooklyn, NY. PRES- • ELECT: Paul Ebert, MD, New York. SEC: Eric W. Fonkalsrud, MD, Department of Surgery, UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA 90024. MTG: Phoenix, Ariz, Feb 13-15, 1975. [Ml

Society for Vascular Surgery (358). PRES: W. Andrew Dale, MD, Nashville, Tenn. PRES­ELECT: Russell M. Nelson, MD, Salt Lake City. SEc: James A. Deweese, MD, 260 Crit­tenden Blvd, Rochester,' NY 14642. MTG: Chicago, June 20-21, 1974.

•southeastern Surgical Congress (2,400). PRES: Robert M. Miles, MD, Memphis. PRES­ELECT: William S. McCune, MD, Washing­ton, DC. SEC DIR: A. Hamblin Letton, MD,

1536 Jurie 17, 1974 • Vol 228, No 12

340 Boulevard, NE, Atlanta, GA 30312. MTG: Atlanta, Feb 17-20, 1975.

Southern Medical Association (21.000). PRES: George J. Carroll, MD, Suffolk, Va. PRES­ELECT: Andrew M. Moore, MD, Lexington, Ky. Exr.c DIR: Mr. Robert F. Butts, 2601 Highland Ave, Birmingham, AL 35205. MTG: Atlanta, Nov. 17-20, 1974.

Southern Society for Pediatric Research (610). PRES: Warren F. Dodge, MD, Galveston, Tex. PRES"ELECT: Max D. Cooper, MD, Birm­ingham, Ala.· SEC-TREAS: John R. Mont­gomery, MD, Department of Pediatrics, Bay­lor College of Medicine, Houston, TX 77025. MTG: New Orleo,ns, Jan 29-Feb l, 1975. [Ml

Southern Surgical Association (300). PRES: David C~ Sabiston, Jr., MD, Durham, NC. PRES-ELECT: Robert M. Miles, MD, Memphis. SEC: W. Dean Warren,· MD, 1364 Clifton Rd NE, Atlanta, GA 303.22. MTG: Boca Raton, Fla, Dec 9-12, 1974. [M]

Southern Thoracic Surgical Association (441). PRES: Bertram A. Glass, MD, New Orleans. PRES-ELECT: Frederick H. Taylor, MD, Char­lotte, NC. SECcTREAs·: James W. Brooks, MD, 1200 E Broad St, Richmond, VA 23298.

Southwestern Medical Association (3,450). PRES: Zigmund W. Kosicki, 'MD, Santa Fe, NM. SEC-TREAS: Gray E. Carp'enter, MD, El Paso, Tex. EXEC SEC: Mr. Bob Reid, 723 Mills Bldg, El Paso, Tex 79901.

•southwestern Surgical Congress (l,450). PRES: George H. Mertz, MD, Phoenix, Ariz. PRES-ELECT: John B. Gramblich, MD, Chey­enne, Wyo. SEC-TREAS: Jack A. Barney, MD, 708 Physicians & Surgeons Bldg, Oklahoma City, OK 73103. MTG: Las Vegas, NV, April 21-24, 1975.

Student American Medical Association (140). PRES: J. Ted Norris, PhD, Rolling Meadows, Ill. VICE PRES: Scott D. Condie, Rolling Mead­ows, Ill. EXEC DIR: Charles C, Hewitt, JD, 1400 Hick~ Rd, Rolling Meadows, IL 60008. MTG: Chicago, March· 6-9, 1975. ·

United States Pharmacopeial Convention (300). PRES: John H. Moyer, MD, Philadel­phia. EXEC Drn: William_. M. Heller, PhD, 12601 Twinbrook Pkwy, Rockville; Md 20852.

Western Industrial Medical AssociatiOn (400). CHMN OF BOARD: Robert H. Armbruster, MD, Palo Alto, Calif. PRES: James D: McCafl'rey, MD, Anaheim, Calif. EXEC SEC: B. H. Brav­inder, PO Box 201, Alamo, CA 94507. MTG: Los Angeles, Oct 10-12, 1974.

Western Orthopedic Association . (1,565). PRES: William H. Gulledge, MD, Honolulu. PRES-ELECT: Harry R. Walker; MD, Oakland, Calif. EXEC SEC: Miss H. Jacqueline Martin, 354-21st St, Oakland, CA 94612. MTG: Hono­lulu, Oct 5-10, 1974.

Western Surgical Association (500). PRES: Darrell A; Campbell, MD, Ann Arbor, Mich. SEC: William P. Mikkelsol!, MD, 1127 Wils.hire Blvd, Los Angeles 90017. MTG: San Francisco, Nov 20-23,' 1974. ..

Woman's Auxiliary to the American Medical Association (B9,721); PRES:· Ruth C. Scriv­ner, Belleville, rn." PRES-ELECT: Betty Lil­)estrand; Honolulu. EXEC-DIR: Hazel J. Lewis, 535 N Dearborn St, 'Chicago 60610. MTG: Chicago, June 23-26, 1974.

Noah Worcester Dermatological Society (145). PRES: Richard Q. Crotty, Omaha. PRES­ELECT: Mauray J. Tye, Haverhill, Mass. SEC: Harold Plotnick, 1150 David Whitney Bldg, Detroit, MI 48226. MTG: Phoenix, Feb 2-9, 1975. [Ml· .

World Association .of Societies of Pathology (30 Societies). PRES: Peter I. A. Hendry, MD, Newcastle, Australia. VICE PRES: Nozomu Kosakai, MD, Tokyo. SEC: Bruno L. Della Vida, MD, Via L. Magalotti 15, Rome· 00197, Italy. MTG: Sydney, Australia, October 1975.

World Medical Association (62). PRES: Dr. Ernst Fromm, Hamburg, Germany. PRES­ELECT: Dr. Stig-~ertil Nilsson, Linkoping, Sweden. SEC GEN: Sir William Refshauge, World Medical Association, ·21 Avenue de la Toison d'Or, 1060 Brussels. MTG: Stockholm, Sept 1-8, 1974.

MEETINGS IN THE UNITED STATES

American Medical Association, EXEC VICE­PRES: Ernest B. Howard, MD, 535 · N Dear-born St, Chicago 60610. ·

Conventions: 1974: Annual-Chicago, June 22-27.

Clinical-Portland, Ore, Nov 30-Dec 4. 1975: Annual-Atlantic City, NJ, June 15-19.

Clinical-Honolulu, Nov 30-Dec 4. 1976: Annual-Dallas, June 27-July 1.

Clinical-Philadelphia, Nov 28-Dec 1. 1977: Annual-San Francisco, June 18-23.

1974

JUN.E SMTWTFS

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

16 17 18 19 20 21 22 2~0 24 25 26 27 28 29

American Association for the Study of Headache, Continental Plaza, Chicago, June 22-23. EXEC SEC: Seymour Diamond, MD, 5252 N Western Ave, Chicago, 60625.

American Association for the Study of ~eo­plastic Diseases, Blackstone, Chicago, June 22-27. EXEC SEC: Robert H. Jackson, MD, 10607 Miles Ave, Cleveland 44105.

American Chinese Medical Society, Semi-An­nual, Chicago, June 23. INFO: Wei-Ping Loh, MD, 600 G·rant St~ Gary, IN 46402. .

"American College of Nutrition, Palmer House, Chicago, June 22. INFO: Executive Secret_ary, American College of Nutrition, 146 Central Park West, New York, NY 10023.

American College of Preventive Medicine, ChiCago, June 24-26. EXEC DIR: Ward Bent­ley, 801 Old Lancaster Rd, Bryn Mawr, PA 19010. .

AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, [El, Chicago, June 22-27. EXEC VICE-PRES: Ernest B. Howard, MD, 535 N Dearborn St, Chica-go 60610. ·

•American Medical Golf. Association, 58th An­nual Tournament, Playboy Club-Hotel, Lake Geneva, Wis, June 21-22. PRES: Daniel H. Callahan, MD, 310. S Michigan Ave, Chicago, IL 60604. .

American Physicians Fellowship Inc. (for the Israeli Medical Association), Palmer House, Chicago, June 24. SEC: Manuei M. Glazier, MD, 1622 Beacon' St, Brookline, MA 02146.

American Thermographic Society, [EJ, Chi­cago, June 22-23. EXEC SEC: Elizabeth A. Winsor, 4041 Wilshire Blvd, Los Angeles 90010.

Birth Defects Conference, sponsored by Har­bor General Hospital and National Founda­tion-March of Dimes: Newporter Inn, New­port Beach, Calif, June 16-20. INFO: D'avid L. Rimoin, MD, PhD, Harbor General Hos­pital, 1000 W Carson St, Torrance, CA 90509.

Drug Information Association~ [El. Palmer House, Chicago, June 26-28. SEC: Claire R. McDonnell, Johnson and Johnson Research Center, New Brunswick, NJ 08903.

lnternationai College of Surgeons United States Section, 17th Annual, Stevensville Country Club, Swan Lake, NY, June 30-July 3. GEN CHMN: Salvatore R. Traina, MD, 155 High St, Medford, MA 02155.

Maine Medical Association, [El. Shawmut Inn, Kennebunkport, Me, June 15-18. EXEC DIR: Daniel F. Hanley, MD, PO ~ox 250, Brunswick, ME 0401!'.

National· Medicinal Chemistry Symposium, 14th, sponsored by the. American Chemical Society, University of New Hampshfre, Dur­ham, NH, June 16-20. CHMN: Dr. Robert E. Lyle, Department of Chemistry, Parsons

· Hall, University of New Hampshire, Dur­ham, NH 03824.

Society for Vascular Surgery, Drake, Chicago, June 20-21. SEC: James A. DeWeese, MD, Society for Vascular Surgery, 260 Crittenden Blvd, Rochester, NY 14642. · ·

Symposium on Hypertension and Stroke, sponsored by the Western Division of Amer­ican Geriatrics Society, Denyer, June 20. SEC: Richard M. Johnson, MD, 211 Cherry Ave, Long Beach, CA 90802.

US Virgin Islands Medical Society, Cancel

(Continued on page 1538.)

Meetings US

Page 10: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

thalmology (l,681). PRES: Jay Enoch, PhD, _St. Louis. PRES-ELECT:' Albert M. Potts, MD, Chicago: SEC-TREAS: Robert D. Reinecke, MD, Albany Medical College, Albany: NY 12208.

Association of State and Territorial Health Officers (55). PRES: John S. Anderson, MD, Helena, Mont. PRES-ELECT: Maurice S. Reizen, MD, Lansing, Mich, DIR: Mr. Noble J. Swearingen, 128 C St, NE, Washington, DC 20002. .

Association of University Anesthetists (160). PRES: Arthur S. Keats, MD, Houston. PRES­ELECT: Robert M. Epstein, MD, Charlottes­ville, Va. SEC: C. Philip Larson, Jr., MD; Stanford University Medical Center, Room S-278, Stanford, CA 94305.

Association of University Radiologists (464). PRES: Byron G. Brogdon, MD, Albuquerque, NM. PRES-ELECT: Melvyn H. Schreiber, MD, Galveston, Tex. ADMIN OFFICER: Richard H. Greenspan, MD, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar St, New Haven,· CT 06510.

Central Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (497). PRES: Russell J. Paal­man, MD, Grand Rapids, Mich. PRES-ELECT: Brooks Ranney, MD, Yankton, SD. SEC­

. TREAS: Clifford P. Goplerud, University of Iowa Hospitals, Iowa City 52242. MTG: New Orleans, Oct 3-5, 1974. ·

Central Neuropsychiatric Association (350). PRES: Loufs D. Boshes, MD, Chicago. PRES­ELECT: Benjaniin Jeffries, MD, Harper Woods, Mich. SEC-TREAS: David W. Sprague, MD, 1417 Marlowe Ave, Lakewood, OH 4'4107. MTG: Ann Arbor, Mich; Oct 17-19, 1974.

Ce,ntral Society for Clinical Research (900). PRES: John W. Eckstein, MD, Iowa City. PRES-ELECT: Gene H. Stollerman, MD, Mem­phis. SEC-TREAS: Giles G. Bole, MD, R4669 Kresge I, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48104. MTG: Chicago, Oct 31-Nov 2, 1974.

Central Surgical Association (652): PRES: William J. Fry, MD, Ann Arbor, Mich. PRES­ELECT: Robert A. Mustard, MD, Toronto. SEC: Alexander J. Walt, MD, 540 E Canfield, Detroit, MI 48201. MTG: Chicago, Feb 27-March 1, 1975. [Ml

Christian Medical Society (3;500). PRES: John H. Dawson, MD, Seattle. PRES-ELECT: Mar­vin R. Jewell; MD, Deiroit. GEN DIR: Had­don W. Robinson, PhD, 3909 Swiss Ave, Dallas 752.14.

Clvll Aviation Medical Association (1,000). PRES: LeRoy A~ Wolever, MD, Las Vegas, Nev. PRES-ELECT: Silvio Finkelstein, MD; Montreal. Bus COUNSEL: Mr. Albert Carriere, 801 Green Bay Rd, Lake Bluff, IL 60044. MTG: Colorado Springs, Colo, Oct 20-23, 1974.

Clinical Orthopedic Society. PRES: Sam Banks, MD, ·Suit City; Ariz. PRES-ELECT: Joe W. King, MD, Houston. Siic-TREAS: Mack L; Clayton, MD, 2045 Franklin, Den-ver 80205. · ·

College of American Pathologists (5,233). PRES: Robert C. Horn, Jr., MD, Detroit. EXEC DIR: Howard E. Cartwright, 230 N Michigan Ave, Chicago 60601: MTG: Washington, DC, Oct 4-11, 1974.

Commission on Professional and ·Hospital Activities (12). CHMN: C. Tiffany Loftus; Benton Harbor, Mich. PRES: Veriril N. Slee, MD, 1968 Green Rd, Ann Arbor; Mich 48105.

Conference of State and Provincial Health Authorities of North America (66). PRES: Jacob Koomen, Jr., MD, Raleigh, NC. PRES­ELECT: Maurice S. Reizen, MD, Lansing, Mich. VICE PRES: Edwin D. Lyman, MD, State Department of Health, Topeka, KS 66612. ' '

Congress of Neurological Surgeons (1,400). PRES: George T. Tindall, MD, Atlanta. PRES­ELECT: James T. Robertson, MD, Memphis. SEC: Robert G .. Ojemann, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114. MTG: Van­couver, British Columbia, Canada, Sept 24-28, 1974. .

Drug Information Association (900). PRES: Charles C. Leighton, MD, West Point, Pa. PRES-ELECT: Bob West, PhD, Mt. Vernon, NY. SEC: Claire R. McDonnell, Johnson and Johnson Research Center, New Brunswick, NJ 08908. MTG: Chicago, June 26-28, 1974.

Eastern Orthopaedic Associati.on (948). PRES: joseph 0. Romness, MD, Arlington, Va. PRES­ELECT: James D. Fisher, MD, Springfield, Mass. EXEC SEC: Elizabeth F. Capella, CMA, Suite C, 330 S 9th St, Philadelphia 19107. MTG: Southampton, Bermuda, Oct 16-20, 1974.

Endocrine SocletY. (2,500). PRES: Grant W. Liddle, MD, Nashville, Tenn. PRES-ELECT:

JAMA, June 17; 1974 • Vol 228, No 12

Seymour Lieberman, PhD, New York. EXEC­SEC: Mrs. Marcella M. Branch, 1411 Classen Blvd, Suite 319, Oklahoma City, 73106.

Eye-Bank Association of America (60). PRES: Ronald B. Harris, MD, Roanoke, Va. PRES­ELECT: Mr. Orville Gauthier, Phoenix, Ariz. EXEC SEC: Mrs. Charles A. Bunce, Sr., 8195 Maplewood Ave, Winstori,Salem, NC 27103. MTG: Dalias, Oct 11-13, 1,914. ·

Flying Physicians Association (2.400). PRES: 'William R. Bernard; MD, -Springfield; Ill. PRES-ELECT: R. Gordon Hepworth, MD, Van­cou:..er, British Columbia, Canada. Bus COUN­SEL: Mr. Albert Carriere, 801 Green Bay Rd, Lake Bliiff, IL 60044. MTG: Biloo:i, Miss, Sept 22-27, 1974. . '

Gerontological Society (3,135). PRES: Ethel Shana:s, PhD, Chicago. PRES-ELECT: Harold Brody, MD, Buffalo. EXEC DIR: Edwin Kas­kowitz, ACSW, 1 Dupont Circle, Suite 520, Washington, DC 20036. MTG: Portland, Ore, Oct 28-Nov 1, 1974.

Health· Insurance Council. CHMN: Charles G. Hill, Sprlngfleld, Mass. CHM:N-ELECT: c. Donald Hankin, Los Angeles: DIR: Louis A. Orsini; 750 Third Ave, New York 10017, or 322 S Michigan Ave, Chicago 60604;

International Academy of. Pathology (3,100). PRES: Richard E. Palmer, MD, Alexandria, Va. PRES-ELECT: M. R. Abell, PhD: Ann Ar­bor, Mich. SEc'TREAS: Leland D. StOddard, MD, Medical College of ·Georgia, Department of Pathology, Augusta, GA 30902. MTG: New Orleans, Feb 28-March 8, 1975.

International Academy of Pathology, US­Canadian Division (2,800) .. PRES:· Nathan Kaufman, MD, Kingston, Ontario. PRES­ELECT: Richard E: Palmer, MD, Alexandria, Va. SEC-TREAS: Leland Stoddard, Mp, Medi­cal College of Georgia, Augusta, GA 30902.

International Academy of. Proctology (1,550). PRES: Waldo W. Stiles, MD, Quito, Ecuador. PRES-ELECT: Daniel D. Thoma.s, MD, Gary, Ind. EXEC OFFICER: Alfred J. Cantor, MD, 147-41 Sanford Ave, Flushing, NY 11855.

International College of Surgeons· (13,000). PRES: Prof. Paride Stefanini, Rome. PRES'

Who should control medical data?

Who should assume the major responsibility for protecting patients' pri~ vacy? In his article, "GUARDIANS OF MEDICAL DATA," in the June issue of PRISM, Carrnault B. Jackson's answer is uri­equivo,cal: physicians. They must develop the safe­guards tq protect their patients' rights.

Don't miss the Jurie i~sue

lllllS

ELECT: Prof. Nicholas C. Louras, Atl'lens, Greece. INT EXEC SEC: Virgil T. Devault, 1516 Lake Shore Dr, Chicago 60610. MTG: Portland, Ore, Sept 27-0ct 2, 1974.

International Health Society of the US (178). PRES: Jerome H. Greenberg, MD, Indian~ apolis. PRES-ELECT: James P. Pappas, MD, Oxon Rill, Md. SEC: Jack L. Diamond, MD, 4505 Bellemeade Ave, Evansville, IN 47715. MTG: New Orleans, Oct 21-24, 1974.

*International Society of Tropical Dermatol­ogy (1,450). PRES: John C. Belisario, MD, Sydney, Australia. SEC GEN: Samuel B. Frank, MD, 170 Maple Ave, White Plains, NY 10601. MTG: Sao Paulo, Brazil, Sept 1-5, 1974.

Interstate Postgraduate Medical Association of North America .(1,100). PRES: Edgar S. Gordon, MD, Madison, Wis. PRES-ELECT: C. Thorpe Ray, MD, New Orleans. EXEC-DIR: Mr. Roy T. Ragatz, PO Box 1109, Madison, WI 53701: MTG: Hollywood, Fla, Nov 4-7, 1974. '

Medic Alert Foundation International. PRES: Marion C. Coliins, MD, Turlock, Calif. EXEC DIR: Mr. Alfred A. Hodder, 1000 N Palm St, Turlock, Calif 95380.

Medical Library Association (2,655). PRES: Mrs. Sarah· C. Brown, Birmingham, Ala. PRES-ELECT: Mr. Sam W. Hitt, Houston. EXEC DIR: Mr. John S. LoSasso, Suite 3208, 919 N Michigan Ave, Chicago 60611.

Mid-Continent Psychiatric Association (162). PRES: Dean T. Collins, MD, Topeka, Kan. PRES-ELECT: George A. Colom, MD, 6700 Troost Av;;, Suite 620, Kansas City, MO '64131. MTG: Topeka, Kan, Sept 20-22, 1974.

National Association of Blue Shield Plans (71). CHMN: George R. Dunlop, MD, Worces­ter, Mass. VICE-CHMN: ·Jahn H Mayer, Jr., MD, Kansas City, Mo. PRES: Mr. Ned F. Parish, 211 E Chicago Ave, Chicago 60611.

National Association of Medical Examiners (700). PRES: Dr. Ali Z. Hameli, Wilmington, Det VICE-PRES: .Joseph Davis, Miami, Fla. SEC-TREAS: William G. Eckert, MD, Labora­tory, St. Francis Hospital, ·Wichita, KS 6721.4. MTG: Chicago, February 1975.

National Cystic Fibrosis Research Founda· tion (33). PRES: Mr. Robert D. McCreery, Atlanta. NATL DIR:, Mr. Welch H. Boyer, 3379 Peachtree Rd, Atlanta 303.26.

Natio~al Federation of ·Catholic Physicians' Guilds (6,000). PRES: John J. Brennan, MD, Milwaukee. PRES-ELECT: John R. Cavanagh, MD, Washington, DC. EXEC SEC: Robert H. Herzog, 2825 N Mayfair Rd, Milwaukee 53222. MTG: Portland, Ore, Nov 30-Dec 1, 1974.

National Hemophilia Foundation. PRES: Roy S. Heavner, New York. EXEC DIR: Mrs. Katherine Earnshaw, 25 W 39th.St, New York 10018. MTG: San Francisco, October 1974.

National Medical Association (6,000). PRES: Emery L. Rann, MD,· Charlotte, NC. PRES­ELECT: Vernal G. Cave, MD, Brooklyn, NY. EXEC VICE PRES: Mr. Robert D. Watkins, 2109 E Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037. MTG: New Orleans, July 28-Aug 1, 1974.

National Medical and Dental Association of America (1,500). PREsi Edward Bonk, DDS, Park Ridge, Ill. PRES-ELECT: Mathew Brozyna, MD, East Rutherford; NJ. FINAN SEC: Henry P<ilchlopek, MD, 434 Springfield St, Chicopee, MA 01013. MTG: St. Augustine, Fla, Aug 4-8, 1974. [M]. .

National · Multiple Sclerosis Society (214). PRES·: Mr. D. J. Haughton; Burbank, Calif. ExE:c DIR: Miss Sylvia Lawry, 257 Park Ave South, New ·York 10010.'

National Society for the Prevention of Blind­ness (346). PRES: Th'omas R. Moore, New York. EXEC DIR: Mrs. Virginia S. Boyce, 79 Madison Ave, New York 10016.

Neurosurglcal Society of America (100). PRES: William F. Collins, Jr., MD, New Haven,. Conn. PRES-ELECT: .Robert· S. Knigh­ton, MD, Detroit. SEC: Shelley N. Chou, MD, University of Minnesota Medical School, Min­neapolis 55455.

North American Clinlcal Dermatologic So· ciety (170). PRES: Charles L. Schmitt, MD, Pittsburgh. EXEC SEC: ·Edmund F. Finnerty, MD, 510 Commonwealth Ave, Boston, MA 02216.

Pacific. Derriiatologic Association (800). PRES: 'Wil1iam D. Stewart, MD, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. PRES-ELECT: Robert J. McNamara, MD, Berkeley, Calif. EXEC SEC: Mrs. Florence Beardsley, 180 Mark Twain Ave, Reno, NV 89502. MTG: Las Vegas, Nev, Oct 13-18, 1974.

Organizations 1535

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(Conttnued from page 1536.) Bay, St. John, June 22. SEC: Salvatore Tabac­co, MD, Box 1, Cruz Bay, St. John 00830.

Woman's Auxiliary to the American Medical Association, Drake Hotel, Chicago, Jtine 23-26. EXEC DIR: Miss Hazel J. Lewis, 535 N Dearborn St, Chicago 60610.

JULY SMTWTFS

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13

14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

American Electroencephalographic Society, [El, Washington Plaza, Seattle. July 25-27. EXEC SEC: Mrs. Margaret H. Henry, 36391 Mapie Grove Rd; Willoughby Hills, OH 44094.

America~ Veterinary Medical 'Associatio.n,. [El, Denver, July 22-25. EXEC VICE PRES: D. A. Piice, DVM, 600 S Michigan Ave, Chicago 606Q5. . . . .

Health. Physics Society, 19th Annual, Sham­rock-Hilton, Houston. July 7-n: PROM CHMN: Wordie H. Parr, Physical Agents· Branch/ NIOSH, 1014 Broadway, Cincinnati 45202.

Idaho Medical Association, [E·l. Lodge, sitn Valle'Ji,. Idaho, July 24-29 .. EXEC DIR:. Mr: Armand L. Bird, 407 W Bannock St, Boise, ID 83702.

International Association for Child Psyctiia­try and Allied Professions, [El, Sheraton­

. Philadelphia, Philadelphia, July 28,Atig 2 SEC GEN: Herman D. Staples, MD, 24 Green Valley. Rd, Wallingford, PA 19086. .

•La Leche League International, 5th Conven· tion, Palmer House, Chicago, July ll-13. Eirnc SEC: Mrs. John Froehlich, La Leche League International, 9616 Minneapolis Ave, Franklin Park, IL 60131.

National Medical Association, [EJ, Fairmont Roosevelt, New Orleans, July 28-Aug 1. EXEC VICE PRES: Mr. Robert D. Watkins, 2109 E St, NW, Washington, DC 20037. .

Radiation Research Society, 22nd Annual, Seattle, July 14-20. EXEC SEC: R. J. Burk, Jr., 421l 39th St NW, Washington, DC 20016.

Symposium on Dynamic Studies with Radio­isotopes in Clinical Medicine and'Research, sponsored by the International Atomic Energy Agency, Knoxville, Tenn, July 15-19. INFO: R. A. Dudley and E. H. Belcher, In­ternational Atomic Energy Agency, Kiirntner Ring n; PO Box 590, A-1011, Vienna.

August

American Hospital Association, [El, Chicago, Aug 12-15. PRES: John Alexander McMahon, 840 N Lake Shore Dr, Chicago 6061l.

American Medical Tennis Association, [Ml, Mt. Washington Inn, Mt. Washington, NH, Aug 25-29. EXEC. DIR: .Mr. Bill Drake, PO Box 183, Alton, IL 62002.

Association of Philippine Practicing Physi­cians in ·America, [El, Holiday Inn (North Randall), Cleveland, Aug .16-18. EXEC DIR: Manuel P. A. Claudio, MD, 132 Emerson Dr, Schaumburg, IL 60172.

Black Hiils Seminar, sponsored by South Dakota Chapter of the American Academy of Family Physicians .and South Dakota Chapter of the American College of Ob· stetriCs and Gynecology, Howard Johnson Motor Lodge, Rapid City, SD, Aug 16-17. SEC: L .. H. Amundson, MD, 3001 S Holly, Sioux Falls, SD 57104.

International Doctors in Alcoholics Anony­mous, Annual Meeting, O'Hare Inn (O'Hare Airport), Des Plaines, Ill, Aug 2-4. INFO SEC: IDternatiorial Doctors in AlcoholicS Anony .. mous, 1950 Volney Rd, Youngstown, OH 44511. . .

Montana-Wyoming Chapter of the American College of Surgeons, Annual, Big Sky, Mont, Aug 8-10. SEC-TREAS: David E. Klein, MD, The Surgical Clinic, Suite 214, 1231 N 29th St, Billings, MT 59101.

index to advertisers Abbott Laboratories Roche Laboratories, Div. of Tranxene .............. . 1512-1513 Hoffmann-La Roche, Inc. ..

Larodopa .............. . 1516-1518 Librax ................ . 1588-1590

Burroughs Wellcome Co. Librium ............... . 1532-1533 Cortisporin Otic ........ , ... . 1504 Valium ............. . Cover2-1498

Eaton Laboratories, Div. of Morton-Norwich Products, Inc. Macrodantin ........... . 1508-1509

Lederle Laboratories, Div. of American Cyanamid Co. Minocin ....... , ....... ,1524-1527

Lilly, Eli, & Co. Kefzol.; ....... _ ........ . 1539-1540

Merck Sharp & Dohine; Div. of Merck& Co., Inc.· Hydropres ............. . 1582-1584 Lightcast II ......... . 1592A-1592F

Sandoz Pharmaceuticals Fiorinal ....... : .......... Cover 3 Hydergine ................. . 1501 M ellaril .................... . 1529

Stuart Pharmaceuticals, Div. of ICI America, Inc. Mylanta II ................. . 1530

Upjohn Co. Orinase . ; ................ Cover 4

Walgreen Co. Institutional ............... . 1503

Woodward Medical Personnel Bureau Employment Agency ........ . 1613

While every preciiution is taken to insure ~ccuracy. we cannot guarantee agtiinst the pos~ibility Of an ocCasional change or omission in the preparation of this index.

1538 JAMA, .June 17, 1974 • Vol 228, No 12

National Medical and Dental Association of America, [MJ, St. Auguatinc, Fla, ·Aug 4-8. FINAN SEC: Henry Polchlopek, MD, 434 Springfield St,. Chicopee, MA 01013.

Northwest Proctologic Society, Spokane, Wash, Aug 20-25. PRGM CHMN: Edward Clanton, MD, West 904 Bishop 'ct, Spokane, WA 99204. .

Rocky Mountain Radiological Society, Annual Meeting, Brown Palace Hotel, Denver, Aug 22-24. SEC-TREAS: Lorenz R. Wurfzebach, MD, 4200 E Ninth Ave, Denv~r 80220.

West Virginia State Medical Association, The Greenbrier, White Sulphur Springs; WVa, Aug 21-24. EXEC .SEC: William H. Lively, PO Box 1031, Charleston, WV 25324.

Western Hemisphere Nutrition Congress IV, Americana Hotel, Bal Harbour, (Miami Beach), Fla, Aug 19-22. INFO: AMA Council on Foods and Nutrition, 535 N Dearborn St;· Chicago 60610.

September

American Association of Medical Clinics, [EJ, Washington Hilton, Waahington, DC, Sept 4-8. EXEC DIR: James B. Cobb, PO Box 949, 20 S Quaker Lane, Alexandria, VA 22313.

American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Annual, The Homestead, Hot Springs, Va, Sept 4-7. SEC: J. Donald ·Wood­ruff, MD, Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore 21205.

AMA Congress on Occupational Health, 34th Annual, Marriott Motor Inn, Chicago, Sept 9-10. INFO: Henry F. Howe, MD, AMA De, partment of Environmental, Public, and Oc­cupational Health, 535 N Dearborn St, Chi­cago 60610.

American Medical Tennis Association, [Ml. Moana Kea, Hawaii, Sept 8'13. EXEC Dm: Mr. Bill Drake, PO Box 183, Alton, IL 62002.

American Roentgen Ray Society,' [El, Hilton: San Franciaco, Sept 24-27. SEC: Ted F. Leigh, MD, Emory University -Clinic, Atlanta 30322.

-END

How can we preserv~ the right of privacy? Read Senator Sam· J. Ervin's views.

·Why does this eminent authority on Constitutional Rights believe that the privacy Americans prize so highly--but too often take for granted--must now either be resolutely defended or lost? Read his thought~provoking article, "CIVILIZED MAN'S MOST VALUED RIGHT," in the June issue of PRISM.

Don't miss the June issue

lllllS

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To teach the fundamentals . . . . . .

of athletic ·health and training,. thousands Qf coaches tum to the AMA for coaching.

Of the 14,000-plus high schools in this country, few can afford the luxury of a professional athletic trainer. So a coach or student tries to fill the gap. Problem is, few of them have any training in the field: ·

Where do they turn to get it? They turn to The Fundamentals of Athletic Training, a book published by the AMA. A joint project .of the AMA, the National Athletic Trainers Association and the Athletic Institute, it's the only book especially prepared to train coaches and student trainers in the basic principles of physical fitness, nutrition, first aid, physical therapy and the other vital aspects of a sound athletic training program.

Some 10,000 coaches and students in high schools across the country depend on this book tb help them ake better care of their athletes.

Physicians often ask what the AMA does. This is just ne of many things--and rriade possible by the physicians

who support the AMA through their membership. Find )Ut more about the AMA, how it serves the public, iow it serves the profession. Just send in the ompleted coupon.

~·\L .\ I

. '

----------------~---I Join us. I We can do much more together. I I I· I

Dept. DW American Medical Association 535 N. Dearborn St. Chicago, Ill. 60610

1

1

Please send me more informa.tion on the AMA and AMA membership.

I JA 6/17 /74

I Name-------:----------~ I Address _______________ _

I City/State/Zip _____________ _ L ___________________ J,

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...._ .. ·

Governor Jimmy Carter 1974 Campaign Chairman; Democratic National Committee

P.O. Box 1524 Atlanta, Georgia 30301

Dear

As Chairman of the 1974 Campaign Committee of the National Democratic Party, I am deeply concerned about the sense of alienation and exclusion from governmental processes felt by many Americans. Too often important and legitimate concerns of individuals have been ignored or superseded by powerful and selfish interest groups. Politicians have failed to recognize the talents and knowledge that is concentrated in such national organi­zations as •

I want to be sure that Democratic candidates this year are fully informed on issues of concern to you. I would appreciate your writing me to help identify those particular issues which you feel need to be addressed in ... a serious and effective way by political candidates this year. During the coming months I hope you will also keep us informed of additional issues which concern you.

I look forward to hearing from you in the near future. If you are in Atlanta, I would like to personally discuss with you ways in which the Democratic Party can address issues of concern to you.

Sincerely,

Jimmy Carter

JC/scg

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DRAFT

Dear

As Chairman of the 1974 Campaign Committee of the National Democratic Party, I am deeply concerned about the sense of alienation and exclusion from governmental processes felt by many Americans. Too often importan~egitimate concerns of individuals have been ignored or sup rce d by powerful and H&iii'&86i

interest groups. Politicians have il to recognize the talents and · e that is concentrated in such national organizations

/>e. th · d'd h' I want to assure at Democratic can 1 ates t is year are fully informed on issues of concern to you. I would appreciate your writing me to help identify those particular issues which vou feel need to be addressed in a serious and effective way by PQ11:1Q.-,_/,/:c.-e cretie candidates this year. During the coming months I hope you will also keep us informed of~issues which concern you •

.:ULd.. ~;• .... a. I I look forward to hearing from you in the near future. If

you are in Atlanta, I would like to personally discuss with you ways in which the Democratic Party can address issues of concern to you.

Sincerely,

Jimmy Carter

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Memo To: Governor Carter

From: Steve Chandler

Date: June 7, 1974

Peter Bourne has identified over 200 national organizations with over 10,000 members which include trade, business, agricul­tural, educational, and fraternal groups (religious organizations are not included). He would like for you to write the executive officer of each of these groups both to ask for issue information and to make a personal contact with them. The executive directors will be more likely to remain in office over the next two years than would an elected officer. We could then follow up with those groups who respond favorably to inform them of your position on issues of interest to them.

I am enclosing a draft letter for your consideration and the list of organizations. I have circled several of the listings for whom this letter might not apply.

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To: Steve Chandler

From: Peter Bourne f.g. Subject: Organization Letter

October 20th 1974

Here are the remainder of the summaries from the replies to the letter to organizations. Although some of the replies are excellent and we have been able to establish some excellent contacts, I am somewhat disappointed at the overall response in terms of the percentage who replied.

·Apart from the follow up suggestions I have made I believe it would be useful after the announcement for the Governor to send a letter to each of thse people who did reply, thanking them for this response again and soliciting their continuing input and support now that he is an announced candidate. Also for those who did not respond this time I believe it would be wort~while to send another letter to a refined list (post announcement) asking for the organization to support the Governor and provide him input on their issues of concern. I think many of these people will be more responsive to an individual candidate than they.were to what they may have seen as a rather amorphous request from the Party. Also this time it would be possible to tailor the letters much more specifically to what we know are their individual concerns with the opportunity to stress the Governor~s position when we know they coincide.

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~~ERICAN COLLEGE OF SURGEONS MEDICAL

Contact: C. Rollins Hanlon, M.D. Director 55 Erie Street Chicago, Illinois 60611

Tel: 312-664-4050

Issues: Letter states that they expressly refrain from any political activity

Comment: No appropriat·input

Follow-up: None

--.-.·----------- --····----·-····--··-····-···-·,·--- .. -- -~ . - -- ---- -·.---.-·--;·· . -· ...... ----------~··--·. -

*

·.- .. ,•

.. ;. >".<-·.:-: -

-.---. ··:: . ..

,·, ·.--.

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·:· ... ::·· ·. ·- .

-,·. :: -~

NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY

Contact: Melvin M. Payne, President Washington, D.C. 20036

Tel:

SCIENTIFIC/CONSERVATIONIST

Issues: No suggestions ·at present, but reserves the right to contact us again at a later date;

Comment: This is an organizationof .. influential people, but_ generally not concerned with any particular policy issues. They seemed very appreciative of being asked for input;.

Follow-up: None

*

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WOMEN UNITED INTERNATIONAL Women *** Contact: C. Rebel Randall

32969 Shifting Sands Trail Palm Springs, California. 92262

Tel:

Issues: 'Women are the key to the breakthrough in 1 74 1

Comment: Ms Randall was an unsuccessful candidate for the Democratic nomination in California~ 37th Congressional District; and most· of her letter deals with this , her future political plans, and her organization in her district. She does not address any specific issues on behalf of her:organization. However I believe she will be helpful to us in organizing in her own district.

Follow-up: We should maintain contact with her, possibly with the Governor seeing on a future trip to California .

. .

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AMERICAN CONSERVATIVE UNION

Contact: Ronald B. Dear Executive Director 422 First Street S.E. Washington, D.C. 20003

POLITICAL

Tel: 202-546-6555

Issues: Traditional conservative issues- anti-labor~ oppose Federal housing program and National Health Insurance~

Comment: Letter is brief, but quantity of material outlining their position on the above issues is enclosed and-is-on file. Particularly in the human services area it is going to be difficult for us to support their. positions. However in the area of defense there may be some commoA ground, particularly relating to their support of the Trident program.

Follow-up: It would probably be usefull for the-Governor to meet with Mr Dear

***

or another representative-of their organization on a future trip to Washingt ton.

'.•. ,-_, . ;'··:

;-:i...

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NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MANUFACTURERS

Contact: E. Douglas Kenna President 1776 F Street N.W. Washigton, D.C.

Tel: 202-331-3800

Industry **

Issues: No issues in this letter, but promises follow-up with several position papers detailing various issues of concern to industry.

Comment: This is alarge and influential organization; and while we may have problems with some of their positions it would be worth while to establish an ongoing relationship-with them.·

Follow-up: If:.they do not send us their position- papers we should contact them again .':' , shortly after the announcement. Also it would.be useful for the Governor

to meet with Mr Kenna if he has not already done so. :Possibly an address to their next annual meeting would be appropriate.

. .

_.:.· ..

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INTERNATIONAL CONSUMER CREDIT ASSOCIATION

Contact: William Henry Blake Executive Vice President 375 Jackson Avenue St. Louis, Mo. 63130

Tel: 314-PA7-4045

Business **

Issues: Inflation, 1 rekindling respect for America, the things she has accomplished over the past 200 years and its.elected officials who carry on·the functions of Government• .-Also 1 We 1 ve gotten off the track and need to restructure our thinking in a· more positive vein rather than citing a11 of the negative wrongs. 1

-

Comment: In expressing appreciation·for..the letter soliciting input from his organization Mr Blake states_• our publications reach-more than 100,000 opinion forming people monthly. 1 We should definitely try to get something into-their publications just fa~ the expo~urei-

Follow-up: We should cohtact.Mr Blake after the announcement about getting a statement to them that they could use. '

\'~-~

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NATIONAL SMALL BUSINESS ASSOCIATION

Contact: John Lewis Executive Vice President 1225 Nineteenth Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. 20036.

Tel: 202-296-7400

BUSINESS

Issues: They feel politicians and.government constantly expresses.concern for

***

small business but rarely.does anything concrete for them. Their main concern is that large corporations grow. at the expense of small business, and goverMment actions tend to favor large not small-business. In particular they are concerned about the tight credit situation caused by the present economic situation.

Comment: They enclosed a copy of their pamphlet:describing their 11 Catch Up" program. for small business. This·is.a grpoup that·is.large but not·terribly well organized. They are however a group from whom we should be able to get a good dea 1 . of. natura 1 support. - - - · ·

Follow-Up: The- Governor should meet with Mr Lewis on a later trip to Washington. perhaps also we could prepare something for their publication.

,._;

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CROATIAN FRATERNAL UNION OF AMERICA ETHNIC **

Contact John Badovinac National President 100 Delaney Drive Pittsburgh, Pa. 15235

Tel : 412-351-3909

Issues: Run away inflation, plight of their older members, and the general economic condition of the country.

Comment: A group whose irlteres ts are 1 imited _to certain areas of the country, but a group that it will be_good to:have.some·pre-existing contact with in places like Milwaukee,-New Jersey, and other parts of the country where middle European ethnic .groups:live.in large.numbers ...

Follow-Up: Mr Badovinac ofered to meet with· the-Governor while passing·through­Atlanta in August;· If this meetingdid:not occur we.should-try to arrange_ a meeting some time when the Governor will.be in Pennsylvania. After the announcement we-should contact-him-again and see if we can get some help with 1coa1 organizing efforts in those States where they have a .. · ' significant mebership .

. .

- .-~-.... --.

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AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION -;.••

Contact: Bert H. Early Executive Director 1155 East 60th St. Chicago, Illinois 60637

Tel: 312~493-0533

LAWYERS

Is~ues: Offered to provide ~ome specific input.on issues some.time in September after their House of Delagates .. has met.in August. I do not know if they have done this. No issues mentioned in·the·letter.

*

Comment: Although they are a big and influential organization and their suggestions· are likely to be helpful it is unlikely that we will get any great mileage from them.as they arecbound.to.be·sought out by all candidates.

Follow-LI~: If they have·not sent something·yet we should followup with a request· for the.premised position· statements~. After the first·of the year we . should see· about getting·material·into-their newsletter and other publicat- l ions. Also perhaps we could arrange for the Governor to speak at their annual meeting next year.

. .. -.. -

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AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

CONTACT: W.E.Olson President·

·666 Fifth Avenue New York, N.Y. 10019

Tel: 212-581-8440-

BUSINESS **

Issues: 11 the devastating effect of inflation, the integrity of the: political process, ·and achievement of full participation by minoritiesin our economic life, and the equitable distribution of .the burden of·taxation; 11

Comment: He states that they have refrained from taking partisan positions in the past and therfore this limits what they feel .they can say or how much they can support any particular candidate· or party. This is a large organization, and we should atleasttry to get attention through .their publications even if we. can not. get.much-overt support ...

Follow-up: Possibly prepare a statement for their publication. None other at present.

. .

···::'--

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NATIONAL CONFEDERATION OF AMERICAN ETHNIC GROUPS

Contact: Paul M. Deac Executive Vice-President 562 Davis Building Washington~ D.C. 20006-

Te 1: 202-338-8900_

ETHNIC

Issues: Canvassing affiliates for their views-will get back-to·us·on·what their key issues of concern are. Nothtng specificin·this·letter;_···.

*

Comment: 11 ! believe your query is a terrific.iaea. The mere fact of our.communicating it to our group·s wi 1 l make you many.friends among. our groups 11 ·This 1 ctter is filled with such positive statements. However Hami.lton has suggested that the group may net be.legitimate: and should be furthter checked out before any further follow up.

Follow-Up: None at present.

... · ·. ·.·'·:'. ··--:·:

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EUGENE ZWOYER, Executive Director .

·,"

.AM.ERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS

345 EAST 47th STREET • NEW YORK, N. Y. 10017 ,: (212) PL 2-6800

The Honorable Jimmy.'ta,rt·er··.· 1974 Campaign Chair~an ' Democratic Naiional. Committ~e' P. 0. Box 1524 Atlanta, Georgia ~OJOt

Dear Governor::

Novem~er 6, 1974

·~·, " .~· ·'

This is further re~ponse to your letter of July 22, 1974, with respect to identification of issu~s which we feel need to be addressed "in a serious and effective way by political can­didates ... ''· We certainly welcome. this opportunity to be of service in the political process., arid intend to supplement these initfal comments by furth~r inform~tion, as y~u.s~ggest.

While there are many is·sues '.of concern to the American . ' "'I : - ./ • ~ ' •

Society of Civil Engineers,' t_hi:s l_etter· is· 1.im.f t·ed t.o those of paramount importance in '._the. transportation ·field. . Our National Trani.port at ion Po.I icy Com.mitt ee . is.' .in:. tti·~- .prd·c·ess . of .. reviewing and revising the· ASC::E .s·ta.tement-.· '·'-P~in:c.iples' ·of a·. Souri'd National Transportation .Pol i:cy'; '·' l~st · a.mended ''by' our ·Bcfard·. of Di.rec t ion in: May 19 67. When·. ·the cu.rr.eil't: rev is ion· i·s comp 1 et.e·d and adopted, we shall-~be delighte·d.to"furni's·h.:it to you and, from time to tim~, to provide additional pblicy st~temeriti which we believe to be in the public interest.

. tn general., the Com~ittee points out that tfans~ortation i's a· servj;ce:.·vit~ifl· .tor'..the 'wel-fare o:f, 'all peopl'e, and::.·that :speed,

• I • ' • • • ' ~ . ' ·, ~ ... . - • ' • • • •· • • ; • ', . '. . -_.

sj:tfefy ,- . con·venience,, . .':and ecorioJriy .. Of, trarispo'.rt, CC?i:ltr.ibuting to ·a. 'goci.d .eniT;ir.onment'· ,:· ·are<hallrna·rks.:-.~f a . good:\ r:anspO'rta t ion system

, which- iS: :··compo·sed of mariy. types. of facilities. ~nd equipment, co­ordinated tc{ m·eet'th·e~ peo'pie·':s· n·ee:d·s:\a.s r.efl'ected in-, i ifestyl es, market, ·~ho ices·~ a,nd na tl.O,rial: 5.e.curity ··rec(uir"eni~nts;,, based ~n best

.. av;ailab le. technology. - 'Jt ~is. b.e1 iev.ed that transportation pol icy should. ·s erv.e <national . go a.ls,, as '.'._they are estabJ ished ; .. but sho.uld not necess·a:-i:ily be the chief mearis o'f attaining th~m· ..

. The Committe·e· believes that adeqtiate transportation is es­sential, achie~ed through cooperative Ped~ral, st~t~, local, and esp~cially priv~te enterprise efforts. It:~s believed that the private ·sector in transportation should be given the greatest reasonable incentives through equitable regulatory policies, ade­quate rates of return on investment, and ~he g~eatest possible

MEMBER ENGINEERS JOINT COUNCIL

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! I :1

Governor Jimmy Carter -2- November 6, 1974

reductions in rest~ictions on effi~f~~t manpower utili~~ii~~~· Bow~ ever, Government has a responsibility to ass.ure essential, safe, and efficient transport of people and goods.

: . -- _ • •I · •• , r! • •••·• ~"'\ (~ .... ! "°· ·._ .. - ,.,. ,(..,,_·_·:-, 0, 1\~ /) .... -,.., ,..., ~·" ·G ~,,.. v'i ~ -, -~ ..•.. -.. ~JJ -

T·ra:n sport at i ori p lan·iti'ng· sh o,ul (f"-b'e ) int eg ra l''' with'· coin'p'rerh en-• ' ·."".!:.. '. ,") -·~ t., •• --•• ·,·:'.~:' - _· 'j")!·,·~.·, .. ' 1:.ri')'\ •(l['/''·(" \!. ·:>···,·-,;~- .... ::.,i-,'':1-.-;-:·r.:·.--.,-, '•

s 1 ve p I am?-_1ng, re~?gl1.:.1:.~1;'.ng .t.~;a:t . ~~~1;:~P or ta~ r~rt ·~ 1s both'· a' "l'and use and a support serv:1ce.~···rransportat1on fac1lTt1es should be planned, constructed, and ,managed. so as to. enhance. community.values and., .on bala-nce to improve <tne'·. q''u~ii?t'y "of.· fife:~;;· ,_Reil!.i'ztilg'- that'i1th\; 5• devte~

, • - • . "' ·~-; '·~. : . -~.' ! (' , ·- - ·' ·• ·~ "-:- ':>.' '"1 :'-,f ·~ '" ,_,

lo pm en t o·f t ransporta~t ion syst eins can ha:v e ··major impacts on the human, physical, and natural envi~onment, the Committee believes that planning for t ransporta ti on mu s·t b~·:,2 arried 'out with invo 1 ve­ment and advice of the citizens in the~afeas affected, but at the same time the responsible agencies and ·.pro·.fe:·.s's·ionals- :bear a duty to develop alternatives and recommend solutions w~ich will result in prompt decisions necessary to meet currerii and iuture needs without undue delay.

The Committee is convinced that all modes of transportation should be considered in the planning process and that each should be utilized in an appropriate manner to form a unified transporta­tion system. No one mode of transportation, by itself, can meet the pressing needs. Moreover, no transportation fa~ility should be constructed unless the total costs of it can be justified by the total benefits which will accrue from it. In this respect, segments of facilities should not be viewed in isolation, but as part of a larger system, the total benefits of which will exceed the costs.

The Committee believes that users of transportation service are generally the primary beneficiaries and should bear the pri­mary costs, with other beneficiaries sharing remaining costs to the extent they are benefited. Where public assistance may be needed to insure essential services, the amount should be deter­mined analytically and provided from appropriately related sources at the lowest possible level of jurijdiction, where most deci­sions about the transportation facilities and their funding should be made. State and Federal aids may also be justified to the ex­tent that statewide or nationwide public benefits may be identi­fied.

The Committee believes that considerable increases in trans­portation research and development are warranted and necessary -­providing substantial benefits beyond the costs of R&D, in the long run. Full consideration of a wide range of transportation alterna­tives is necessary, including ways to reduce traveJ demands, secure more efficient vehicle utilization, and operate facilities more efficiently. However, it believes that any individual should ·have the inherent right to choose the transportation vehicle, or system,

\.

;·.

' ''

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~l>kt\\~ Some organizations with resource information and/or pertinent publications are:

AL-ANON FAMILY GROUP HEADQUARTERS 115 East 23rd Street New York, New York 10010 (212) 475-6110

AMERICAN FEDERATION OF TEACHERS (AFT) 1012 Fourteenth Street, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20005 (202) 737-6141

AMERICAN NATIONAL RED CROSS 17th and D Streets, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20006 (202) 737-8300

ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE OF B'NAI B'RITH (AOL) 315 Lexington Avenue New York, New York 10016 (212) 689-7400

ASSOCIATION FOR CHILDHOOD EDUCATION INTERNATIONAL (ACEI)

3615 Wisconsin Avenue, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20016 (202) 363-6963

BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA North Brunswick, New Jersey 08902 (201) 249-6000

DRUG ABUSE COUNCIL 1828 L Street, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20036 (202) 785-5200

14

GIRL SCOUTS OF THE U. S. A. 830 Third Avenue New York, New York 10022 (212) 751-6900

INTEGRATED EDUCATION ASSOCIATES School of Education Northwestern University 2003 Sheridan Road Evanston, Illinois 60201 (312) 492-3741

METROPOLITAN APPLIED RESEARCH CENTER, INC. (MARC) 60 East 86th Street New York, New York 10028 (212) 628-7400

NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE FOR DRUG ABUSE INFORMATION 11400 Rockville Pike Rockville, Maryland 20852 (301) 443-6720

NATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE ON ALCOHOLISM AND ALCOHOL ABUSE

Box 2345 Rockville, Maryland 20852 9119 Gaither Road Gaithersburg, Maryland 20520 (301) 948-4450

NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF CHRISTIANS AND JEWS 43 West 57th Street New York, New York 10019 (212) 688-7530

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"The World of IBM Education." "Xerox Builds a New University."

Change 5(10):36-42. Winter 1973-74.

Young People and Their Culture, by Ross Snyder. Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press. 1969. 221 pp.

"Youth Culture: Alienations, Protest, and Dissent." Section I. Uses of the Sociology of Education, edited by C. Wayne Gordon. The Seventy-third Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education. Chicago: Univeristy of Chicago Press. 1974. Pp. 1-157.

Youth: Transition to Adulthood. Report of the Panel on Youth of the President's Science Advisory Committee. Washington, D. C.: U. S. Government Printing Office. June 1973. 190 pp.

13

Page 32: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NATIONAL CONGRESS OF PARENTS AND TEACHERS 700 North Rush Street Chicago, Illinois 60611 (312) 787-0977

NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES OF CHRIST IN THE U.S.A. 475 Riverside Drive New York, New York 10027 (212) 870-2200

NATIONAL COUNCIL OF TI-IE YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION (YMCA)

291 Broadway New York, New York 10007 (212) 349-0700

NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION (NEA) 1201 Sixteenth Street, N.W. Washington, D. C. 20036 (202) 833-4000

NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON ALCOHOL ABUSE AND ALCOHOLISM (NIAAA)

5600 Fishers Lane Rockville, Maryland 20852 (301) 443-3885

NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DRUG ABUSE 11400 Rockville Pike Rockville, Maryland 20852 (301) 443-6720

NATIONAL SCHOOL BOARDS ASSOCIATION (NSBA) State National Bank Plaza Evanston, Illinois 60201 (312) 869-7730

15

NATIONAL SCHOOL BOARDS ASSOCIATION (NSBA) State National Bank Plaza Evanston, Illinois 60201 (313) 867-7730

NATIONAL SOCIETY FOR HEBREW DAY SCHOOLS 229 Park Avenue South New York, New York 10003 (212) 674-6700

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY'S CENTER OF ALCOHOL STUDIES Rutgers, The State University New Brunswick, New Jersey 08903 (201) 932-1766

YOUNG W~N'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

600 Lexington Avenue New York,' New York 10022 (212) 753-4700

Page 33: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

5. Other Organizations

CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS Box 4068 Santa Barbara, California 93103 (805) 969-3281

COUNCIL FOR BASIC EDUCATION 725 15th Street, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20005 (202) 347-4171

SOCIAL SCIENCE EDUCATION CONSORTIUM, INC. Educational Resource Center 855 Broadway Boulder, Colorado 80302 (303) 443-1370

9

Page 34: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

For this 8th annual meeting of the Education Commission of the States three separate bibliographies, which may be considered as a unit, are available. Their titles are:

Education for Citizenship Education to Make a Life Education to Make a Living

Comprehensive and specific information (including legislation on aspects such as accountability, finance, governance, innovations, opportunity, and programs) and suggestions for resource persons, including ECS staff, on the subjects of these bibliographies are maintained by the Education Commission of the States. Inquiries may be addressed to the Resource Center or the Research and Information Services Department.

Education Commission of the States

1880 LINCOLN STREET/DENYER, COLORADO

I Loan copies of these publications may be available from the public, university or state library near you. Purchase copies should be ordered from the sources shown. In the case of an ERIC publication (see ED number at end of document), your library may have the original document and/or the ERIC microfiche; so, check for either. ECS publications may be ordered directly from Commission headquarters, 1860 Lincoln Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80203. (303) 893-5200.

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Some organizations with resource information and/or pertinent publications are:

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF COMMUNITY AND JUNIOR COLLEGES (AACJC)

One Dupont Circle, N. W. Washington, D. G. 20036 (202) 293- 7050

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF STATE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES (AASCU)

One Dupont Circle, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20036 (202) 293- 7070

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS (AAUP) One Dupont Circle, N. W., Suite 500 Washington, D. C. 20036 (202) 466-8050

AMERICAN COUNCIL ON EDUCATION (ACE) One Dupont Circle, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20036 (202) 833-4 700

AMERICAN PERSONNEL AND GUIDANCE ASSOCIATION (APGA) 1607 New Hampshire Avenue, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20009 (202) 483-4633

AMERICAN VOCATIONAL ASSOCIATION (AVA) 1510 H Street, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20005 (202) 737-3722

B'NAI B'RITH CAREER AND COUNSELING SERVICES 1640 Rhode Island Avenue, N. W. Washington, D. C. 20036 (202) 393-5284

10

Page 36: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

Today's Academic Condition, by Samuel B. Gould. New York: McGraw-Hill. 1970. 101 pp.

Toward Equal Educational Opportunity for Higher Education; Report. New York: College Entrance fa:amination Board. 71 pp.

"Two Million Teachers Make a Lot of Votes," by Kenneth G. Gehret. Compact VIII(3):11-12. Denver, Colorado: Education Commission of the States. May/June 1974.

Universities for All, by George Z. F. Bereday. First edition. San Francisco: Jossey­Bass. 1973. 158 pp.

"Values and Education." Notre Dame Journal of Education 1(3). Fall 1970. 284 pp.

Vocation as 'Calling'." Report of the Task Force on Occupational Education in Post­secondary Education. Denver, Colorado: Education Commission of the States. Decem­ber 1971. 31 pp.

Vocation: Central Aim of Education, by Richard M. Millard. Denver, Colorado: Education Commission of the States. Iowa City, Iowa: American College Testing Program. December 1972. ll pp.

Vocational Choice Stability and Career Development, by Craig S. Scott and others. Washington, D. C.: American Educational Research Association. July 13, 1973. 43 pp.

ED 078 822

"Vocational Education as Contemporary Slavery," by M. L. Story. Intellect 102 (2356):370-372. March 1974.

9

Vocational Development of Disadvantaged Junior High School Students, by Robert E. Campbell, Jean L. Parsons, Samuel H. Osipow, Frank M. Fletcher, and Chandra M. N. Mehrotra. Research Series No. 41. Columbus: Ohio State University, Center for Vocational and Technical Education. August 1969. 88 pp.

Vocational Education for the Handicapped: A Bibliography of ERIC Documents. Bibli­ography Series No. 20. Columbus: Ohio State University, Center for Vocational and Technical Education. August 1973. 33 pp. ED 083 480

Vocational Education: Staff Development Pri­orities for the 70's. Washington, D. C.: National Advisory Council on Educational Professions Development. 1973. 179 pp.

Women in the World ERIC Documents. Columbus: Ohio Vocational and 1973. 29 pp.

ED 084 240

of Work: A Bibliography of Bibliography Series No. 19.

State University, Center for Technical Education. August

ED 083 479

Work-Study College Programs: Appraisal and Report of the Study of Cooperative Edu­cation, by James W. Wilson and Edward H. Lyons. With an introduction by Ralph W. Tyler. First edition. New York: Harper and Row. 1961. 240 pp.

Youth Encounters the World of Work, edited by Nancy Belbos. Seminar Series No. 4. Minneapolis: Minnesota University, Center for Youth Development and Research. August 1973. 60 pp. ED 080 895

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11

CENTER FOR CONTINUING EDUCATION OF WOMEN University of California at Berkeley Berkeley, California 94720 (415) 642-6000

CENTER FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT IN HIGHER EDUCATION (CRDHE)

University of California at Berkeley 2150 Shattuck Avenue Berkeley, California 94720 (415) 642-5769

CENTER FOR VOCATIONAL AND TECHNICAL EDUCATION Ohio State University 1960 Kenny Road Columbus, Ohio 43210 (614) 486- 3655

ERIC CLEARINGHOUSE ON CAREER EDUCATION 204 Gurler Northern Illinois University DeKalb, Illinois 60115 (815) 753-1000

EDUCATIONAL CAREER SERVICES (ECS) 12 Nassau Street Princeton, New Jersey 08540 (609) 924-4660

FAR WEST LABORATORY FOR EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

One Garden Circle, Hotel Claremont Berkeley, California 94705 ( 415) 841-9710

Page 38: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NATIONAL ADULT EDUCATION CLEARINGHOUSE Department of Adult Continuing Education Montclair State College Upper Montclair, New Jersey 07043 (201) 893-4353

NATIONAL ADVISORY EDUCATION

425 13th Street, Washington, D. C. (202) 962-0781

COUNCIL ON VOCATIONAL

N. W., Suite 852 20004

NATIONAL VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE ASSOCIATION See: American Personnel and Guidance Assocation

SER (Service, Employment, Redevelopment) 9841 Airport Boulevard, Suite 1020 Los Angeles, California 90045 (213) 649-1511

STATE HIGHER EDUCATION EXECUTIVE OFFICERS ASSOCIATION (SHEEO)

c/o Miss Nancy Berve, SHEEO Secretary Education Commission of the States 1860 Lincoln Street, Suite 300 Denver, Colorado 80203 (303) 893-5200, Ext. 258

12

Page 39: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

For this 8th annual meeting of the Education Commission of the States three separate bibliographies, which may be considered as a unit, are available. Their titles are:

Education for Citizenship Education to Make a Life ~ Education to Make a Living

Comprehensive and specific information (including legislation on aspects such as accountability, finance, governance, innovations, op·portunity, and programs) and suggestions for resource persons, including ECS staff, on.the subjects of these bibliographies are maintained by the Education Commission of the States. Inquiries may be addressed to the Resource Center or the Research and Information Services Department.

Education Commission of the States

·~-1880 LINCOLN STREET/DENVER, COLORADO

I Loan copies of these publications may be available from the public, university or state library near you. Purchase copies should he ordered from the sources shown. In the case of an ERIC publication (see ED number at end of document), your library may have the original document and/or the ERIC microfiche; so, check for either. ECS publications may be ordered directly from Commission headquarters, 1860 Lincoln Street, Suite 300, Denver, CO 80203. (303) 893-5200.

.w .... --

----1

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- ' .. I·

TO: Steve Chandler

From: Peter Bourne

Subject: Organizations

Here is the first batch of summaries on the national organizations. If you want they can be filed on Sx8 cards. Some require follow up particularly where an individual has expressed an interest in coming to Atlanta to see the Governor. Also if there is anyone who could pursue the idea of preparing material for the newsletters most of these organizations put out it is a way of getting substantial free publicity and attention. After .December we could arrange for the Governor make some state~ents specifically addressing the concerns of certain of these organizations, and then

· mak~ the statements available to them to distribute to the membership. Also after the first of the year we need to try to get the mailing lists or membership directories from some of these organizations.

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..

AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF BANKING

Contact: Rudolph R. Fichtel Di~ctor, American Institute of Banking 1120 Connecticut Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036

Tel: 202

BAN KING/ECONOMY **

Issues: Inflation, high taxes and crime. These are very standard issues and they offered nothing else; However these are the key issues concerning not only the banking and business community, but·the entire country-.

Comment: The letter is short and· not.thoughtful. However Mr Fichtel expressed considerable and probably sincere appreciation for being asked to have input.

Follow-up: None at present

.. · .. ~· ·:··

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·-· •. • •• :.-•.. .:_ ::.::_,·_, ___ :-,· -·-1:.

AMERICAN FARM BUREAU FEDERATION FARM/AGRICULT. ***

Conact:

Issues:

----- ·--------------

William J. Kuhfuss President 225 Touhy Avenue Park Ridge Illinois, 600068

-- ·------------·~-----·-·

Primary concerns are, inflation, food aid, government reserve of farm products, trade reform, farm labor, Occupational Safety and Health Act, National Health Insurance, and Consumer Protection. They have provided a series of position papers and copies of Congressional testimony.

Co~ment: The politics of the National farm organizations are complex, and this group tends to be rather conservative. This is an area where more research needs to be done, however it is of considerable importance to us and this particular organization is large and influential ..

Follow-up: Mr Kuhfuss does not.offer future .help and.the letter was short and ··uninspiring. However in ·view of the significance of the group we

should probab1y.in vite him toAtlanta,,or·the Governor should try to see him while in Illinois. Peter Bourne will pursue a more detailed analysis of the overall farm organization situation .

. ----·----------- ---- ___ , ______ - ---- --- ----- .-~~~----------·-···-~---·-.-:-:::::-:-·-- - --- - --· ·- _____ .. __________ -------------------- ··--··· ·- -··-··- ----·-------- -· ---·---~-·--·- -·· -j ~-

.....

·:_:' -i

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·,

TOBACCO ASSOCIATES INC.

Contact: Joseph R. Williams President Suite 912 1101 Seventeenth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036

AGRICULTURE ***

Tel: 202-659-1160

Issues: This letter provides extensive documentation of the magnitude and economic significance of the tobacco industry. 400,000 farms in 25 states are involved in its cultivation~ 20% of the Nation's farmers are involved with this crop. It is-a major-source of tax dollars and exports provide ar. major contribution to our overseas balance of trade.Their primary con~.erns· are that health advocates will successfully interfere with the cigarette market and that agrcultural·economists who believe in a· free economy will seek to eliminate production control·and price·supports.

Comment: From a health standpoint-it is hard to.support their position. From an economic view they are extremely.consequential ... Jn. addttion they represent · a very large costituency. The letter·is also long and carefully written. We should make an effort to.·.privately-seek·their support although it may be hard to take a public position that would align us too closely with them.

Follow-up: None immediately

,

,•_,·-

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·,

..

AIRCRAFT OWNERS AND PILOTS ASSOCIATION AIR/TRANSPORTATION ** Contact: J.B.HARTRANFT,Jr.

President Box 5800 Washington, D.C.20014

Tel: 301-654-0500

Issues: Concerned about protecting general~aviation and·particularly what they see as the potential of consistent interference by the Federal Aviation Administration:·They emphasize that·any·nat1ona1 transportation policy should take into account different individual needs in different communities. They enc 1 osed a number of pub l i cations detai 1 i ng their pos i ti ans~-

Comment: This organization has an elaborate newsletter and magazine service. It might be worthwhile to put together a statement for them to send to their membership.

Follow-up: No other follow up at this time.

··" ;:·

. :: -~ -

r· ! ~ - -. . :·-. ; ' - .-

( _: . . ~-· .

,:··--,

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·,

CANCER CARE INC. HEALTH

Contact: Mary Overton Assistant Executive Director

(acting in the absence-of Irene G. Buckley, Executive Director) One Park Avenue New York, N.Y. 10016

Tel: 212-679-5700

**

Issues: Caring about the human impact of cancer rather· than the treatment or cure. Their main concern is any change in the tax structure that would result· in discouraging voluntary giving to organizations like theirs.

Comment: Cancer is a issue of concern for many Americans. This concern will be intensified because of Mrs Ford!s problems and the openness of Marvella Bayh, particularly ifher husband is a.candidate. Their is not much milage for us in this issue.but by maintaining contact with this group we can reduce any adverse effect and diminish what other candidates can get out of it.

- -· --. - . - -- ----· ~·-- ·--····--·.

,., ·-·

' ~ .

i·.

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ROTARY INTERNATIONAL

Contact: Philip H. Lindsey Head

0, ~xecutive Services Division

lbU Ridge Avenue Evanston, Illinois. 60201

Tel:

Civic

Issues: Rotary International is the association of Rotary Clubs.in 151 countries· around the world. They do not take any policy or political .positions and therefore feel they can not offer any specific comments~·

Comment: Although they take no partisan position.this is a large and influential organization that might be worth·spending some time on. In particular it might be worth getting an invitation for the Governor to address their annual meeting.

. - -. --~· .

*

. .·.· ·.

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NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF INVESTMENT CLUBS

Contact: Thomas E. O'Hara Chainnan, Board of Trustees 1515 East Eleven Mile Road Royal Oak, Michigan~-48067

Tel:

BUSINESS/SMALL INVESTOR ***

Issues: There are 30 million small investors in the country represented directly· or indirectly by this organization. Their greatest concern is that capital gains taxes aimed ostensibly at .. the large institutional investor often have greatest impact on-the little·investor. Inflation produces apparent gains that are taxable but not real. Theyfeel there should be some provision to allow for the effect of inflation in capital gains taxation. Particularly the issue of· rising commision costs in securities investing is of concern to them .....

Comment: This organization represents a sizable number of people. Also with the stock market· continuing to stay down anyone·taking interest in their plight is going to be greatly appreciated. The letter is long and thoughtful.

Fol low-up: The Governor should after he announces provide· them a statement or article ! .. · onthe plight of the small investor that they could use in their magazine. , As an alternative, but of lower priority he mi.ght if in Michigan meet with !

Mr 0 1 Hara, or address their annua 1 meeting. :·", . : · ·· ··

I

... -·-······---- -····-· -··-------·,···-... ---·····-,~--··---

,·, ... . ~;,..

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NATIONAL WELFARE RIGHTS ORGANIZATION

Contact: Ms Johnnie L. Tillmon Executive Director 1420 N Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20005

Tel: 202-483-1531

Issues: Primary concerns of NWRO are in four areas:

POVERTY

(1) Guaranteed adequate income (i.e~ $7,500 for.a family of four) (2) Comprehensive National Health Care Package. (3) Adequate wages and guaranteed work (4) Adequate housing .

Comment: Although this is generally considered a radical group, they are vocal and will certainly be in a visible .role in 1976. While it is unlikely

·that we could endorse their entire proposal particularly the guaranteed income, we can probably see that they would not.be in opposition to us. A little effort at an early stage to try to get input and convey our concern would pay off.

Follow-up: If Ms Tillmon has not already contacted the Governor as she proposed

***

in her letter for a meeting while she was in Atianta during mid-September we should contact her and arrange a meeting perhaps in Washington.

........ -·---.·---·---·-··--····-·.--

,

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; .. · :''•: ._:· , .

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AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF SCIENCE.

Contact: Dr Philip H. Abelson Acting Executive Officer. · 1515 Massachusetts Avenue N.W. Washington, D.C. 20005

SCIENCE

Issues: Inflation, energy, environment. No other issues which might be specific to the interests of scientists are mentioned.

**

Comments: This is a very disappointing response. It is 5;·.0rt and lists only those general issues that the populatipn as awhole.is worried about. Perhaps part of the problem is that Dr Abelson is in·only an acting role.

Follpw-up:·None at present. This is an important organization and perhaps we we should contac~·them again once they have a replacement for Dr Abelson. ·

I . '

~ .

--- --- -·--··•····. ···.·.--·-· ··-· ._ ·-· ·····----c·---·---- ·-rc-J_

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AMERICAN SOYBEAN ASSOCIATION

Contact: Ralph T. Jackson Executive Vice President P.O. Box 158 Hudson, Iowa. 50643

Tel: 319-825-3296

Fann

Issues: Emphasis on self help to expand markets for soybeans and soybean products. No Government controls and cu1Tently their is no Federal acreage limit. They oppose Government held strategic grain reserves

****

or reserves for other commodities·. Strongly opposed 1 as t years soybean export embargo. They want stronger' legislation to prevent crippling. dock and tran~portation strikes. Government should provide more funds for soybean research. They support. the 1973 Trade Reform Act.

Cormnent: This is a long and thoughtful letter and the organization is one to which we should have some ~nique appeal~.

Follow-up: Bill~Ptichard·of Louisville is the Ga. State Association President, and Mr Jackson suggested .. that .. they contact the Governor for an appointment If we have not yet heard from them it would be a good idea for us to. initiate the contact and·.arrange some mutually .convenient time. Probably it should be after the announcement.

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NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR RETARDED CITIZENS RETARDED ***

Contact: Philip Roos, Phd. Executive Director 2709 Avenue E East P.O. Box 6109 Arlington, Texas 76011

Tel: 817-261-4961

Issues: They provided us with their "Five Year Plan" which is on file. The primary thrust is on Community based programs as opposed to institutional care. They want to see increased Federal support for the retarded, especially in the area of providing housing and foster homes. They are also emphasizing legal rights, more Government support for research, and

.' better education of the general public, as far as the ability of the retarded citzen to lead a relatively normal ·life.

Comment: This organization·has achieved prominence largely through skillful political endeavor. They are very approachable and Dr Roos offered to. make a special trip~to Atlanta to meet with the Governor. They also recommende that we contact Dr Jack Blackstone of their Geogia Affiliate and Kermit Harrington their regional representative who is also in Atlanta. They will certainly be pursuing every major candidate, so it is unlikely we will g~t anything unique from them.

see over

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KIWANIS INTERNATIONAL

Contact: R.P.Merridew International Secretary Kiwanis International Building 101 East Erie Street Chicago, Illinois, 60611

Tel: 312-Wh3-2300

PUBLIC SERVICE/CIVIC

Issues: Clear statement of their concerns that probably reflect the views of a large percentage of the country at this time; inflation, increasing taxes, constantly growing· bureacracy, lack of pride in workmanship,

***

lack of pride in the nation, increasing centralization of government,·· worry over energy and the need for reconciliation between environmentalists and industrial raalfties,.lawlessness, and concern that so-called tax reform is an attack on profits,dividendsand capital gains~ ''the

. ' American business sys tern itself"

Comments: Routine input without any particular offers for the future, but a group worth investing some time and effort courting because of their size and influence.

Follow-up: An effort should be made to get the Governor invited to speak at their annual convention.

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AMERICAN SOCIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

Contact: Peter M. Blau President Dept. of Sociology Columbia University New York, N.Y. 10027

Tel: 212-

Social Issues **

Issues: Responded with his personal views r2ther than any organizational position. He feels that the enormous size of so many of our institutions whether private or· Governmental have caused not only the great alienation that has occurred in modern society, but also has contributed significantly to the abuse of power and as such represent a major threat to American society merely by virtue of their bigness.

Comment: He is putting our request on the agenda for the August Council meeting of the organizationand- asking the· individual members to respond to us directly. His response is a little academic, but corroborates what several other respondents have written us.

Follow-up: None immediately.

,

·., .... ; ..

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NATIONAL ORGANIZATION OF WOMEN

Contact: Karen DeCrow President 116 Benedict Ave. Syracuse, N.Y. 13210

(Home)

Tel: 212-922-4536(0ffice)

Feminist issues

Issues: No specific issues discussed other than her desire to meet_with the Governor to discuss ways in which the Democratic party can become more feminist in its orientation._

Comment: It is disappointing that she provided no specific concrete suggestions. This appears a slapdash response.

*

Follow-up: Becuase of the importance of this constituency an effort should probably be made to meet with this woman, btu if her letter is any indication it will not be very productive, and we would probably do best to get our primary input on this topic from other sources.

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AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION

Contact: Aryeh Neier 22 East 40th Street New York, N.Y., 10016

Tel: 212-725-1222

CIVIL LIBERTIES ***

Issues: The right to privacy and Government secrecy were given as the primary issues of concern. This emphasis may have been colored by the impeachment process which was at its height at:the time this letter was written.

Comment: This organization wields immense inf1uence over the intellectual/liberal community, and although ostensibly non-partisan the support of their key officers would help us enormously;

Follow-up: Mr Neier offered to meet with the Govern::,,· when in Atlanta Sept.12-13th. The Governor scheduled to meet·with Mr Charles Morgan, National Political Director in Washington September 24th 1974.

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AMERICAN l©SPITAL ASSOCIATION

Contact: John Alexander~~.::: Mahon Piesident 8 40 Lake Shore !Ti ve Chicago, Illinois, 60611

b'l-5 Tel: 3H2- M - 9400

Health Care

Issues: Recognizes the need for enhanced access to health care for the "unserved and underserved of our society" but stresses his organization's desire to maintain the separation of the Gov~rnment and the private sector in health care. ~sition basically parallels that of the AMA.

Comments: Theyare sponsoring the Ameriplan for Nat. Health Insurance, its '.;:;ly provision is that it calls specified minimum benefits in private health insurance policies.

Follow-up: Mr McMahon will be in Atlanta on October 31st 1974, we should invite him to stop by to see the Governor if he will be in town

**

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AMERICAN DENTAL ASSOCIATION

Contact: Bernard J. Conway Assistant Executive Director Legislation and Legal Affairs 211 East Chicago Avenue Chicago, Illinois. 60611

Tel: 312- WH-4-6730

Dental/Health Affairs *

Issues: Health Insurance Biils and health manpower proposals. They support the original Childrens Dental Health Act (S.429).They believe comprehensive dental services for children should have the highest priority in any national health program, and that any national health insurance plan should include provision for the coverage of health care. We have on file a complete statement of their position on N.H.I.

Comments: Rep. Melvin Price (D.Ill.) introduced.leg·i:;lation to reorganize the Den ta 1 Corps of the Armed Services. He appearst to be t;1e key person on the Hill promoting their interests.

Follow-Up: None immediately, but we should invite them to any health meeting we have and also offer them input when we put together our final health policy position.

·. <.:. -..

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AMERICAN CHIROPRACTIC ASSOCIATION

Contact: Louis 0. Gearhart, D.C. Executive Director 2200 Grand Avenue Des Moines, Iowa. 50312

Tel:

Chiropractic/Health

Issues: Health care ~nd National Health Insurance. They ask that 'health care' and not 'medical care' be stressed. They want all Federal support for service delivery, research, and training to provide equal provision for chiropractic as other helth professions.

Follow-Up: None at present. Use of the term 'medical care' should be avoided in any public statements if possible.

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ASSOCIATION FOR COMPUTING MACHINERY

Contact: Jean E. Sammet {Miss) President IBM Corporation 545 Technology Square Cambridge, Mass 02139

Computer Industry

Tel:

Issues: They are presently preparing a paper listing issues of concern to their membership that they will send us. They do not at present have any definable concerns although they responded very positively to the inquiry.

Comment: The Governor spoke to them at, their last annual meeting which was in Atlanta, they recalled this very positively.

Follow-up: None at present.

*

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AMERICAN PERSONNEL AND GUIDANCE ASSOCIATION Guidance/Education **** Contact: Patrick J. McDonough, Ed.D.

Issues:

Assistant Executive Director for Professional Affairs 1607 New Hampshire Ave. N.W. Washington, D.C. 20009

Tel: 202-483-4633

Dr McDonough conducted a special poll of their members to 9et an adequate answer to our letter. The priority issues were: 1) Politicians fail to use adequately. professional groups.such as this one to get input on key issues, -they should do it much more., 2) Candidates should be aware of their obligation to all constituents-"open door" and "open ears". 3) Reduce duplication in education f.:·.:.:tions in the Federal Government. 4) Encourage support for industry-labor-education cooperation. Also included in the letter are seven specific issues along the same line, that should be referred to if any statement is to be made touching on this area~

Comment: A considerable amount of effort obviously went into answering our·· letter, and they clearly would like to have continuing input.·

Follow-up: As we develop our policy psition on education they should be kept involved. Also if possible it might be useful for the Governor to meet this man on one of his trips to Washington.

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. I

..

NATIONAL FEDERATION OF INDEPENDENT BUSINESS

Contact: Bill Burson Area Director, State and Local Affairs 3004-1 Buford HighwayN.E. Atlanta, Ga. 30329

Tel: 404-634-1446

Small Business ****

Issues: Bill Burson fon-sarded to us a list of policy issues prepared by the National Office in San Mateo, California. These are on file with his letter. The major points in the paper are, opposition to anti-trust laws, oppose economic controls, seek liberalization of first year depreciation allowance, oppose further increase in the minimum wage, and favor legislation to prevent crippling strik~s .

Comment: This paper is as clear as any in concisely laying out the issues that concern this group. Many of their concerns are things we can easily support and would bring us some attention from this group which is large and influencial.

Follow-up: None immediately

. . ~:. ': ·:.

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NATIONAL COUNCIL ON CRIME AND DELINQUENCY

Contact: Milton G. Rector President Continental Plaza 411 Hackensack Avenue Hackensack, New Jersey 07601

Tel: 201-488-0400

Crime ** **

Issues: They provided us with pamphlets summarizing their position on, Nondagerous Offenders, Sentencing of Narcotic Offenders, and Victimless crimes. Main complaint about the administration•s policy.is its failure to apply or even respond to the recommendations of the National Advisory Commissions recommendations. In particular they favor a phasing out of the present U.S. Bureau of Prisons and the development of a new Federal structure to provide leadership in this area.

Comment: They provided some very good material with some very via~le positions that we might want to consider. This is a good source for speech material or for developing our criminal justice policy pos·ition.

Follow-up: None immediately, but we might want to get their reaction to anything we d~velop in this :tea. He did make an offer to come to Georgia Specially to meet with the Governor. Maybe we could have him do this.

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AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS

Contact: Joseph Duffey General Secretary One DuPont Circle-Suite 500 Washington D.C. 20036

Tel: 202-466-8050.

ACADEMIC INTERESTS

Issues: No specific issues mentioned. They will send us from time to time organizational statements, and policy documents. They will also send us suggestions of specialists from among their mebership who have worked on their various committees;

Comment: We could benefit from providing us the assistance of various experts.

**

Also it would help us to get strong supQorters .and spoke~men in the . academic community. Duffey ran for the Senate in Connecticut-lost to We1cker

Follow-Up: We should probably establish a more .direct personal contact with Mr Duffey. Peter Bourne might get together with him, and perhaps the Governor could see him at some point while in Washington.

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.. I

ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS

Contact: Mary Ellen Uribe 468 Park Avenue South New York, N.Y. 10016

Tel: 212-686-1100

ALCOHOLISM

Issues: Concerned about alcoholism, but a fellowship of individuals that does not involve itself as an organization in any policy issues.

Follow-up: In light of their policy of non-involvement no follow up is indicated .

,

*

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AMERICAN FORESTRY ASSOCIATION

Contact: William E. Towell Executive Vice President 1319 Eighteenth Street N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036

Tel: 202-467-5810

CONSERVATION ***

Issues: Balanced use of all natural resources is the major objective of the organization. They are concerned about the lack of management and professional direction in the use of the nations forests. They include a list of 14 specific steps they would like to see taken by government officials. These include an Eastern Wilderness System, placing all public lands and minerals under a leasing system, a comprehensive nationwide land use planning law.

Comment: This is a time consuming response and their position is one we could easily support.

Follow-up: We should try to arrange for the Governor to speak at their next annual meeting.

,

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NATIONAL COUNCIL OF FARMER COOPERATIVES

Contact: Kenneth D. Naden President 1129 Twentieth Street, N.W. Washington D.C. 20036

Tel: 202-659-1525

FARM

Issues: Main protection of the Cooperatives isIRS Section 521 and Subchapter T

**

They oppose any attempt to repeal these sections. They are concerned about the transportation of produce, particularly the need for more rail-cars and the decline in rail line serving rural communities and storage facilities. They are concerned about maintaining their partial immunity from anti- trust legislation. They are also concerned that the Government take steps to maintain the supplies of fuel and fertilizer, minimize barriers to world trade, and stabilize the agricultural labor situation.

Comment: A lenghthy letter to which considerable thought seems to have been given.

Follow-up: He recommends that we contact Mr D. W. Brooks, Chairman of the Board, Goldkist, Inc. in Atlanta. It might be a good idea for the Governor to meet him. Also we could folloe up with someone meeting with Mr Naden in Washington.

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NATIONAL PARKS Arm cor~SERVATION ASSOCIATION'

Contact: f982°~Y~~K~ge~~~t~treet Washington, D.C. 20009

Tel: 202-667-3352

Conservation/Ecology

Issues: No ~ecific issues, but he is also Chairman Environmental Coalition for North America, and of the Executive Committee, Citizens Committee on Natural Resources. ··

* **

Comments: Lifelong Democrat, Franklin Coun.ty, Pennsylvania (see individual mailing ca card)

Follow-up: He expresses desire for meeting w:ith the Governor or his representative. This should be done as soon as possible.

Also prepare an article for their publication

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. ~.

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N ATIONAL SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERS

Contact: Paul H Ro!Di ns Exe cu tile CT rector 2J29 K Street l'l. W.

·Washington, D.C. 20006

Tel: 202-331-7020

SCIENCE/ENGINEERING/TECHNOLOGY

. '. ·'".'~ ..

Issues: Failureof recent adniinistrations to adequately use the technological ecpertise and resources in the country. Feast and famine for scientific rese~rch .High level organization needed in future administrations to insure full use of the country's scientific and technological talent.

Comment: This man took the time to write a l.enghthy and well thought out letter. Much of the ~ntent could serve as direct speech material.

Follow-up: He asks for a continuing dialogue. We should contact him JErhaps for a largergroup meeting of people .concerned about scientific issues.

**

I l i

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. ·•· ..

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•.

AMERICAN l©SPITAL ASSOCIATION

Contact: John A 1 exander ~:c Mahon Piesident 8 40 Lake Shore Iri ve Chicago, I 11 i noi s, 60611

tits Tel: 312- M - 9400

Hea 1th. Care

Issues: Recognizes the need for enhanced access to health care for the 11 unserved and underserved of our society 11 but stresses his organization's desire to maintain the separation of the Government and the private sector in health care. R>sition basically parallels that of the AMA.

Comments: Theyare sponsoring the Ameriplan for Nat. Health Insurance, its only provision is that it calls specified minimum benefits in private health insurance policies.

Follow-up: MrMcMahon will be in Atlanta on October 31st 1974, we should invite him to stop by to see the Governor if he will be in town

**

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I' I

v--· National Congress of American Indians

1346 Conn.Ave.NW Lyn Aument Wash.,DC 20036 Public Info.

Officer

Amer~r ~1424 16th St.NW Leon Shull National Dir. Democractic Action Wash.,DC 20036

- 2 -

650 Represents 350,000 Indians

65,000

Anoth~--Mtfher ~ 407 N. Maple Dr. for Peace ·; Beverly Hills,

Florence Warner 185,000 Exec. Sec.

~ Calif. 90210

League of Women 1730 M.St.NW Lucy Wilson Benson President

Voters of the U.S. Wash.,D.C.

Party

t--La Roza Unida

~' National States Rights Party

310 First St.SE Carl C.Rove Wash. ,D.C. 20003 Exec. Dir.

468 Park Ave.S. New York, NY 10016

1410 W.Zavala Crystal City, Texas 78839

Serphin R. Maltese Exec. Dir.

Mario Campean Exec. Officer

P.O.Box 1211 Edward R. Marietta, Ga. Fields

160,000

95,000 College Republicans

129 ,017

67,000 Chicanos

12,000

30060 ~ National Sec.

(~~~~m££~ '-~~g0o~~.Ave. · ~- ~~~~~~~~~P~onl-:-OOO,oo~=:~ ·-·--·----(;?'"- ~lash ,nc 20037 -----------~---·-----·-·

Academy of Political 3937 Chestnut St. Ingeborg Hessler 22,500 and Social Science Philadelphia,Pa. Business Managr.

19104

Annual

Annual

1974-May 6-10 San Francisco

Biennial

Annual

Annual Always Labor Day

Biennial

Always April Philadelphia

Indian we.lfare

"Formulate liberal policy"

Activist women

Political involvement

Conservative

Conservative

Chicano a~tivism i

I

Conservative

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Koreah Cultural and Freedom Foundation

t...---National Urban League

Amer~ Conservative Union

ADDRESS

Box 365 Park Ridge, 'Ill. 60068

1028 Conn. Ave. ,NW

Wash. ,D.C. 20036

22 E. 40th St. New YorR,NY 10016

55 E. 52nd St. New York, NY 10002

422 First St. S.E. Wash.,D.C.20003

Liber~obby ~ 300 Indep.Ave.SE ~Jash. ,DC 20003

~ ?'·· Young Americans , ~ 1221 Mass.Ave. for Freedom / Wash.,DC 20005 ~·

American Economic Assoc.

1313 21st Ave. South Nashville,Tenn. 37207

PUBLIC AFFAIRS ORGANIZATIONS

KEY STAFF PERSON

John Crippen Exec. Sec.

Bo Hi Pak President

Aryeh Neier Exec. Dir.

MEMBERSHIP

60,000

100,000

130,000

Vernon Jordan 50,000 Exec. Dir.

Robert E. 25,000 Baumann Sec.

Curtis B.Dall Chairman

Wayne J. Thorburn Exec. Dir.

240,000

66 '700 :·

Prof .Rendings 18,259 Tels Sec./Treas.

ANNUAL MEETING

Annual

Biennial

Annual

Biennial

1974-Dec.28-30 San Francisco

1975-0ct.2-4 Dallas

1976-Sept.16-18 Atlantic City

INTEREST OR CONCERN

Educate about evils of Communism

Asia (Directory)

Civil liberties.

Black affairs, expeci ally jobs.

Conservative lobbying

Conservative issues.

Economic policy

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,...., ..

-~ - 4 -

American 1700 18th N.W. Melvin 19,360 1974-May 6-10 Mental health care Psychiatric Wash.,D.C.20009 Sabshin,M.D. Psychi'atrists Detroit Association Med. Dir. 1975-May 5-9

Anaheim

v 1976-May 10-14 Atlantic City

American Public 1015 18th St.NW James R. 26,000 1974-0ct.21-25 Pub 1 i c hea 1th. Health Association Wash., D.C. Kimmey,M.D. Health New Orleans

20036 Exec. Dir. professionals 1975-0ct.13-17

~ Anaheim

National 1522 K St.NW E.B.Whitten 32,000 1974-0ct.14-16 Mental and physical Rehabilitation Wash.,D.C.20005 Exec. Dir. Rehabilitation Las Vegas rehab il ita ti on. Association workers 1975-0ct.13-15

Cincinnati 1976-0ct.26-30

~· Hollywood, Fl a.

American College 55 East Erie St. C.Roll ins 34,500 1974-0ct.21-25 Surgery of Surgeons Chicago, Ill. Hanlon,M.D. Surgeons Miami

60611 Director 1975-0ct.13-17

~ San Francisco

American Society 5555 West Loop Stephen B. 21 ,000 Always June Hea 1th ca re. for Medical South,Suite 200 Friedheim Medical 1974-New Orleans Technology Houston, Texas Exec. Off. technicians 1975-San Francisco

77401 1976-Chicago v--

American Vetinary 600 South D.A.Price 22,000 1974-July 22-25 Animal care Medicine Assoc. Michigan Ave. Exec.V.Pres. Vets. Denver

Chicago, Ill. 1975-July 14-17 60605 Anaheim

1976-July Cincinnati

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~ - 3 -

American Dietetic 620 Michigan Robert M. 23,000 1974-0ct. 7-11 National nutrition Association Avenue Crum Dietitians Philadelphia

Chicago, Ill. Exec. Dir. ~· 60611

American College 1 East Wacker Michael 12,500 1974-Apr.29-May 2 Family planning, of Obst. and Gynecol. Chicago, Ill. Newton, M.D. Obstetricians Las Vegas maternal and child

60601 1975-May 5-8 health. Boston

1976-May 10-13

!---' Da 11 as

American 6000 Exec.Blvd. Leo C. 12,000 Always October Occupational Suite 200 Fanning 1974-Wash. ,D.C. Therapy Assoc. Rock vi 11 e, Md. Exec. Dir. 1975-Milwaukee

20852 1976-San Francisco ~ American 7000 Chipewa J.Harold 17 '143 1974-June 18-22 Eye care.

Optonietrists Street Bailey Wash. ,D.C. Association St.Louis, Mo. Exec. Dir. 1975-June 17-21

63119 Hot Springs,Ark.

~ 1976-Las Vegas

American 2215 Constitut. Wi 11 i am S. 50,000 1974-Aug.3-9 Pharmaceutical sales. Pharmaceutical Avenue Apple Pharmacists Chicago Association Wash., D. C. Exec. Dir. 1975-Apr.19-25

v 20037 San Francisco

American Physical 1156 15th St.NW Royce P. 17,000 1974-June 16-24 Therapy Assoc. Wash.,D.C. 20005 Noland Physical Montreal

Exec. Dir. Therapists 1975-June 15-21 Anaheim,Calif.

1976-June 27-July 2 New Orleans

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Name

American Mathematical Society

Mathematical Society of America

American Society of Mechanical Engineers q

~ American Society for

Metals i----

American Institute of Mining, Metallingical, Petrolleum Engineers

Address

P.O. Box 6248 Providence, R.I.

02904

1225 Conn. Ave. NW Wash., DC 20036

345 East 47th St. New York, NY

Metalo Park Ohio, 44073

345 E. 47th St. New York, NY

10017

Key Staff Person

Gordon L. ~ Walker Exec. Dir.

Alfred B. Willcox Exec. Dir.

Rogert B. Finch Exec. Dir.

Allan Roy Putnam Managing Dir.

Joe B. Alford Exec. Dir.

Membership Convention Interest or Concern

14,000 Mathematicians Semiannual and educators 1974-Jan.

18,500 College teachers and industrial mathe­maticians

64,740 Mechanical Engineers

40,000 Metallungists

49,744 Engineers

San Francisci 1975-Jan 23-27

Wash., DC Aug 5-8

Always Jan. 1974-San

Francisco 1975-Wash., DC

Largely teaching of mathematics.

Semiannual Research and 1974- New Orleans professional

New York - standards 1975-Boston

Houston

1974-0ct. 21- . 0All ~spec ts of Detroit 24 using metals.

1974-Feb.23-28 Promote economic Dallas production of

1975-New York minerals, metals 1976-Las Vegas and fuels.

American Museum of ~atural History

Central Park West Thomas D. Nicholson 234,000 Study of living things. Several publications.

at 79th St. Director

·~ American Nuclear qSociety

New York, NY 10024

244 East Ogden Ave. Hindale, Ill.

60521

International 10 Rickenbacker Oceanographic Foundation Va. Key, Miami,

Fla. 33149

Octave J. DuTemple Exec. Sec.

10,000 Professionals in the nuclear field

Mrs. F. May Smith 65,000 Oceanographers

Semiannual Advancement of 1974-June 23- use of nuclear

27 power. Philadelphia

Nov. 17-21 Wash., DC

Oceanography

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~ - 4 -

Optimist 4494 Lindell Blvd. Hugh H. 105,000 1974-June 23-27 Service and civic International St. Louis, Cranford Atlanta affairs

Missouri 63108 Exec. Sec. 1975-June 22-26 San Francisco

1976-June 27-July 1

v Wash.,D.C.

Rotary 1600 Ridge Ave. Harry A. 723 ,000 1974-June 9-13 International · Evanston,Ill. Stewart Minneapolis

60201 Gen. Sec. 1975-June 8-12 Montreal

1976-May 16-20

v Buenos Aires

National Assoc. 600 Southern Chauncey 56,000 Biennial Social work. of Social Workers Bldg. Alexander Social workers

15th and H St.NW Exec. Dir. Wash., D.C.

~ 20005

United 30 Second Ave. Helen F. 20,000 Annual Service to veterans Voluntary Service San Mateo,Calif. Lengfeld Volunteers and others.

·v-- 94401 National Pres.

YMCA 291 Broadway Dr. Robert W. 7,500,000 Biennial meeting New York, N.Y. Harlan

~ 10007 Exec. Dir.

YWCA 600 Lexington Edith M. 2,400,000 Triennial Avenue Lerrigo New York, N.Y. Exec. Dir. 10022

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HEALTH AND MEDICAL ASSOCIATIONS

KEY STAFF NAME ~

ADDRESS PERSON MEMBERSHIP ANNUAL MEETING INTEREST OR CONCERN

American Geriatric 10 Columbus Edward 10,000 1974-April 17-18 Aging Society Circle Henderson,M.D. Physicians and Toronto

New York,N.Y. Exec. Dir. others.

l-/' 10019

American 2200 Grand Louis 0. 8,891 1974-June 30-July 5 Chiropracty Chiropractic Des Moines, Gearhart Chiropracters Chicago Association Iowa . Exec. Dir. 1975-June

Honolulu 1976-June

L---· Houston

National Assoc. 814 Thayer Ave. Frederick C. 17,000 1974-June 30-July 6 Problems of the deaf. of the Deaf Silver Springs, Schreiber Adult deaf Seattle ,__._ Maryland 20910 Exec. Sec. persons

American Dental 211 East Chicago C. Gordon 116 ,000 1974-Nov.10-14 Association Avenue Watson,D.D.S. Dentists Wash.,D.C.

Chicago,Ill. Exec. Dir. 1975-0ct.26-30 60611 Chicago

1976-Nov. 14-18

l----Las Vegas

International 8 Jackson Pl. J David H. 25,000 Annual Rescue and First Ca 1 dwe 11 , N\. J . Slayback Volunteer and Aid Association 07006 Exec. Dir. professional

and Ed. rescue work~rs v-

American Heart 44 East 23rd St. James M. 91,000 1974-Nov.14-19 Support heart disease Association New York, N.Y. Hundley,M.D. Physicians and Chicago research.

10010 Exec. Dir. laymen 1975-Nov.13-18

~ Anaheim

American Hospital 840 North Lake John 24,504 1974-Aug.12-15 Association Shore Dr. Alexander McMahon Chicago

Chicago,111. President 1975-Aug. 18-21 60611 Chicago

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- 2 -\

4200 Pine St. Edward C. 20,374 1974-Mar.31-Apr.5 Internal medicine. Philadelphia, Rosenow, Jr. New York Pa. 19104 ~1.0. 1975-Apri l 6- ll

Exec.V.Pres. San Francisco

~ 1976-April 5-9 Philadelphia

535 N.Dearborn Ernest B. 219,000· Semiannual Health care medicine. Street Howard,M.D. PhysiC:i ans 1974-June 23-27 Chicago,Ill. Exec.V.Pres. Chicago 60610 Dec .1-4

Portland 1975-June 15-19

Atlantic City Nov.30-Dec.4 Honolulu

1976-June 27-July l Da 11 as Nov.28-Dec.l

~ Philadelphia

American Assoc. l East Wacker Dene R.Murray 15,000 1974-Denver Hea 1th ca re. of Medical Drive Exec. Dir. Medical 1975-Louisville Assistants Chicago, Ill. Assistants

v- 60601

National Assoc. 1800 N.Kent St. Brian 950 1974-Nov.20-24 Mental health care. for Mental Health Rosslyn, Va. O'Connell Local Chapters Wash. ,D.C.

22209 Exec. Dir. 1975-Nov.17-22 San Diego

1976-Mov.15-20

t---' Philadelphia

American Nurses 2420 Persling Rd Eileen M. 175,000 1974-June l 0~~14 Nursing health care. Association Kansas City, Jacobi Nurses San Francisco

Missouri 64108 Exec. Dir. 1976-June 6-11 Atlantic City

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Name

(/ American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics ~

American Institute of Architects

Society of Automotive Engineers

t,,--American Inst. of Biological Sciences

-~ American Society for Microbiology

~ American Chemical

Scoiety

SCIENTIFIC, ENFINEERING AND TECHNICAL ORGANIZATIONS

Address

1290 Ave of the Americas

New York 10019

1735 New York A~e. NW

Wash., DC 20006

Key Staff Person

James J. Harford Exec. Sec.

William Slayton Exec. V. Pres.

2 Pennsylvania Plaza Joseph Gilbert ·New York, NY 10001 Sec. & Gen. Mgr.

3900 Wisconsin Ave. John R. Olive NW Director

Wash. , DC 20016

1913 I St. NW Wash., DC 20006

R.W. Sarber Exec. Dir.

1155 16th St. NW Federick·T. Wall Washington, DC 20036 Exec. Dir.

Membership

32,000 Scientists and Engineers

22,200 Architects

27,000 Transportation Engineers

14,500 Scientists in lif esciences

16,000 Microbiologists

110,000 Chemists and Chemical engineers

Interest or Convention Con~ern

Always Oct. Science and

1974-May19-23 Wash., DC

1975-May 18-22 Atlanta

1976-May 2-6 Philadelphia

Technology

Always-Jan Applied engineering Always-Detroit in all aspects of

transportation

1974-June Federal support of Tempe, Arizona research.

1974-May12-17 Chicago

1975-Apr. 27-May 2nd

New York 1976-May 2-7 Atlanta City

1974-Mar3lst- A,pplied Chemistry Aug 5th

Los Angeles Sept. 8-13

Atlantic City 1975-Apr 6-11

Philadelphia Aug 24-29

Chicago

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Name

~ American Institute of Chemical Engineers

~-

American Society of Civil Engineers

v Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers

Council of Engineers and Scientists Organizations

,___--National Society of Professional Engineers

~ National Geographic Scoei~

Society of Manufacturing Engineers

Address

345 East 47th St. New York, NY 10017

345 East 47th St. New York,.NY 10017

345 East 47th St. New York, NY 10017

1140 Connecticut Suite 809

Wash., DC 20036

2029 K St. NW Wash., DC 20006

17th and M St. NW Wash., DC 20036

20501 Ford Rd. Dearborn, Michigan

48128

Key Staff Person

F.J. Van Antweopen Exec. Sec.

Eugene Zwayer Exec. Dir.

Donald G. Fink Exec. Dir. &

Paul H. Robbins Exec. Dir.

Melvin M. Payne President

R. William Taylor Gen. Manager

Membership

38,000 Chemical engineers

67,000 Civil Engineers

158,000 Scientists and

70,000 Engineers

8,300,000q

45,000 Mfg. Engineers

Convention

1974-Nov 28 Wash., DC

1975-Nov 27 Los Angeles

1976-NovH4 Chicago

Quaterly 1974-Jan 21-25 Los Angeles

Apr. 22-26 Cincinnati

July 15-18 Montreal

Oct. 21-25 Kansas City

Usually March New York

Annual

Interest or Concern

Standards, Professional Quality

Professional Standards -

employment and Federal support.

Scientific issues and support of research.

Coordination and legislation

concerns

Semiannual 1974-Bilosci,Miss.

All issues effecting the engineering profession

Atlantic City 1975-Tusan

Minneapolis

1974-Apr 29 -May 4

Philadelphia 1975-Apr 7-11

Detroit 1976-May 3-7

Philadelphia

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·~

~ American Assoc. of School

Administration ,___.---· National Business Education Assoc.

Ihternational Federation of Catholic =..... ....... =.._

~ Association for Childhood Educ. International

National Council of Teachers of English

ADDRESS

1801 N. M:x>re St. Arlington, Va. 22209

~les Intl. Airpo- rt - . '

P~O. Bo~-17402 Wash. ,D.C. 20041

EDUCATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS

. KEY STAFF PERSON

Paul B. Salrcon Executive 0: Sec.

IDr. 0.J. Byrn­side Jr.

Exec. Division

MEMBERSHIP

18,0@© School Adm.in.

20"~ 000 Leaders of Business

CONVENTION

Semiannual Usually Feb. Att. City & March

Annual

416~~<J---~~~-~~-:---:-:-:-:--:--:-:--~~---------Mrs. tfuiiles D. l,ooo·~.000 Triennial ____ _

:t:ho!ic Univ. of American

Washington, D.C. 20017

3615 Wisconsin Ave. Wash,,D.C. 20016

Missai AlUrma.l of Editor eatholic

Instit.

Alberta. L. Meyer 50,000 Executive Sec. ;parents,

Teachers

201 16th St. N.W. Sam M. 1ambert 1,103,485 Wash., D.C. 20036 Executive Sec.

1111 Kenyon Rd. UrQana., Ill.

61801

Robert F.Hogan Executive sec.

130,000 Teachers of English

1974-April 16-19 _wash., o.c. 1975-Mar.30 Apr.4

New Orleans 1976-Apr.18-23 Salt Lake City

197 4-July\ ,3-8 Minneapolis

Annual

IN'IEREST or.:CONCERN

Advance School Administration

Education and well being of Children

All Education Issues

Increase effectiveness of ,Teaching English and. lfterature -

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~ American Correctional Association

,__-­National Council on Crime and Delingquency

~ United Native Americans.

Nat1~ssociation for Retarded Children

~ Planned Parenthood ~ World Population

V" National Recreation and Park Association

~ American National Red Cross

- 2 -

4321 Hartwick Rd. Dr. E. Preston - 10 ,000 College Park, Sharp Wardens, Maryland Gen. Sec. Admin.

Superintendents

Continental Plaza 411 Hackensack Avenue Hackensack, N.J.

P.O.Box 26149 San Francisco, Calif. 94126

2709 Avenue E. East

Arlington,Texas 76001

Milton G. Rector Exec. Dir.

Lehman L. Brightman Director

Philip Roos Exec. Dir.

60,000 Social workers, judges, prison officials.

12,000

200,000

335 North LaBrea Jack E.Staggs 48,000 Avenue Exec. Dir. Movie industry Los Angeles, Cal if. 90036

810 Seventh Ave New York, NY l 0019

1601 N.Kent St. Arlington, Va. 22209

-Ahli F. 188 ~, sehe¥f;-M Q~ Affiliate President Organ.

Dwight F. Rettie Exec. Dir.

17,000

17th and D St.NW George M.Elsey 36,400,000 Wash., D. C. President Donors of 20006 $1 or more

1974-Aug.17-25 Houston

1975-Loui svi 11 e

Always June

1974-0ct. 1-5 Milwaukee

1975-0ct.19-25

Last Sunday in June Los Angeles

Always October 1974-St.Louis 1975-Seattle

1974-0ct.20-25 Denver

1975-0ct.19-24 Da 11 as

1976-0ct.17-22 Boston

1974-May 19-22 Minneapolis

1975-April 27-30 Boston

1976-May 9-12 Portland

To improve correction standards.

Crime and delinquency.

Welfare of Indians.

Mental retardation.

Welfare for motion picture employees.

Population control

Conservation

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NAME ~

National Council on the Aging

~ Alcohol and Drug Problems Assoc. of North America

L---­Alcoholics Annonymous

Aker'ican Humane Association

L--"'" National Welfare Rights Organization

Big ~ers of America

Cancer Care Inc.

v Superior Council of U.S. Society of St. Vincent de Paul

ADDRESS

1828 L St. NW Wash.,D.C. 20036

SOCIAL WELFARE ORGANIZATIONS

KEY STAFF PERSON MEMBERSHIP

Jack Ossofsky 1,400 E:l(eC. Dir.

1130 17th St.NW Augustus E. Wash.,D.C. 20036 Hewlett

Exec. Dir.

1 ,688

P.O.Box 459 Grand Central Sta ti on, N. v".

1730 Chicago Avenue Evanston, Ill.

P.O.Box 1266 Denver, Colo. 80201

1424 16th St.NW Wash.,D.C. 20036

Mrs. Fred Tooze President

575,000 Alcoholics

250,000

Rutherford T. 2,000,000 Phillips Exec. Dir.

Thomas E. O'Brian

125,000

46,000 220 Suburban Station Bldg. Phil ade 1 phi a, 19103

Pa. Exec. Dir.

ANNUAL MEETING

Annual

Always September 1974-San Francisco

Every 5 years

1974-Aug.28-Sept.4 St.Paul, Minn.

1974-0ct.13-17 Boston, Mass.

1975-San Diego

Always July

. Annua 1

One Park Ave. New York, N.Y. 10016

Irene G. Buckley Exec. Dir.

28,000 Always June Always New York

1893 Railway Exch. Bldg. 611 01 ive St. St. Louis, Mo. 63101

Dudley L. Baker Exec.Sec.

44,000 Annual Laymen in personal service

INTEREST OR CONCERN

All issues relating to aging.

Alcoholism and drug abuse.

Alcoholism

Federation of all humane groups.

Needs of welfare recipients.

Federation of local agencies.

Social welfare for cancer patients.

Social welfare.

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CULTURAL ORGANIZATIONS

KEY STAFF NAME ADDRESS PERSON MEMBERSHIP ANNUAL MEETING INTEREST OR CONCERN

i.----American Crafts 59 West 53rd St. Dr. Donald L. 35,000 American crafts. Counci 1 New York, N.Y. Wyckoff Designers,

10019 Exec. V.Pres. Architects,

~ Craftsmen

American Personnel 1607 New Charles L. 28,000 1974-New Orleans Guidance and personnel and Guidance Assoc. Hampshire Ave.NW Lewis Personnel workers particularly minority

~Jash. ,D.C. 20009 Exec. Dir .. groups. ~

Organi zatioff of c/o Thomas D. Thomas D.Clark 12,500 Always April American Historians Clark Exec. Sec. Historians 1974-Denver

Indiana Univ. 1975-Boston 112 N.Bryan St. 1976-St.Louis Bloomington, Ind.

~ 47401

American Historical 400 A Street SE Paul L. ~Jard 18,500 Always Dec.28-30 Association Wash.,D.C. 20003 Exec. Sec. Historians 1974-Chicago

1975-Atlanta

!~ 1976-Wash. ,D. C.

American Library 50 East Huron St. Robert 37,000 Semiannual Association Chicago, Ill. Wedgeworth Librarians 1974-Jan.20-26

60611 Exec. Dir. ,__ . Chi ca go \·_ -:I·:uuly 7-13

New York 1975-Jan.26-Feb.l

San Francisco

~ June 22-28 Miami Beach

National Fed. of 600 S.Michigan Dr. Merle 600,000 Biennial Music Music Clubs Ave.,Suite 1215 Montgomery Musicians

Chicago, Ill. President 60605

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~ - 3 -

American Assoc. 1225 Conn.Ave. Bernard E. Nash 4,000,000 1974-April 28-May 2 To improve living for of Retired Persons Wash., D.C. 20036 Exec. Dir. Retired San Diego older people.

~ persons

~N_ationa l Safety 425 North Howard Pyle 11 ,000. Always Chicago All safety issues. Council Michigan Ave. President 1974-Sept.30-0ct.3

Chicago, Ill. 1975-Sept.29-0ct.2

.~ 606ll 1976-0ct. 18-21

Altrusa 332 South Mrs. Dorothy 18,000 Always July Women's service International Michigan Ave. Epple Kuehlhorn Professional 1975-Houston association.

Chicago, Ill. Exec. Dir. women

.v-- 60604

Civil an 115 North 21st~; Frank J. 55,000 Always June Good citizenship. International Street · Bulgarella Business and 1974-Boston

Birmingham,Ala. Exec. Admin. Prof. 1975-Ho llywood 35203 1976-Acapulco

101 East Erie St. R.P. Merri dew 275,000 Always June Chicago, Ill. Sec. 1974-Denver 606ll 1975-Atlanta

~ 1976-San Diego

Lions York and W.L.Wilson 976,848 1974-July 3-6 Service sight International Cermak Roads Admin. Business and San Francisco conservation.

Oak Brook, Ill. Professional 1975-June 25-28 60521 Da 11 as

1976-June 23-26 Honolulu t_...)--- .

National Assoc. 1601 R St.NW Carole A.Early 100,000 Biennial Service of Colored Women's Wash., D.C. Hqtrs. Sec. Black Women Clubs~ 20009

National Exchange 3050 Central Lee Wells 50,000 Annual Club Avenue Exec. Sec. Business and

Toledo, Ohio Professional 43606

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Council for Except­ional Children

~-

Jewish Teachers' Association

L--' National Assoc. for the Education of Young Children

;__--National Congress of Parents and Teachers

~ National Assoc. of Elementary School Princi­pals

National Assoc. of Secondary School Princi-pals

Jefferson Plaza Bldg 1, Suite 900 1411 S. Jefferson Davis Highway Arlington, Va. 22202

11 W. 42nd St. New York, NY 10036

1834 Conn. Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 20009

700 N. Rush St. . Chicago, Ill.

60611

1801 N. Moore St. Arlington, Va. 60611

·]90-45.Assocf~tlcri·_ Dr. Reston, Va. 22070

William C Greer 48,000 Exec. Sec.

Annual Education of men­tally and physically handicapped

Michael Linewand 28,000 Annual President Jewish (NYC)

teach":'.i c!

Dr. Milton E. Akers, Exec. Director

J. Robert Merrill, Man·~:

·.·.>aging Dir.

William L. Pharis, Exec. Sec.

Owen B. Kiernan, Exec. Sec.

ers

.19,000 ·.Nursery '~'School

~ ioirs.

1974: Nov. 6-9 Dallas,TX 1975: Nov. 5-8 Phila, PA

Day care and other child care programs

8,590,622 (May) ~All issues relating Parents, Teachers, Admins.

1974: San :~o education. Antonio 1975: At-

., lantic Cty ;· _L\197 6: Louis-1-,'ville

26,000 Elem. School Princs.

30,000 Sec. School Princs.

1974: Apr.27-May 2

'.;Anaheim, CA 1

\· l 97 5: Apr. 12-17 Minneapolis 1976: Apr. 3-8 Atlantic Cty

1974: Feb. 9.,...13

,··;Atlantic Cty

Education

Education

Page 86: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

Name

v Association of American Trial Lawyers

(__.,/ National Association of Legal Secretaries

v Navy League of the United States

v Reserve Officers Association of the U.S.

v National Parks and Conservation Assoc.

c_/ National Police Officers Association of America

v National Assoc. of Postmasters

~ National Assoc of Retired Fed. Employees

~ National Sheriffs Association

Address

20 Garden St. Cambridge, Mass

02138

1574 E 21st St. Tulsa, Okla. 74114

818 18th St. Wash. , DC 20006

1 Constitution Ave. NE

Wash. , DC 20002

1701 18th St. NW Wash., DC 20009

18905 Taninani Trial

Venice, Fla. 33595

348 Pann. Ave. NW Wash., DC 20004

1909 Q St. NW Wash., DC 20009

1250 Conn. Ave. Suite 320 Wash., DC 20036

Key Staff Person

Ernst W. Bogusch Exec. Dir.

Mascine Dover Exec. Dir.

Vinvent C. Thomas Exec. Dir.

John T. Carlton Exec. Dir.

Anthony Wayne Smith

Pres. & Gen Counsel

Frank J. Schira Exec. Dir.

Edward V. Dorsey Exec. Dir.

Thomas G. Walters President

Terris E. Lucas Exec. Dir.

Membership

27,000 Trial Lawyers

18,000 Legal Sec.

48,000 Volunteer Navey Supporters

68,000 Active or Inactive duty officers

55,000 Conservationists

23,000 Police Officers

34,000 Postmasters

160,000 Retired Fed Employees

22,000 Sheriffs

Convention

Annual

Interest or Concern

"To advance the science of advocacy

Always July 1974-Houston,Texas

Patriotic 1974-San Francisco 1975-New Orleans 1976-Boston

group supporting

strong military

1974-July 3-6 Defense budget Atlanta Strong Military

1975-June 18-22 San Diego

1976-June 30 -July 3

Bal Harbour

Semiannual

Biennial

Annual

Biennial

1974-June 16 -19, Memphis

Parks and Conservation

Law Enforcement

Welfare of retired persons.

Law Enforcement

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~ American Assoc. of University Professors

~ National Retired Teachers Assoc.

~ National Science Teachers Assoc.

American Association of University Women

One DuPont· Circle Washington, D.C. 20036

1225 Conn.Ave. Suite 401 Wash.,D.C. 20036

1201 16th St. NW Wash., D.C. 20036

2401 Virginia Ave.NW Wash., D.C. 20037

Bertram H. Davis, Gen. Sec.

Bernard E.Nash Exec. Director

Robert H.Carleton Exec. Sec.

Alice L.Beeman Exec. Dir.

94,000 1974: College_Apr. 26-27 & Univ. -,,tWash., D.C .. Profs. ,_, 197 5:

May 2-3 Denver

327,564 1974: Retired June 3-6 Teachers Denver

42,000 1974:' Science March 15-19

· Teachers Chicago . 1975:

March 21-25 Los Angeles

173,000 1975: Women June 15-19 College Seattle Graduates

Academic freedom,· tenure, Federal

(~support for higher · 'education

Retirement benefits

Teaching Science

Study/action program .in major policy areas.

Page 88: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

v American Sociological Association

v National Cowboy Hall of Fame and Western Heritage

7 5334 E. 46th St. Tulsa, Oklahoma 74145

1722 N St. NW Wash., D.C. 20036

1700 Northeast 63rd St. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73111

- 2 -

Peggy Chambers 21,000 Mng. Dir. Harmony

Singers

Otto N.Larsen 14,800 Exec. Dir. Sociologists

1974-0ct. Milwaukee

1974-Aug.26-29 Montrea 1.

1975-Aug.25-28 San Francisco

Dean Krakel Managing Dir.

38,000 Always April Fans of the West Always Oklahoma City

Singing

Social science study.

The West.

Page 89: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

Name ~

American Forestry Association

(.;;_/' 4-H Program

v National Peanut

Council

~ National Park

Producers Council ·v--

Burley Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association ~

Flue Cured T.obacco Cooperative Stabilization

j,.../ Sierra Club

Address

1319 18th St. NW Washington, DC

20036

Extension Science U.S. Dept. of Agriculture

Washington, DC 20250

1616 H St. NW Washington, DC

20006

7900 Westpark D. Suite 713

McLean, Va 22101

4715 Grand Dea Moines, Iowa

620 S. Broadway Lexington, Ky.

40508

Key Staff Person

William E. Towell Exec. V. Pres.

E. Dean Vaughan National

Director

John W. Seall Master

John L. Currier President

J. Marvin Gamen Exec. v. Pres.

WP Aben Exec. Sec.

522 Fayetteville St. Fred G. Bond Raleigh, NC 27601 Sec. Treas.

1050 Mills Tower San Francisco, Calif. 94104

J. Michael Mc Coskey

Exec. Dir.

Membership

75,000

5,000,000 Age 9-19

600,000 farm families

200

56,000 Park producers

525,000 Producers of Burley Tobacco

670,000 Tobacco Producers

135,000 Conservation

Convention

1974 -Sept. 29-

0ct. 2 Mackinae Is.,

Mich. 1975 -Oct. 5-8 Wash., DC

1976 -Oct. 17-20 DisneyWorld

Annual

Annual

Annual

Annual

Last Friday in June Raleigh, NC

Biennial '75 '77

Interest or Concern

Forestry and

Wildlife

Character development and farming.

Promotes generai farmers welfare.

Encourages research to improve quality of peanuts.

Federation of state associations.

Administers Gov't Support price.

Marketing

Includes research and scientific aspects of conservation

Page 90: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

Name

_L Defenders of Wildlife

Izaak Walton League of America

~ National Audubon

Society

'"' National Wildf ife Federation

~ Nature Conservancy

'--Wilderness Society

,__ Nat~onal Council of Farmer Cooperatives

Ame~n Farm Bureau Federation

v Farmers Educational and Cooperative Union of America

Add res sq

2000 N St. NW Wash., DC 20036

1800 N Kent St. Suite 806 Arlington, VA

22209

950 Third Ave. New York, N.Y.

10022

1412 16th St. NW Wash., DC 20036

1800 N. Kent St. Suite 800 Arlington, VA

22209

729 15th St. NW Washington, DC

20005

1129 20th St. NW Wash., DC 20036

225 Touhy Ave. Park Ridge, Ill.

60068 P.O.Box 2251 Denver, Colo.

80201

Key Staff Person

Mary Hazell Haines Executive Director

Membership

35,000 Persons in­terested in wildlife.

Convention

Annual

Interest or Concern

Wildlife protection

Raymond C. Hubley, Jr.

50,000 Conservationists

Always July Conservation 1974-Huntington

Exec. Dir. W. Va. 1975-Des Moines

Iowa

Elvis J. Stahr 200,000 Annual Conservation President Conservationists

Thomas L. Kimball 700,000 + 3,000,000 1974-Mar. Exec. V. Pres. indirect supporters Denver Convervation

Everett M. Woodman 28,000 Annual Conservation Conservationists

Stewart M. 77,000 Annual Conservation. Brandberg Conservationists

Exec. Dir.

KennetA D. Nader 133 Associations Annual "Protect rights Exec. V. Pres. representating of farmers"

3,000,000 farmers

Wm. J. Kukfuss 2,000,000 Annual Analyses farm President Farmers problems.

Tony T. Duhart 250,000 General Agri-President. farm families Annual cultural Welfare

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Name -v American National' Cattlemen's Association

,,..,. American Soybean Assoc.

v Great Plains Wheat Inc.

v National Association of Wheat Growers:

~ Plains Cotton Growers

,___, Rice Council for Market Deve~opment

~ Technical Association of the Pultfaiui Paper Industry

AGRICULTURAL ORGANIZATIONS AND COMMODITIES EXCHANGES

Address

1001 Lincoln St. Denver, Colorado

80201

Hudson, Iowa 50643

1030 15th St. NW Suite 340 Washington DC

20005

1030 15th St. NW Wash., DC 20005

1720 Ave. M Lubbock, Texas

79401

3917 Richmond Ave. Houston, Texas

77027

One Dunnwoody Park Atlanda, Ga. 30341

Key Staff Person

G.S. Spencer Exec. Vice.Pres.

Ralph T. Jackson Exec. Vice Pres~

Howard W. Hardy President

Jerry Rees Exec. Vice Pres.

Arnold A. Johnson Exec. Vice Pres.

L.O. Tiedt Exec. Vice Pres.

Membership Convention

300,000 Always Jan. Ranchers, breeders 1974 -and feeders of beef- San Diego cattle.

17,000 Producers and processors of soybeans.

360,000 Federation of 8 State Wheat Growers Assoc.

79,000 Wheat Growers

Always August

Quarterly

Annual

Interest or Concern

Includes all breed registry associations.

To promote new markets for soy­beans in the U.S. and abroad.

Promotion of Wheat market in U.S. and abroad.

Market Development

25,000 Annual To further use of Cotton Producers Warehousemen

22,000 Rice producers, millers, dryers

always Oct. High Plains Cotton always Lubbock,

Texas

Annual Promotes the market for rice

Philip E. Nethercut 13,000 1974-Jan 14-17 Technology of the Exec. Sec.-Trea. Professionals in the Miami Beach, paper industry.

paper, pulp, forestry Fla. and plastics industry 1975-Feb. 24-

27th New York City

1976-Mar-22-24th San Francisco

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~ American Political Science Assqc.

;__----· United Nations Association of the U.S.A.

L---' National Council of Negro Women

I--National Council of Women of the U.S.

t..-National Federation of Business and . Professional Women's Clubs

1527 New Hampshire Ave. Wash.,DC 20036

Euron M. Kirkpatrick Exec. Dir.

- 3 -

18,000

833 U.N.Plaza New York, NY 10017

Porter McKeever 50,000 President

1346 Conn.Ave.NW Dorothy I.Height 4,000,000 Wash.,DC 20036 National

President

345 East 46th St. Hope Skillman New York, NY Schary 10017 President

2012 Mass.Ave.NW Lucille H. Wash.,DC 20036 Shriver

Director

957 East 73rd St Wilma Scott hicago,Ill. Heide

60649 President

23,000,000 Including affiliate organizations

178,000 Women

400 Local chapter

I 1302 18th St.NW Doris Meissner 30,000 Suite 603 Exec. Dir. Wash.,DC 20036

~ National Assoc. for the Advancement of Colored People

1790 Broadway New York, MY 10019

Roy Wilkins Exec. Dir.

450,673

· Annua 1

Biennial

Biennial

Annual

Usually July 1974-Chicago 1975-Las Vegas 1976-Denver

Annual

Annual

Political science

Support U.N.

All women's issues

Women in politics

Page 93: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NAME ·.--_t-'

Son·s of· Norway

,_, Independent Order of Oddf ellows

.;L--Fraternal prder of Police

/./ Polish Nat'l Alliance of the U.S.A.

v Serb Nat'l

. Federation

v Nat'' 1 Feder-ation of Grandmother

,Clubs of Arner.

-~-- v. .Ukramian ~at'l Assoc.

. ~

Country Women's Council U.S.A.

'ADDRESS'

1455 West Lake St. Minneap9lis, ._. · Minn .<_554 08 ,

16 West Cha:se st. :Baltimore Md. 21201

KEY STAFF PERSON

Magne Smedvig, Gen.Mgr.

A. Ford Win:ters, Sovereign Grand Sec.

1501 N. Miracle M.L. Mile Stri~, Richardson, Tucson, Afiz. Nat'l Sec.

151·4:-2b w· •. · nivi~ion: :st. Chicago, Ill. 60622

Aloysius A. ·Mazewski, .Nat-'l Pres.

MEMBERSHIP

75,000

1,200,000

80' 000.

332' 962' _/ ".···

3414. Fifth . Robert Rode {i, oo·o;_ Avfi., Pitts-· Stone, Pres . burgh,. Pa. i5213

I

203' N·. Wabash Myrtle 20, 000. Ave.,-Chicago George, Pres.Grandmothers· Ill.- . .

81-83 Grand'.· st.; Jersey,.'. City; N..J. · 07302

307 N.· Ful t6n Keo-t;.a; . Iowa 522_48 .

Joseph .Lesawyer, Pres.

.:.80, ooo .

Mrs. Albert 3,000,000 Stoutner, Chrm.

ANNUAL MEETING. INTEREST--OR CONCERN

Biennial Norweigan/Arnericans 1974, Aug. Colgary, Canada

1974-S~pt.14-20 Fraternal · Philadelphia 1975-Sept.13-19 Portland 1976-Sept .18-,24

Biennial

Quadrennial 1975

Quadrennial

Annual ..

Quadrennial ·-

Annual

Benefits for Police Officers

Polish/Americans

National Grandmother's ·Day ..

": ·· _ Ukratl\ian Americans

Federation of Rural Women's Clubs.

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Name ~

~ National Association of Counties

Natio~sociation Qf Internal Revenue

Employees

Americi~cature Society

GOVERNMENTAL,

Address

1612 K St. NW Wash., DC 20006

1001 Connecticut Ave.

Wash., DC 20036

Iran Works Pike Lexington, Ky.

40505

1730 K St. NW Suite 1101

Wash., DC 20036

1155 East 60th St. Chicago, Ill

60637

Same

PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION,

Key Staff Person

Allen E. Pritchard Exec. V. Pres.

Bernard F. Hillenbrand

Exec. Dir.

Brenard Crihfield Sec. Treas.

Vincent L. Carnery Nat' 1 Press ·' -=

Bert H. Early Exec. Dir.

Clenn R. Withers Exec. Dir.

MILITARY, LEGAL

Membership

15,000

21,000 Elected County Officials

54 Governors

33,000 Present and past U.S. Treasury Employees

158,205 Lawyers

47,000 Judges, Law Teachers

Convention

1974 Dec. 1-5 Houston, Tex.

1975-Nov. 30 Dec. 4 Miami

1976 -Nov. 28 Dec. 2 Denver

Always July

Anntia1.

Biennial

Interest or Concern

Municipal policy

Largely concerned with planning and fiscal issues.

1974-Aug 12-16 All issues Honolulu relating to the

1975-Aug 11-15 legal profession Montreal

1976-Aug 7-12 Atlanta

Same Efficient administration of

justice.

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Name

~ American Society for the Advancement of Science

National Academy of Sciences

Address

1200 17th St. NW Wash., DC 20036

1515 Mass Ave. NW Wash., DC

2101 Constitution Ave.

Wash., DC 20418

Key Staff Person

Kenneth B. Little Exec. Officer

William Bevan Exec. Off.

John s. Coleman Exec. Officer

Membership

32,000 Psychologists

130,000 in all fields of science

Convention Interest or

Concern

1974-New Orleans 1975-Chicago 1976-Washington,

DC

1974-Feb. 25 -Mar. 2

San Francisco 1975-Jan 27-31

New York City

7 Federal Health ~

financing for psychologists

All issues affecting scientists.

Unique organization which identified key policy issues in different areas of science.

Page 96: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

:\~!Name

National Farm and Power Equipment Dealers Association

Nat~l Association of Realtors

/..---:{ National Restaurant Association

Address

Box 1146 Durham, NC 27702

231+0 Hampton Ave. St. Louis, Mo.

63139

529 14th St. NW Wash, , DC 20004

Key Staff.q

Charles Cooper Exec. Sec.

Charles R. Fre­derick

Exec. V. Pres.

Paul F. Morton Gen. Mgr.

Membership Convention

3,700 Professional Annual News Photographers

11,000 Retailers of Annual farm machinery

4,734 Reporters, writers and Newsmen

Interest or Concern

Press/News Photography

Agriculture

155 E. Superior St. H. Jackson Pontius 103,000 Always Nov. Real Estate Chicago, Ill. Exec. V, Pres.

60611

1530 North Lake Shore Drive

Chicago, Ill

60610

Dr. William P. Fisher 10,500 Exec. v. Pres. Food Service

Owners

1974-Las Vegas 1975-San Francisco

Always May Always Chicago

Improving calib of food servic

f aciliti.e.s·.

Page 97: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

Name ~

National Retail Merchants Assoc.

v--Sales and Marketing Executives International

v National Secretaries Association

~ National Association of Investment Clubs

NationJr-F;d~ration of Independent Businesses

~ National Small Business Association

~ Tobacco Associates

v"' World Trade Centers Association

Address

100 West 3l~t St. New York, N.Y.

10001

630 Third Ave. New York, N.Y.

10017

6+6 East 63rd St. Kansis City, Mo.

64110

1.515 E Mile Rd,. Royal Oak, Mich

48067

150 West 20th Ave. San Mateo, Calif

94403

1225 19th St. NW Washington, DC

20036

1101 17th St. NW Washington, DC

20030

111 Eighth Ave. New York, N.Y.

10011

Key Staff Person Membership

James R. Williams 26,000 Retailers President

William M. Driscoll 28,000 Executives Managing Director Controlling

3,000,000 Salesmen

Thelma R. Sintz Exec. Dir.

Thomas E. O'Hara Exec. Dir.

Wilson S. Johnson President

John E. Lewis Exec. V. Pres.

Joseph R. Williams President

Guy F. Tozzoli President

29,000 Secretaries

193,746 Small investors

316,000 Independent businessmen.

40,000 Small Businessmen

400,000 Tabacco owners and employees

Convention Interest or

Concern

Always Jan. Always N.Y.

General economic issues affecting public purchasing

Always-Fall Selling and 1974 Nov.17-20 management, Hollywood, Fla. particularly

1974-July 16-20

Atlanta, Ga. 1975-July 15-19 Montreal

1976-July 20-24 Houston, Texas

training.

Certification professional training and advancement.

and

Annual Small investors 1974-Milwaukee clubs. 1975-Baltimore

None but legislative office in Washington with weekly publication

Lobbies State and Federal legislative bodies.

F

Annual

1974 June New York

To promote the market for tobacco.

Promote World Trade Centers.

Page 98: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

")· ", ..

NAME;'··· '.··--·~

;·General 'F.eder.ation ~,.

of . Wonu:fo I s Clubs

·. :.-

ADDRESS'·:·

17 .. 3 4) N ~ . St • N /w. ; .. ·: .- , ... ,,. washihgton, D ;'C ~ .1, . 2 0 0 :f6' ·. .

·•.>'._;

··:-.·, .... ,,.,..:..

··KEY STAFF ·.PERSON

Mrs. .Wilson Y~ Christian, Exec. Sec.

, ' ... ~ ;

MEMBERSHIP

10,000,000

ANNUAL MEETING'.··;.; INTEREST "OR CONCERN

1974-May 2.6:-. June 1. Minneapol'is •.

-. ~ . ' .

Page 99: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NAME t.,...-·

International Management Council

ADDRESS

291 Broadway New York, NY 10007

KEY STAFF PERSON

H.Darwin Haines Exec. Dir.

- !:> -

MEMBERSHIP

24,236 Supervisors and

Managers

ANNUAL MEETING

1974-May 8-11 Chicago

1975-May 28-31 Bal Harbour

INTEREST OR CONCERN

To help members become leader in their industries and communities.

Natio~anagement 2210 Arbor Blvd Marian N.Kershner Exec. V.Pres.

65,000 Always October Promote management as a p:'o~2 Association Dayton,Ohi~ Business and 1974-Buffalo,NY

45439 Industrial Management 1975-Dayton, personnel Ohio

'­National Association of Manufacturers

277 Park Ave. New York, NY 10017

~J.P. Gu 11 ander President

12,000 Manufacturers

A hvays New York 1974-Dec.5-6 1975-Dec.4-5

Promotes industries views on national issues.

,_.,.. American Marketing Association

230 N.Michigan Avenue

Chicago,111. 60601

Wayne A. Lemburg Exec. Dir.

18,000 Spring and Fall

Institute

t..-National Association of Retail Druggists

Prof Js;ional Photographers of America

,1801 K St. NW Wash., DC

20006 .

1101 16th St. NW Wash, DC 20036

Marketing Executives

Frank N. Ikard President

8,000 Producers, refiners and markets of foil.

Minor S. Jameson Jr. 11,000 Exec. Director Independent oil

and gas operators

One East Wacker Dr. Willard B. Simmons Chicago, Ill. 60601 Exec. Secretary

36,000 Independent Drug Store Owners

1090 EXecutive Way Des Plaines, Ill.

60018

Frederick Quellnoly 13,500 Professional Executive V. Pres. Photographers

Always Nov. 1974-New York

City' 1975-Chicago,

Ill.

1974-Mar 4-8 Denver

Oct. 25-29 Dallas

1975-Apr 20-22 New Orleans Nov. 2-4

Houston

Annual

1974-July Los Angeles

1975-July Chicago

All ·issues relatinl to oil industry.

Same

Re.strictior.s on marketing of drugs.

Page 100: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NAME ADDRESS t.--·

National Assoc. 434 West of Independent 8 Mile Rd Food Retailers Detroit,Mich.

48220 v National Assoc. 2000 Spring Rd of Retail Grocers Suite 620 of the United Oak Brook, I 11 . States 60521

'-' Peanut Butter 1225 19th St.NW Manufacturers and Room 807 Nut Salters Assoc. Wash.,DC 20036

Nttf'onal Funeral 135 W.Wells St. Directors Assoc. Milwaukee,Wis.

tr National Retail 964 Pennsylvania Hardware Assoc. Street

KEY STAFF PERSON

Edward D.Deeb Exec. Dir.

Frank D Register Exec. Dir.

James E. Mack Mng.Dir. and Gen.Counsel

Howard C. Raether Exec. Dir.

Wi 11 i am G. Mashaw

- 4 -

MEMBERSHIP

17,000 Retail food merchants.

43,000 Retailers, manufacturers, distributers in the food business.

155 Manufacturers

14,000 Funeral Directors

18,000 Hardware Retailers

ANNUAL MEETING INTEREST OR CONCERN

3/year Food store operations. 1974-Catskills

Mountain,N.Y.

1974-June 23-26 All issues relating to food Miami Beach marketing.

1975-June 22-25 Las Vegas

Annual Peanut product marketing.

1974-0ct.20-24 Funerals

1974-July 21-25 Retailing hardware.

Indianapolis, Ind. Mng.Dir. Philadelphia

1975-July 20-24 Anaheim

1976-July 18-22 New Orleans

v American Hotel and Motel Assoc.

46204

888 7th Ave. New York, NY 10019

,.......---') American Society of /70 Bryn Mawr, Chartered Life . Pennsylvania Underwriters · 19010

~· ~

National Assoc. 1922 F St.NW of Life Underwriters Wash.,DC 20006

~ American Management Association

135 W.50th St. New York, NY 10020

Lawson A.Odde 7,500 Exec.V.Pres. Hotels and motels.

Paul S.Mills 16,000 Exec.V.Pres. Life underwriters

C.Carney Smith 105,000 Exec.V.Pres. Life Insurance Agents

1974-Dec. San Juan,PR

All aspects of hotel and motel operations.

1974-Sept.22-24 Training of professional Miami Beach underwriters.

1974-Sept. Wash. ,DC

1975-Anaheim

All issues relating to life

James L.Hayes President

55,000 Always September Professional Always New York

·~o organize and encourage the exchange of information to advance the profession. 11 Management Executives

Page 101: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

TRADE, BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL ORGANIZATIONS

KEY STAFF NAME ADDRESS PERSON MEMBERSHIP ANNUAL MEETING INTEREST OR CONCERN

V' Amer.Institute of 666 Fifth Ave. Wallace E. 88,000 1974-0ct.13-16 Influencing professional Certified Public New York, Olson,Exec. Professional Seattle accounting standards, expecially Accountants N. Y. 10019 Vice Pres. accountants certified 1975-0ct.12-15 corporate financial statements.

by states and terr. San Antonio Prepares and grades CPA exams

///' for states.

National Assoc. 919 3rd Ave. William M. 70,000 Annual meeting Research and continuing education of Accountants New York, Young, Jr. Management always June. in management accounting

N. Y. l 0022 Exec. Dir. accountants in 1974-Detroit industry,public 1975-Anaheim accounting, govt. and teaching. -i.---

National Society 1717 Penn.Ave.NW Stanley H. 14,000 1974-Aug.19-23 Conducts correspondence courses, of Public Wash.,DC 20006 Stearman Professional society Honolulu, education programs,awards Accountants Exec.Dir. of Public Accountants Hawaii scholarships. .

'41..~ ... , .. -

American Accounting 653 S.Orange Ave. Paul L. Gerhardt 15,000 Always August Mainly interested in teachers of Association Sarasota, Fl a. Admin.Secr. Teachers and 1974-New Orleans accounting. Formerly Amer. Assoc.

33577 practitioners of 1975-Tucson of Univ. Instr. in Accounting. accounting. 1976-Atlanta

4-:/' American 1225 Connecticut Howard H. Bell 40,000 1974-April 28 11 To further a better understanding Advertising Avenue, NW President Advertising clubs. -May l of advertising through govern-Federation Wash.,D.C. 20036 ad. agencies, Wash. ,DC ment relations, public relations

advertisers 1975-June 22-26 and advertising education, and Sun Valley further an effective program of

Idaho advertising self regulation. 11

1976-May 2-5

v Wash. ,DC

Aircraft Owners Box 5800 J.B. Hartrauft 166,000 Promotes interests of general and Pilots Wash. ,D.C. 20014 President Private pilots and Usually in May aviation concerned with Association aircraft owners. encroachment by commercial

aviation.

Page 102: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NAME ADDRESS ~.>

National Aero Club 16740 Highway 28150

San Antonio, Tx 78221

~

National 806 15th St.,NW Aeronautic Wash.,D.C. 20005 Association

,...'/,;?_ .. --·- ... ·- ..... ·-· .. - -- ... ---- ...

KEY STAFF PERSON

L.G. Harris Exec. Dir.

A.S. Mike Monroney President

-.....

- 2 -

MEMBERSHIP

42,000 Private and business aircraft owners

100,000 Persons interested in the advance­ment of general and military aviation.

Bureau of Salesmen's 1819 Peachtree Marsha 11 J. \ 30 ,000 Mantler \ Salesmen in the soft National Assoc. Street

Suite 505 Managing Dir. \ goods industry. Atl. ,Ga. 30309 i

i :National Assoc. c/o Statler Marshall J. I ·,of Women's and Hilton Mantler J

1

~hildren 1 s Apparel 7th Ave & 33rd St Exec. ,Dir. __ ,/ "· New-- York N Y , -----°'-17' c·-c•: -7::'...: . .:.:.:-.:.::.:..::.~::~.~~--.. ·------------~----·:._: ..... -------~

American 8111 Gatehouse Rd James B. Creal Automobile Falls Church, Exec.Vice Pres. Association Virginia 22042

~

14-,000 Salesmen

15,000,000 Motorists

ANNUAL MEETING INTEREST OR CONCERN

Promote private and small Annual business aircraft use.

Annual Concerned about all issues that affect the progress of aviation and aerospace.

Semi-annual Sponsor trade exhibits.

Annual Women's and children's apparel.

1974-Sept.16-18 All issues relating to Chicago automobile use.

1975-Sept.22-24 Philadelphia

1976-Sept.27-29 San Francisco

Nationa 1 Association of Bank Women

111 E. Wacker Dr. Chicago, Ill. 60601

Phyllis Haeger 10,000 1974-0ct.6-10 Banking interests

American Bankers Association

Exec. Dir. Women bank executives Orlando,

1120 Conn.Ave.NW Willis W. Wash.,D.C. 20036 Alexander

Exec. Vice Pres

18,307 Bankers

Fla. 1975-0ct.12-16

Honolulu, Hawaii

1974-0ct.19-23 All banking issues Honolulu-

Page 103: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NAME ~1 ~

German American National Congress v

Order of Ahepo

v Japanese American Citizens League

v Knights of Pythias

,_ General Grand Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star (Masonic)

v Loyal Order of Moose

ADDRESS

562 Davis Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20006

1422 K St. NW Washington, D.C. 20005

1634 Post St. San Francisco, Calif. 94115

Columbus Plaza New Haven, Conn. 06507

Rm. 201 Pythian Bldg. 47 N. Grant Stockton, Calif. 95202

1618 New Hampshire Ave, NW, Wash, D.C. 20009

Mooseheart Ill. 60539

KEY STAFF PERSON·

Wallter A. Kollacks, Pres.

George J. Leber, Exec. Sec.

MEMBERSHIP

20,000

25,000 US/Greeks

David Ushio 26,000 Nat. Dir.

7 John w. 1,173,597 . McDevitt Catholic Men Supreme Knight

Jule o. 200,000 Pritchard Supreme Sec.

Mrs. Mamie 3,000,000 Landers, Right Worthy Grand Sec.

Carl A. 1,159,091 Weis, Supreme Sec.

ANNUAL MEETING INTEREST OR CONCERN

Annual German Ethnic Issues

1974 Boston Greek Ethnic 1975 Cincinnati

Biennial Japanese Ethnic

1974,Aug. 20-22 Fraternal Detroit 1975 Aug. 19-20 Miami 1976 Aug 17-19 Boston

Biennial

Triennial

Always June 1974-Chicago

Fraternal:..

Fraternal

Fraternal

Page 104: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

NAME

,,_, Chinese Consoli~~ dated Benevolent Assoc.

"" Croation Fraternal Union of America

""' Gechoslovak Society of America

v Fraternal Order of Eagles ,,­

Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks

v National Federation of American Ethnic Groups

FRATERNAL, FOREIGN INTEREST, NATIONALIST AND ETHNIC

ADDRESS KEY STAFF

PERSON MEMBERSHIP

441 Lexington Dr. M.T. ~ .. i!30,000 Aves, Rm. 1002 Mehdi·,:.···~. N.Y., N.Y. :'.,~~.1-Sec.Gen. 10017

10 W. 7lst St. Margaret 215,000 Catholic N.Y.,N.Y. McKearney, Women 10023 Nat'l Sec-Treas.

r" '~ ·- ;·

171 Third Ave. Chung Ping 60,000 N.Y.,N.Y. Tom, Pres. 10003

100 Delaney4E.John Bodovinac 117,000 Pittsburgh, Pa7, Supreme Pres. 15235 ,.,

2138 South Frank J. 52,000 61st Court. Vodroska, Czechs Ciero, Ill. Pres. 60650

3030 Sullivant Grand Sec. 825,000 Ave., Columbus Ohio 43204

2750 Lake View Homer Huhn, 1,531,912 Ave. ,Chicago, Jr., Grand mainly Ill. 60614 Sec. Black

562 Davis Bldg. Paul M. Deac 18,600,000 Washington, D.C.Exec. V .P. Represented 20006

ANNUAL MEETING

Always July

Biennial 1974 ,July Los Angeles 1976,July New Orleans

Quadrennial 1975 Sept. 8-12 Pittsburgh

Quadrennial

Annual

Annual

Annual

INTEREST OR CONCERN

The Arab Cause ?'

Fraternal Service

Fraternal persons of Slavic Descent

Fraternal

Fraternal

Fraternal

Support all Ethnic Organizations

Page 105: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

~v American Institute of

' Banking

v American Business Womens Assoc.

v National Assoc. of Home Builders

National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists

;y· ' Internati ona 1

Consumer Credit

v American Dairy Association

v Association for Computing Machinery

ADDRESS KEY STAFF

PERSON

1120 Conn.Avenue Rudolph E. NW Fichtel

Wash.,DC 20036 Director

1771 N St. N.W. Wash.,DC 20036

'Vincent T. Wasilewski President

- 3 -

MEMBERSHIP

247,885

4,295

9100 Ward Pkwy H.A.Bufton Jr. 64,000 Kansas City,Mo. Exec. Dir. 64114

1625 L St. NW Wash.,DC 20036

3510 Olive St. St. Louis, Mo.

375 Jackson Ave St. Louis, Mo.

Nathaniel Rogg 67,693 Exec. V.Pres. Builders

James K. Ahlquist Exec.Dir.

William H. Blake Exec. V. Pres.

65,000 Operators and owners of beauty shops.

57,000 Credit executives

20 N. Wacker Dr. M.J.Framberger 500,000 Chicago, Ill. Exec. V. Pres. Dairy farmers

60606

ANNUAL MEETING INTEREST OR CONCERN

1974-May 27-29 Baltimore

1975-May 26-28 Minneapolis

1976-May 31 -June 2

St. Louis

Education and training for banking.

1974-Mar.17-20 Represents radio and television Houston stations and networks.

1975=Apr.6-9 Las Vegas

1976-Mar. 28-31 New Orleans

1974-0ct.18-20 Professional assoc. of business Denver,Colo. women.

Annual All issues concerning home building.

Annual Teaching of beauty aid courses. always July

1974-June 17-21 Credit and finance issues. Las Vegas

1975-June 21-25 Pottland,Ore.

Annual Milk prod~cts,_sales. 'advertising and marketing!

1133 Avenue of the Americas

New York, NY 10036

Gordon Smith Exec. Dir.

29,000 Annual Advancing computer science. Mathematicians, engineers, physical and social scientists.

Page 106: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

ASSOCIATIONS AND ORGANIZATIONS OF NATIONAL SCOPE

There are 17,000 non-profit membership associations of

national scope. For the purpose of this document I have in

general listed only those organizations with more than 10,000

members. The few exceptions are those organizations with

fewer members which I know to represent significant or in­

fluential constituent groups or where the membership is made

up of other organizations or individuals who themselves

represent large groups of people. Labor federations.are the

best example of this.

I have divided the Associations into the following

general categories of interest:

a) Trade, business and commercial organizations

b) Agricultural organizations

c) Governmental, public administration, military and legal

or.ganizations

d) Scientific, engineering and technical organizations

e) Educational organizations

f) Cultural organizations

g) Social welfare organizations

h) Health and medical organizations

~) Public affairs organizations

j) Fraternal, foreign interest, nationality and ethnic

organizations

k) Religious organizations

1) Veterans, hereditary and patriotic organizations

Page 107: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

2

m) Hobby and avocational organizations

n) Athletic and sports organizations

o) Labor unions

p) Chambers of Commerce

q) Greek letter societies

Attached is a list of major organizations in each

category with basic data on membership, area of interest,

and key staff person.

These organizations represent a very large number of

people .who, if they can be successfully reached, could

represent a big and viable constituency. Some recommended

steps which could be taken to maximize support from the

membership of these groups include:

a) Almost every one of these organizations puts·· out

a regular newsletter or other publicatiol'l: to its membership.

In general they are short on material and particularly on

news items to fill these publications. Providing them ~ith

material on statements the Governor makes. relative to their

area of concern will in most instances guarantee its distri­

bution to the membership. Special statements might be

planned with this objective in mind in order to gain the

attention of certain large membership groups. Any time the

Governor says anything or takes ~ction in an area such as,

for example, the environment, we should be sure that the

conservation groups nationally are provided adequate

Page 108: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

3

information for their publications.

bf Many of these organizations will either provide

a copy of their membership mailing list or put out a

directory of their members. We should make a concerted

effort to obtain as many of these lists as possible~

c) Based on the convention schedule of these major

organizations, we should seek to obtain speaking invitations

to those we determine as the most important. Also, this

shol.lld be do.ne without fail for those relatively few groups

which will be meeting in Atlanta during the next year.

Where addressing~the convention is not appropriate or

feasible, we could arrange small group meetings with their

boards or key members to discuss issues that concern them

relevant to the 1974 campaign.

d) At the time of the announcement, a personal letter

should go to the President or key administrator of every one

of these organizations. It should contain a few sentences

to demonstrate knowledge about the group and awareness of

their areas of interest and should solicit their support.

e) Wherever possible when deali,ng with a topic or

issue the Governor should try to drop the name of key

organizations or associations involved in that area. People

tie up a part of their identify in their membership in an

organization, and just the mention of it conveys a personal

proximity that they respond to.

Page 109: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

-------- ---------

---------- ------

--------------

----- ----- -----------------

-----

Page 110: Group Classification and General Recommendations...Group Classification and General Recommendations Folder Citation: Collection: Records of the 1976 Campaign Committee to Elect Jimmy

AMERICAN l©SPITAL ASSOCIATION

Contact: John A 1 exander f'~c Mahon Piesident 8 40 Lake Shore ()'i ve Chicago, Illinois, 60611

E>lf-s Tel: 312- M - 9400 ·

Health Care

Issues: Recognizes the need for enhanced access to health care for the "unserved and underserved of our society" but stresses his organization's desire to maiAtain the separation of the Government and the private sector in health care. ~sition basically parallels that of the AMA.

Comments: Theyare sponsoring the Ameriplan for Nat. Health Insurance, its only provision is that it calls specified minimum benefits in private health insurance policies.

Follow-up: MrMcMahon will be in Atlanta on.October 31st 1974, we should invite him to stop by to see the Governor if he will be in town

... .... --------.. -------·-·------·-···-·- . ·-· ····-~---~---·------·-·--------· --- -:-- • •••• , .......... _.-: .... ,-. j -

\ ··-- ..

·- · .. -...

·: .. __ ,:·,

.·, ..

**

. I i

:· . . · .

·., .'.'(.

., .... ! ' ' -

·•;I ''t ,I,

·~:


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